THE SUNDAY OREGOXIAN, PORTLAND, AUGUST 20, 1923 SIMPLICITY AND COMPLETENESS COMBINED ' HARMONIOUSLY IN CALIFORNIA BUNGALOW Square Plan Used on Account of Inherent Economy, but Economy Is Overcome by Clever Designing. Built-in Features Reduce Furniture to Minimum. II ! V U..l ' " H Mf "-"US i , ,, i i i . it1 BY ANITA IDE CAMPL ""I T PTOAL of tho Californian type I of bungalows is the one illus- trated today, in which simplic ity and completeness are harmo niously combined. Though the square plan has been used, on ac count of its Inherent economy, fru gality Is overcome by clever design ing. The sizo of the rooms is di vided in proportion to the usual mount of time spent in each one. Built-in features reduce the neces sary furniture) to a minimum, and their arrangement is such that the executing of household duties is greatly facilitated. Three coats of waterproof cement are applied over metal lath, on the interior walls. Window and door frames are painted delft blue, with ivory colored sa-shes and screens. All of the ornamental staff work is blue, "aged" with brown and a touch of yellow. Matching the trim is the decorative blue lantern which hangs over the mahogany front door. From one end, of the front patio re steps, leading up to the- roof garden, which, extend-s over the en tire building. The double strength roof accommodates a delft blue, wa terproof wicker set, which consists of a chaise longue, several comfort able chairs, a day bed and a table. At one side there is a large, heavy wood n chest In which the many cushions are put in- rainy weather. Arranging the roof in "this way is certainly a happy thing to do, for there is nothing much more pieas- GREATER NEED FOR SERIOUSNESS IN CHRISTIANITY STRESSED BY PASTOR World Said to Require Cheerful Officers, Teachers and Preachers Who Can Pray and Weep Oyer Sins of Mankind Greater Devotion to Work of Kingdom Wanted. "THE THIXGS WHICH COUNT FOR PEACE," BT THE REV. ELBERT E. FLIXT, Pastor of the Atkinson Memorial Congre. gaMonai Church. Luke. xix:41-42: "Ad when be drew nigh, he saw the city and wept over it aarine. If thou hadet known in thto day, even thou, the things which belong unto peace! but now they are hid from thine eyes." A CAREFUL study of the teach ing and life of Jesus reveals this fact, that 'great and strik ing contrasts were few, but im pressive. Jesus and the young man furnishes us with one of the most striking scenes in history- Authors and artists have striven to repeat It, but it still remains an Inex haustible fountain. Jesus and! Nic- odemus meeting under cover of night, one th lowly Xazarene and the other a great and mighty ruler, a striking -contrast In a day when the humility of the common-place andi the dignity of aristocracy were at the highest. Jesus before Pilate, prisoner and judge meeting- in re versed relationships Jesus and Je rusalem, the two outstanding fig ures in this text, are equally strik ing and impressive. Sting: of Rejection Felt. Jesus is approaching Jerusalem during his last days and among his last visits to this notable city. As the scope of lil vision rises above the hllia overlooking the city, ha eees It as never fcefore stretched out fcofore him like a great paorama. lie was nt unmindful of the city as h then saw it. He was Con scious of the divine gift of right eousness and' peace and love- which he carried in 'his bosom for that mighty city of his own people. He pondered in his thoughts the cor rupt and wicked rulers whom he would encounter in their influence to put the Son of Go65 to death. Even new he felt the sting of the denial by his own and his rejec tion from the holy temple. In . his love for all classes and" condition he thought of the oppression of one class over another. In his vision the banqueting halls of the rich were too far removed from the hovels of . the famishing poor, and1 he paused, and for a time Joy and hope gava way to sorrow SS Mr ImT w-m'nrftt ant on warm summer evening, of a cool, sunny day, than to be in the open, where the wonderful sight of the starlit or the fleeting cloud- flecked sky may . be enjoyed with1 out hindrance. Inside, the woodwork of living, dining, bedrooms and hall Is done in ivory, eggshell finish. The bath room and kitchen are enameled with white gloss. The bedrooms are the same sue, 11 by 12 feet, and each is equipped with a good-sized closet. One bedroom is done with fin striped yellow and white paper, which forms a pleasing background for the color scheme of lemon, tur quoise and'rust colors. The other is done in quaint flowered paper, in nosegay colors The 'living and dining rooms and hall are papered in two-toned ecru, and have electric candle chandel iers and side lights, with frosted, candle flame shaped lights. In the hall there is a spacious linen closet which has four commodious shelves and three deep drawers. Opening from this hall, between the two bed rooms. Is the bathroom. This is all tiled with a high gloss, washable enamel. The tiled-in tub is com pleted by a shower and draw cur tains. A convenient cabinet, with a mirrored door, is built in above the lavatory, .On one elde of the fireplace, in the living room, there Is a built-in bookcase and on the other a little desk, with flap-lid drawers. Above theWide mantel shelf, continuous over the bookcase, fireplace and desk, there are two small square