1 .1 THE SUNDAY OREGOXIAX, PORTLAND, SEPTE3IBER 17, 1922 MAN HELD STRANGE COMPOUND OF MAJESTY AND MEANNESS Deepest and Best Thing Is Kinship to God, Declares Dr. W. T. McElveen Richest Kingdom and Greatest Field of Discovery Is His Own Soul Perfection Is. to Be Goal. REV. WILLIAM T. McBLVEEN". Ph. P First Congregational Church, Park and Madison 8treets. "And God said. Let us make man in our imag-e. Genesis. 1:26. "Be ye perfect as your Father who is m heaven is perfect. Matthew. 5:48. TWO texts one from the Old Tes tament and the other from he New Testament are- to direct our thought this morning. In the first statement we overhear God talking with himself. The solil oquy has to do with - the facul ties and capacities with which human nature is to be equipped. The Heavenly Father is medi tating on how great and glorious a being he can make of man. He makes a proposition to himself. He declares one of his great Inten tions. He tells us of his plan for man. "And God said, let us make man in our image." What does that mean? It means something great. It means more than we can yet fully say. It means that man in some re spects resembles God. It means that God and man are in some importn.nl particulars alike. The words are simple, but their significance is sublime. Noble as are many of th domestic animals and depraved as are many of the savage races, thera is something in every human being that is not in the highest animals. The greatness of God proclaims the greatness of man, for he quality which distinguishes man from the other beings of this earth is a qual ity which he shares with God. God manufactured this earth, but he did not manufacture human spirits. We are in a different sense the children of God from what the beasts and the birds are. The difference is a greal difference. There is more danger in thinking too lightly of our relations to God than in thinking too seri ously of them. There is some kind of a bond which holds us to God: some kind of a void in us that aches. This Freedom, by A. S. M. Hutchinson. Little, Brown A Co.. Boston. Mass. Should A. S. M. Hutchinson, author of "If Winter Comes" and a new novel, "This Freedom," which is here considered, desert the pursuit of literature and take after archi tecture for recreation, there is no doubt but he would not only build interesting and decorative houses. but also strong buildings on founda tions firm and solid. His houses would be good houses. They would last a long time. Per haps the prospective tenants of those houses might grow impatient watching the care, slow and pains taking, with which the workmen placed the foundation for the more graceful and ornamental portions of these houses. But no prospective tenant could be dissatisfied with a Hutchinson house when once it had been completed. No reader can ever be actually dissatisfied with a Hutchinson novel when once it has been read. This is perhaps the most notice able feature .in Hutchinson's tech nique his careful preparation through a good half of both his novels, and then a dramatic devel opment that surges forward with terrific force, hurling his persons upon gray crags. Waves move across the water slowly and deliberately, gathering strength through monotony, but when they come at last to the suore line, there is ever something mag nificent in the final break, just before they come tumbling and seething upon the rocks and sand. So with the two situations in "This Freedom" a careful analysis of a present-day problem, which is so sincere and sympathetic, it would not be too extravagant praise to recommend the book as a part of the fcurriculum in every advanced educational institution in this country. This quotation from the acts of the apostles appears upon the title page, "With a great sum obtained 1 tnis freedom." "This freedom" is the independ ence desired and obtained by Rosa lie, whose development is consid ered to the exclusion of all things else through the entire story. Perhaps Hutchinson settles the question, perhaps he doesn't. He most certainly presents the ques tion fairly and accurately, and of fers there much material for inti mate study. The action of the story is not deferred as long as it was in "If Winter Comes." but though devel oping slowly, seems to start at the very beginning. The progress is with a more even movement, ascend ing with certainty to a powerful climax, but there is not the con trast of "If Winter Comes," which, when the catastrophe did become evident, soared as the eagle for one brief instant before a crash. "This Freedom" is tragedy trag edy redeemed in an epilogue. Here as in the former novel Hutchinson permits himself to indulge in several literary mannerisms, without which the artistry of hs work would be more sincere. The insinuation in the first novel of a character entirely unnecessary, uninteresting, laborious, garrulous and many such unpleasant things ai ways seemed in poor taste. In "This Freedom'" the style is fre quently "gushing." Perhaps Rosalie thought in that bubbling fashion, but it is not consistent with her charaoter to believe this when she was so clearly suited to the posi tion of bank manager and was so apt