windows. ' The dimensions of this and perchance faith trembled on the brink of fear, and unlike any other monrent save for the spiritual cru c'fixion- for the sin of the world. "Jesus Wept." Jesus Prophet of Life. His was not a vision of the tra ditional Jerusalem, but of the 'city. "whose builder and maker is God'" This city, as a type of all cities, stretched out before him through countless centuries. He was fulfill ing the mission of a great prophet of life rather than a student of his tory. The walls did not enter into his thoughts now, but compact rows of tenements stood in their place before him. He thought of the day when great dark and gloomy flats would, bejcrowded with human souls like the rabbit pens of the dear old Jerusalem with but this difference, that at the top there would be but room for one family to catch a breath of the fresh air that swept across the city. His city that he wept over was not one dotted with temples of old but rows of tall, tower-like smoke stacks belching out their cannons with clouds of, smoke, with scores upon scores of men, women and chil dren laboring by day and by night. The city he wept -over is not the city where the little children heard his voice when he said. . "Let the little children come unto me" but it was the city thronged with its millions of children where his voice is drowned with the clatter of wheels and the thump of tha trip hammer. He is ' not weeping over the great cathedrals which have re placed Herod's palace, but he is weeping over the city whose cathe drals are deserted, where no light beams through the windows, where priests still stand at the altar but no thronging millions come to the door for the "bread of Life." If Teeus is what we have found him to be in thegospels that truly tell the story of his life, if Jesus Is the world's savior that we believe him to be, this was tha City that he wept over and cried, saying, "If thou hadst known in this day, then thou, tho things which belong unto peace!" Herlonsaess la Impressive. The question which comes to me out of this scene in the life of Jesus as he faced the city is the serious ness with which he meets the world. Tha eerious-minded person is not H MA """M.'S-sy room are 12 feet 6 inches by 15 feet 6 inches. By a pair of French doors -the living room is connected with the dining room, which is 10 feet by 15 feet 6 Inches. The conventional built-in buffet has two pairs of glass doors above, a serving shelf and long deep drawers below, for the accommodation of silver and table linens. There is a cupboard for large articles in each of the low corners. Convenience Is the keynote of th modern kitchen. Under a large double window there is a breakfast nook. The table lifts up, thus being disposed of when cleaning is going on. Placed back to back with th dining room buffet there is in th kitchen a combination kitchen buf fet and cupboard, with one end partitioned off for a cooler. This cooler, vented to cellar and attic, takes the place of an ice box. except during the warm months. There is a wide serving table, con nected by a slide with the dining room. Just around the. corner from the breakfast nook is a double width Ironing board, which folds up into the wall, and is kept out of sightt when not in use. The Jcitehen sink is no longer an eye-sore. The top apd back are tiled, with a mirrored cabinet and two windows above. A swing spou faucet and tiled-in soap dish add to the convenience.. Below tha tile drainboards are four drawers, on the left, and two tin lined remov able bins on the right. In one corner there is a plastered hood for the range, which is in conspicuous, but gets light from two angles and is placed convenient to Both serving table and Sink. The laundry has a built-in tub, with combination faucet and an auto matic storage instantaneous heater, which furnishes ample hot -water for all purposes. Throughout the floors are narrow oak board ex cept in the bath room, where tile is used, afld in the kitchen, which is linoleumed. The hardware Is sanded brass in living, dining, bedrooms and hall nickel in bathroom and kitchen, and black japanned in the laundry. The old' fashioned mold is omitted Frames and casings are of one piece, molded, with mltered corners. Molded to match is the baseboard. The base shoe mold is of oak, like the floors. The lot need not- be any larger than 45 by-75 feet. A larger lot. however, gives room for some land scape gardening, a garage, a plant nursery and perhaps a pond or fountain. The back yard, which is entirely fenced in, may be treated to suit individual taste. These plans were designed by Kenneth D. Kahn of Los Angeles, Cal. the one in demand, he is too often rtgarded as a joke. The world says of him as they did of old, that "he is drunk," "he is mad" or, "out of his head."' Our schools are not searching for teachers who are dead in earnest to make scholars and character out of boys and girls; the directors of youth's' activities must be those with "fads" and "notions" of every description under the sun. "Th smile that won't come off is a blessed possession if beneath it beats a heart of deep concern that, "Whatsoever a man soweth that shall he also reap." We need cheer ful officers and teachers and preach ers but we need those who can pray and weep. Where are, the men and women who are ready to weep bitter tears over the wickedness of the cities for which we tremble and fear today. "Blessed are they who can mourn and d mourn over the world's needs," says Dr. Charles R. Brown. "The silly, shallow, light-hearted mind has neither the moral capacity for sorrow nor the clear prospect for comfort." Thank God for your ca pacity to know sorrow and to cher ish sympathy. It is not said that "When Israel travailed she 'brought forth"" I am not aying that all the joys, and hopes and the delights of love shall be banished from life and re ligion and the church, but I am con tending that the world's need shall bo regarded with seriousness enough to create a devotion which win car ry tha work of the kingdom and of true living to the extent that it will not sit lonely and forsaken. But were there causes and are there Causes for such anguish that call for earnestness and dvotion even to the extent of tears and ag ony of soul? Supposing we can number Israel by the thousands, can we see any Justification for drawing off the Christian army from the commission to ''go ye into all the world and preach the gospel?" Is it time for us to celebrate the triumph snd victory of Christian brotherhood In the world? Do men love one an other so much that the "golden rule" has taken the place of the 'rule of gold"? Are we at a ooirtt where we can deal so justly with those who differ with Us in color and station and opinion l.at we still feel the sense of the great law that we are all created of on flesh and blood to dwell together upon the face of the earth? Is human society a redeemed society in tha real, tru sense in which Jesus conceived re demption for man and his condition in body and soul? Things may pass as tney are and Jog along-, but God help us to arise to the anxiety and interest for the best and highest.- -Service First Thing. I care not how much you can say for what the gospel has done in getting men and women to heaven, I am speaking frankly for what it Should be doing-. The gospel is still a social failure, for society is not redeemed. Business, pleasure, education, international relation ship, industry, are tlll waiting for the redeeming touch of the spirit of the living God. What affliction can befall human life and cfviliza tion is seep in the denunciation that Jesus makes. Mark his expression of it as, "If thou hadst known, . . . . now they are hid from thine eyes." Jesus has no reference to our classical learning. In speaking here he was not thinking of whether one could read- Latin and Greek and figure in terms of higher mathematics. He was think ing as to whether one could inter pret aright God's communication with Moses in terms of the Ten Commandments. He was thinking as to whether one-could rightly in terpret the Golden Rule and the Sermon on the Mount in terms of life. He was thinking whether one would consider increase of lands THE- LITERARY PERISCOPE BT JEANNETTE KENNEDY. (Assistant, Circulation Dept., Public Library.) I T IS related that a Paris journal 1st with a sense of humor re cently played a joke on the keepers of the Louvre museum by placing a mock figure "of the "Mayor of Montmarte," WTiieh had been ex hibited in the Salon Humoristes on an empty pedestal among the works of Roman statuary. That the statuette showed a figure in garters and top hat and bore the jesting inscription, "Julius Depaguitus, Pro Consul de Mons Martyrum," seemed to awaken neither surprise, incredulity nor laughter in the attendants and visit Ofs. Finally the joker attempted to remove the statuette and that raised a great hue and cry from the guar dian of the exhibits. When the of fender was brought before the mu seum authorities it took some time to fully explain the jocose nature of the incident. To William de Morgan's father is attributed the sayinn that the mark of the well-educated is "to know everything of something and something of everything." Did you know that skipping-rope exercises put one in fine condition for mountain climbing? At least, Samuel Turner uses that method of keeping the muscles in play.'as re counted in "The Conquest of the New Zealand Alps." He declares the New Zealand Alps have not the great altitudes of the Swiss moun tains, but, owing to the hazards and variety of problems in ascent, the sport is just as great, for the same demands are made on the climber's skill. ,'- A forthcoming novel of South Af rica before the war is by Mr. Brett Young and entitled "Pilgrims' Rest." Mary Johnston has chosen the England of Henry VII's time for her new novel, "Silver Cross," which again exemplifies the author's in terest in witchcraft and supersti tion. An interesting comparison is made by Carl Van Doren of the relation of Mrs. Wharton's new book, "The Glimpse of the Moon," to her other well-known novels. He says to all who read with their brains her new book must be an excitement and a delight Without rushing, it never fags, it cuts without drawing un necessary blood; it convinces with no hint of argument. If 'Ethan Frome' is more tragic and 'The Cus tom of the Country' more satiric and The Age of Innocence more varied. The Glimpse of the Moon' is more friendly and human than any of them." A work which will doubtless in terest those who enjoy studies in state craft is a coming book on 'The Prime Ministers of England," from the Walpole of 1721' to the little Welshman, Lloyd George of 1921. 'The Latest Thing, and Other Things," is the title Alexander Black has given a collection of 23 short essays of varying quality. Some of them are refreshingly new, others have a, familiar we-have-always known-it air. . Pioneer days are having their 'inning'" with Emerson Hough's Covered Wagon," Herbert Quick's Vandermark's Folly," Hamlin Gar land's "Daughter of the Middle Bor der," in the field against the new school of 4,The Beautiful and Damned,". "The" Beginning of Wis dom," "Erik Dorn," and other prod ucts of brand new pens. In his role of rector of the an cient Scottish University of St. An drews Sir James M. Barrie deliv ered an address to the students at the time of his installation which was published in full in many British and American newspapers. These papers were eagerly bought and the copies containing that remarkable address have been sold out. Charles Scribner'si Sons have at last published the address In book form iwider the title, "Courage." - - In an article called "The Flight From Reality," published in the Living Age," the author, F.- A. Hampton, makes an interesting statement regarding the) present-day attitude toward literature. He says It is perhaps significant of f change in our national psychology that tragedy is no longer popular. that a happy ending to the drama is demanded. It seems as though the deep tragic note of the old ballads and folk-songs were no longer bear- ble and the robust enjoyment of Byronic melancholy or Victorian pa thos an impossibility to the general public of today." . A bit of th life-story of Louis Hemon, who has given the world the beautiful novel of French-Canadian life, "Maria Chapdelaine,',' has re- ently been unearthed. This work f an unknown author, published in French, has been so eagerly sought by French people that of 1,000,000 copies sold half of them have been bought by French readers, while the French government has made earn est efforts to find the author and do him honor. Louis Hemon went as a young man to Canada to stsidy the French Canadian people in the province of Quebec, where he worked as a farm laborer while writing his book. -He sent it to Paris, where it was ap pearing serially in a newspaper at the. time the war broke out.. After the armistice a critic who had kept the newspaper installments of the story took it to a publsiher, who saw its value. A search was made for tha author by tha publisher, the and storehouses above the value and meaning of the soul. It was the old problem which has ever been with men of. hutting first ththgs first He was thinking of men so blinded that they would choose, as Lot am, things for the moment withou weighing consequences. Jesus knew that the time Would come whe there-would be a great tragedy that would overtake them and then they wouluVfcry out in distress becaus they had not known and had not seen the things which were of true reward and true value. Then observe the great gift to which they were blinded; the great end for which they were to live, the thing above every other price and Worth, the gift which only Jesus could make. These things belong to peace. This was not somethin which was bound up In a package as a single reward; it was the great, peaceful, placid, glassy sea, lulle to perfect stillness into which all the streams and rushing, rollin rivers were gathered. The things which count for peace such as faith, hope, love: such peace as Was upon the face of Ste phen, such a peace as was given Liv ingstone as he made his way into the dark center of Africa, A peace like the center of a greaf cyclone. That gift is still the gift to man an to the world. But eyes are blinded and minds dulled, and "the Master weeps." French government; and, finally, by the Canadian government. Louis Hemon was at last discovered in grave in a snowdrift. Before his manuscript ever reached Paris he had walked from one farm to an other on the railroad track and been killed by a passing engine. He was but 33 years old, and the Canadian government honored his memory by naming for him two beautiful lakes near his last resting plpace Lac Louis and Lac Hemon. Preachers Denounce Soci ety as Immoral. Englishmen and Americans' See Vice Rampant in Cities. I 1 E. Wakerly, the- new presiden of the Wesleyan conference, de nounced the Immorality existing to day in English society both high an low, in his presidential address. On the same day that his utter ances were published here, there ap peared a dispatch from New York in which the prevalence of vice and immorality in America was de nounced by the national council of the Protestant Episcopal cnurcn. American readers may be inter ested in learning that according to Dr. Wakerley, English morals an apparently quite as bad as American morals. "Human life by many is held very cheaply," was his indictment. "There is scarce a day when you do not open yOur paper upon some sordid story of the slaughter of some in nocent. "The standards of morals Between the sexes in many places is very low. The . sacredness of the mar riage relationship is openly pooh poohed: lust tramples truth, integ rity and domestio happiness beneath Its feet. "You have increased the number of your judges in the courts which deal with domestic tragedy because of the number of people who have sought relief in that direction. When you have done that you have only touched the fringe of the evil. "Your cities have no monopoly of vice. Get rid of the impression tha because your villages are pictur esquely placed they are therefore homes of deep spirituality. Alas! it is not so. "You have frequently in what you think your fair village life a low moral sense, which is indicated by an unworthy estimate of woman hood. "We have been remihded in the last few weeljs that materialism Is trebly bankrupt in philosophy, in the natural sciences, and in practi cal life, and that the only alterna tives are a continuance of the pres ent chaos till It ends in a crash, or a return to a spiritual view of the universe." Pope Appoints Monsignor Orsenigo to Hague. Pontiff Selects Man of Culture for Important Place, R OME, July 30, "Priests and sol diers receive orders and must obey them," were the words of the pope in deciding the question who should become papal internuncio at The Hague. "You will ba the right man in the right place." . Monsignor Orsenigo bowed, and the, matter was closed. The monsignor had hesitated for conscientious reasons, not consider ing himself fitted to deal with the responsibilities of the position. But the pontiff thought otherwise, and thus disposed of a problem which for some time has caused specula tion in Vatican circles. Monsignor Orsenigo's life for tha past 25 years has been devoted to works of charity. To be torn from the paths he had chosen for himself made him hold back; he was ' piexed by the possible difficulties of a diplomatic post which has acquired special importance in view of the Russian conference recently held at The Hague. Usually the representatives of the holy see abroad are chosen from among the young priests who have attended the Academy of Noble Ecclesiastics in Rome, which has so aptly been called ."the nursery of cardinals." They are generally first sent out as secretaries and are later promoted Until they reach the rank of papal nuncio. The pope had met Monsignor Orsenigo in Milan, where he had collaborated with him in a church paper called St. Charles Bor- romeo. Pius XI noticed then his great culture; his fluent knowledge of most modern languages and the historical insight shown In some books which Monsignor Orsenigo had published. These qualities the pope remarked When the question arose of who to send to The Hague, and the decision was quickly made. Green Mountain. Boys Historic. Tha "Green Mountain Boys" were a band of Vermont settlers, organ ized la 1""3, under the leadership of Ethan -41len, Seth Baker, and others, for the purpose of protecting" them selves against the attempts of vthe governor of New York to drive them from their land's and take posses sion of their territory On the ground that it belonged to New York, under the charter granted by Charles II. During the revolutionary war the Green Mountain Boys, 300 in num ber, led by Ethan Allen, rendered great, service In securing the passes into Canada, and thus preventing the British troops from overrunning Vermont. Senator's Wife Unappreciatlve. "Do you know 'The Star-Spangled Banner?" "I thought I knew it," repled Sen ator Sorghum, "but my wife says the way I sing it nobody would know it." Pour and Twenty Minds, by Giovanni Fapinij translated from the Italian by Ernest faatch Wilkins. The Thomas Y. Crowell company. New York -city, The critic and reviewer who pe ruses these 24 rhapsodical essays with attention Is almost bound to wonder, when hs lays asidethe Vol ume and assumes the contemplative, whether he has a fight to express an opinion on this particular book or any other. His opihlorf-f orming code is apt to be rather upset and his reflection is likely to be barbed with many conflicting ideas. Giovanni Papini writes his critical essays from a Viewpoint all his own. Papini ia recognized as one of the greatest critics and essayists in Italy. He writes with a mordant and relentless pen and is a man of obvious wide . reading, but. With further faculty of digesting and making his own the things Which in terest him. It is probable that a profound scholar could Inform him self to such an extent that he could discuss intimately two dozen men such as the Unknown Man, Dante Leonardo da Vinci. Albert!,. Berke ley. Spencer, F. C. 8. Schiller, Hegel, Nietsche, Walt Whitman, Croce, Ar mando Spadini, Hamlet, Remy de Gourmont, Ardengo Soffici, Swift Carolina Ihvef nizlo, Alfredo Oriana, AVilliam Tell,. Do Quixote, Kwang Tse, Calderon, Maeterlinck and Gio- vani Papini himself, but Such exten sive acq'ualntanceship would -seem rather befuddling. But -Papini does not need intimacy as a medium through Which to formulate' his ideas. His impressions, although he has apparently studied and di gested much, are luminous flashes. sometimes rationally white, often a heated red and occasionally a beau tiful blue. - The essay on the Unknown Man Is one of the latter hue in substance, but the coVr is in the thought and not tha Words, In ending it Papini says! "All men must have Images when tney attempt adoration, if they do hot know tha name afld tea tures of the man who has achieved they cannot fix their thoughts upon him . . . It is our ineradicable -laziness that ha led Us to forget the unknown i.vm, the age-long ben efactor of the human race. . ; . The Greeks had at least the pro found and prudent idea Of raising an altar to the unknown god." Papini evidently loved the un known man far mora than those wearing, haios of fame, for he is not often kind, and when he is the kindness is a personal tribute due to his like for some characteristic rather than some act, and ha says too many men have been mads fa mous because they have "merely written a tiresome tragedy or given a lucky saber thrust." The greatest Surprise in tne z essays, although it should hot be a surprise after the preceding eight have been read, is his .devotion ' to Nietzsche, to whom, he says, "we owe a debt of love, all of Us, and it is time to pay it. Our , turn ha come at last. There is room now for love. The smirching caresses of fashion are bestowed elsewhere," and in another paragraph, as though the thought were continued, "how different such a tribute from the utterance of the bloodthirsty mon keys Who have disported themselves, in parlors and in novels, under the utterly false name of disciples of Zarathustra." The popular -impression of Nietzsche is not at all in accord with the beautv of the love Papini de scribes which the philosopher bore Cosima Wagner, ot that "it Was in deed of love, shut up and unap peased, that Nietzsche died. - We slew him all of us by our common behavior. Nor will he be our last victim." At any Jrate It is fascinating to read the dictation of an impulsive mind, especially when that mind is sharp enough to probe Without' dig ging. Self-Discovery, by Orison Swett Harden. The Thomas X. croweii company, atvi York city. By explaining tha effects of en vironment and association the au thor has formed a readable essay rff man's potenrian power, and has illed it with no small quantity of good logic. The greatest human nroblem is held to be finding one's self and getting the best out Of one s self in much the same manner that men make machines do all the work they are capable of.. Self-Confldence, setting tasks that require full power, the ability to see yourself as others see you ana raining are some of the points taken up in the brief work. The author holds that a great many per sons never find themselves and plod along through life with great latent power within them, but never called nto use. How to get this power nto action is the theme of his essay. - His reasoning Is simple and direct nd frequently he uses interpreta tions of old proverbs- to expound his points. Most reaaers will know most everything Mr. Marden has to say in some form pf other, but the book serves as a concrete exposition f the wisdom of self-achievement. What Became of Mr. Desmond, by C. .-iina Boyle. Thomas Heltjer, jnsw lor Mr. Desmond, happily- married, of assured income and nothing to ao but "potter" around the house, steps out for a, handful of nails and disap pears to return 15 years later to the dot and take his place at the head of tho table at dinner without a ord of explanafon then nor untu tho end of the tale, nearly a year fter. His middle-aged wile, who loves his body but loathes his soul," because of her suspicions of inti macy with others in the interim, and his children, many full grown, re ceive him with a tolerance thinly uised until the "brow up" m tne last chapter, of which tha reader is soosed to take a surreptitious peep. Tho strong character is a young oman of free-love propensities. ho makes Mr. Desmond a mere in cident. The Modern Credit Company, Its Place In Business Financing, by Robert G. Merrick, the Norman, Remington com- company, Baltimore, Md. From the time John Jacob Astor used to borrow money on the in voices of cargoes en route from the Dutch East Indies until the present, with 125 credit banking companies functioning In tha United States, the history of this particular type of bank is told and its workings ex plained. Tha small volume, which can bo read in an hour' time and easily comprehended by the aver age layman, is a complete exposition of credit companies. It explains how they are organized, how they work in handling accounts as col lateral, and justifies them in the eyes of the banking and business world. The Return, by Walter de la Mare. Alfred A. Knopf, Nw York city. Walter de ' la Mara has told in "The Return" a fantastic, vivid story, which uses with such sincer ity and reticence a strange, super natural occurrence that the cheap ness customary in wierd stories, with their usual thrills and horror, is entirely avoided. There is an ease and naturalness h - , - V if hi -yv I L Giovanni Pajplni, whose critical essays have just been translated from' the Kalian. to the poet's prose style, which, no matter what the subject may be, will always be found charming. He has that careful attention to detail which insists the reader visualize during the unfolding of each event, but at the same time his impres sions are conveyed without catering tha least to the unpleasant or mor bid. Stories of the supernatural are the easiest stories to write or tell. It is always easier for a story teller to create an impression, to sustain atmosphere and hold the attention of his audience with a "ghost" story. The reason is simple. Fear Is a fundamental emotion. It is an emo tion easy to arouse because tho in stinct of self-preservation inherited through all ages has developed in the human race a keen reaction to the minutest impression conveyed by tha senses in tha presence of danger or the semblance of danger. Mote than any other emotion it demands and obtains complete "right of way," for when fear is predominant no other emotion is admissible. In this respect it is eldsely akin to anger. For this reason stories of fear and supernatural have almost domi nated the field of the short story, where a singleness of impression Is desired. There are many excellent examples of the short-story of tha phantom motif, but in novels where a sustained plot and more delicate shading and balancing of numerous impressions is required the venture is more hazardous and frequently disastrous. Walter de la Mare has not made The Return" a ghost story, a thing that nearly any other modern writer would have done, and done badly. He has not sought merely to create wiefd. story. The development and revelation of character has been the consistent purpose of the novel, the super natural motif merely a minor theme Which is woven along through the story with consummate skill. Briefly, the story is concerned with a terrible misfortune which comes to Arthur Lawford and makes it necessary for him to retire from the world for a time until he recov ers from this change. The reaction upon his intimate associates, his Wife, himself, and the manner In which he is saved from a more hideous doom give occasion for the development of the story. Frontiers ot the After-I.ife, by Edward C. Kandall Alfred A. Knopf, New York . city. That books on spiritualistic com munication can be interesting to non-believers as well as the follow ers of the spirit theory is proved in the writing of Edward C. Randall. In spite of the growth of this kind of faith in recent years, its adher ents are still only a small handful in comparison with the entire popula tion of any country. Nevertheless, most everybody is interested and Willing to be shown, and this new book gives more angles, although it does not convince, and explanations of actual spiritual life than most of the many which have been written since Swedenborg first propounded his theories. Surprising, too, some of the ideas advanced in their logi cal explanations. , The author claims to have talked voice to voice with the living dead on over 700 nights in a period cov ering 22 years. His idea of the spir itual body is gained from a reply he received: "There is an inner, etheric body, composed of minute particles of such substance that it can and does pass into spirit life." This body, other communicants informed him. Is beautiful or ugly according to the character of the person in life, and can be remolded by the good done in spirit life. Similarly the- houses lived In are built and furnished and lighted by the character of the spirit, according to one message: "This room so beau tiful Is the result of your self-denial and the happiness you brought to others, but there are others not so pleasing, and wo passed iuio one that was dark and filled with rub bish; the air was heavy. This, my guide said, was builded through my selfishness," etc. Different spirits gave different answers to the same question, much as living persons woujd, according to their philosophy and Interpreta tion.' To the question "Where is tha after life?" there is a similarity in all the "answers, but the most ex plicit was: "Your earth has belts, but they exist in a cruder condition than those of Jupiter and Saturn. The belts or zones that lie around your earth are designed for the hab itation of spirits out of the body and as they outgrow th passions of earth and become more refined, they pass to another or higher zone." m 3 The Country Bjj-od, r James Ollrer Curwood. The Cosmopolitan Book Cor poration, New" York city. A alight twist to separate litera ture from popular fiction and James Oliver ,Curwood can be praised. He has the knack, as few other authors have, of not holding but gripping the imagination with blood-red stories, skillfully handled, lurid with Interesting situations and chuckful of sympathy directed al ways in the direction of popular taste. In "The Country Beyond" he has combined a number of age-old and trustworthy themes into a sin gle story so smooth that even the scorner will read with avidity and never pause to reflect or to reproach himself until the end is reached. Consider the familiar features of the story; an extremely beautiful and young girl, orphaned and tyran nized by a villiandus protector who reeks with the odor of smuggled whisky, a veritable berolna in dis tress; a hero and an outlaw in one, noble and forced to hide away In the woods, constantly separated j from the girl he loves and desires to free from bondage; Royal North west mounted policemen and a tribe of Indians, one, of whom has spir itualistic communication to help out the plot. - Yet these element are molded Into a slick story and tha corners are so carefully rounded off with good taste and ftn adept mty'd that they are even, more full of thrills than is the average story uring ose or more of the usual situations. As a reward fr this Mr. Curwood is extremely popular. He makes countless young men long to be outlaws and rescue beautiful maid ens from Villains. As a literary figure - he may be , but of slight importance, but as a narrator of popular fiction ho must be accorded a prominent place. His skill at holding up a narrative with the most acute suspense Is undeniable, and he is never ridiculous or forced in his scenes, climaxes or charac terizations. He is, wise enough al ways to be plausible, and apparently he does know the great northwest well enough to suggest its grandeur and desolation to the reader. "The Country Beyond" will undoubtedly achieve remarkable popularity. The Shorn Lamb, by Emmi Spped Samp son. Tne Keilly & Lee company, Chi cago, 111. This is wholesome, sprightly fic tion of the sort to satisfy those readers who have graduated from juvenile books but are not quite up to maturity in taste. For this class of readers it is difficult to imagine a better style and better equipment than that of Emma Speed Sampson. She Is extremely original in thought and manner of address, her descriptive passages are pleas ant and easy paragraphs to read and her characterization is simple and effective. Never does her sym pathy jump out of the groove in which It should run to assure popu larity for her books. The story concerns Rebecca Tay lor, an orphan of New York and granddaughter of Major Taylor, a southern gentleman. The son ot Major Taylor left the farm and went to New York to study art. He married a woman his father did not approve, of and Was cut of;' for the offense. Shortly after th daughter was born, the father die and the mother married again. Then the mother died and the step-father married again. Through several stages of such step-parents ItebeccH was handed along, as sort of studio property, for this zlg-zaglng linn of married persons always stayed in the original studio. Finally both parents died ami Rebecca was left alone. The exlnt enca of her grandfather was learned and the young girl whs shipped Off to him with a brief letter of introduction. Her now family war ' cold in heart and the child had n ' hard path to follow. There wan " a family feud, with frlendHhlps car ried on clandestinely, and thefe I" tho usual love story, running through the troubles of Kehecra, Which culminates In the essentially happy ending. Hie Dlngbnt of .Ar.-a.1r, by Margaret Wli Kinpoii. i n MacMiiiau company. Ne York city. . It would ba ridiculous to try -In estimate the number of Oregon persons- who go up and down the Wi'.- lamette river by boat in the coum of a summer, but it is safe to asse: t that few of them saw all that Mat- garet Wilkinson arid her husliai.d took note of when they came down the river In tha "tHnffbat of A - cadj. Her account ot that trip Is. I i both style and content, all that tl i narne of the book Implies. Tl "Dingbat" was a home-made era" and not as graceful in appeararn i as the author's account of the crui is In sound and spirit, but in spt- v of Its leaks and lack of speed floated with the current In keepli with the playtime moods of tl . mated philosophers who contci -plated the eddies and ripples of tl -stream and the sands and shad I banks of its shores. All Oregonlans can learn som. - 'Vt' from h... .T 1 k " ' ""'"ese stranger, who cl.o,- thing of the charm of the Wlllai: J L u .vi IIICII 41111 1 11 L I t., - ture. and who kent th rharai-u .- of the river close to their hearts i matter on what streams they sul -sequently sailed, or on what roar! ' they afterward motored in a m chine as graceless and happy-goii. ; as was the "Dingbat." There is a tribute to Oregon fo". of the country in the story tin. I should make even their city brothers and sisters proud. The Oreg i farmer, says Margaret Wilkinson, did not give to us from his crops tu much as he shared with us from abundance. There was a chanpe ft: ther down, she adds, but along tli upper stream, they shared with ui" Happiness is a state of mlml statement of triteness uml in searc' of it Oregon travels to beach nn I mountain. Happiness is elsewhere . usually, seldom to be found when he who wishes it habitually is, bi t few who dwell here would seek i! on the Willamette in a home-mac flat-bottomed boat; yet few woui: find the happiness these two pei sons found, regardless of where th went. Much of it was due the! own contentment, but the rest w; r due to the river. Perhaps a less skillful writer tluir Margaret Wilkinson, or one wlioci observing eye was less subtle, wouli! find little rapture to reminisce over. -No doubt a great deal of the charm of her story is in her own charm of retelling, for she has a pro nounced charm that is light an'! happy. The big point is that Ore gon should be grateful for thf character she has given a rivtr within the state. Kl'HOPE LIKK9 COWBOY HOOK With the approach of the Pendle ton roundup, Charles Wellington Furlong, author of "Let 'Kr Buck,' tv.story of that famous annual tour nament so accurate and realist!' that even cowboys have been known to thrill at its reading, Is hack It: Oregon again, keenly anticipating the coming festivities. "Let 'Er Buck" was first published last year just before the roundup and almost Immediately went into its second printing. Now Colonel Furlong is busy reading copy for a third reprinting, which will be slightly revised. The publishers have had more than one surprise since the book wa put on. For Instance, the volume has had a surprisingly larse European sale, and omy a (r days ago an order came from Belgrade. Servia. Taking the western product as the typical American, the book is nterpreted as expounding American life as It really was before It became too tame, and Englishmen, especi- B:1y, have prajped It gPneronly iohTTprocured