in finance and the intricacies of insurance. The story would be marred with telling the problem would be dis turbed by half-baked discussion. But here are live people in real situa tions. Those who would occupy this building examine first the founda tion. , ."olio in Society, by George S. Chappell. G. P. Putnam's Sons. New Tork city. The friends of little Rollo, who followed and derived much enter tainment from his adventures down on the farm and along the country side in general, will sit up and take notice at the announcement that Hollo is now in society and doing surprisingly well. That is, surpris ingly according to most debuts, but not at all ,o when Rollo's charm a.nd complete naivete are taken into consideration. Rolio s a complete success when his family takes him to New York to live, and he does the city n, every phase, Greenwich village, Mr. Ritz's restaurant, the football game between the Yales and the Prince tons and even a romance - which Rollo manages quite adroitly ii, spite of his tender years For those who have not followed Rollo now is the time to start, for his city career is by far the most engaging that he has thus far had. Rollo is a little boy who asks quite natural and quite logical questions, much to the consternation of his uncomprehending parents. George Chappell baa well proven his mis- until God fills it. - Whatever has happened since man's start, God's intention for man was exceedinglj grand. Man' is made in the image of God He is a fac-simile in little of God He is a miniature replica of the Eternal Father. There are powers in human nature that are copies in small' of the almighty powers of the Infinite One. Man in God's intention Is to be a glorious God-like being. We are fearfully and wonderfully made. No one can indicate the outei rim of our innumerable moral possl- bilities. We are "beings of large discourse looking before and after." The Pattern for Man. Man existed in God's thought be fore he actually lived. In God's mind there was an idea of what man was to be and to become. Every thing was first a thought. The idea of a thing "Is the necessary first half and a very important half of a thing. Stevenson's engine existed in the inventor's mind long before it worked in his shop. Before the place for the foundation is dug and the material for the building is as sembled the architect pictures in his mind and then on paper how the edifice will look. Our first text per mits us to see God's design of man before he really made him. It is a peep at the mental picture of man as he was divinely anticipated and contemplated before he Decame a flesh and blood being. ' And our second text throws a ray of illuminating light upon that same picture. "Be ye perfect as your Heavenly Father Is perfect," urged Jesus. That statement is a mandate, yet it indicates what it is possible for us to become. It is a behest, yet it declares that man is a being of al most infinite capacity and reach. In deed, this command which at first thought seems impossible of obed ience is a splendid eulogy of our hu man nature. It intimates that we are capable of more than we think. It implies that there is much more tery cf humor, and there aiv it lines in the small volume which are not full of it. Mr. Chappell has a pleasant way cf coming in the back door with his little jests and putting them on the dining room table, as it were, for the inspection of his readers. This book ts an account of the many sur prises due a small boy used to coun try life who moves to the city and plunges into the whirl of sophisti cated society. The Old House, by Cecile Tormay, trans lated from the Hungarian by E. Tor day. Robert M. McBrido & Co., New York city. A story of a time 70 years ago. written in distinctly modern style, with even some of the characters showing modern characteristics and trends of thoughts, is very apt to be a bit incongruous in spots. In fact, it is a wonder that Cecile Tor may has so nearly succeeded in avoiding such a misstep and so well leflected the atmosphere of the mid dle eighties with twentieth century literature, iir technical sense. At times the persons of the story, and especially the women, Anne EJIwing Illey, act or think in a very modern way, and the barrier which rears tself between illev and his wife through mere failure to understand each other is distinctly of the mod ern novel of current times. How ever, those same barriers may just as well have constituted domestic problems a hundred years ago as now. Cecile Tormay writes in European A. S. M. Hutchinson, vrhoae new novel, "This F'reedom," has just been published by Little, Brown & Co. flavor with an exceedingly light touch; a touch that is often so light as to assume fantastical proportions and to give an effect of shadows in stead of living persons; shadows projected on the wall of thought in rather huge outline. But the story loses nothing by these slight de fects, and the line of thought is never lost even if the exemplifying acts are sometimes grotesque. If the touch is light it is sure and the story succeeds in telling itself with considerable strength. Christopher Ulwing was a builder who built a town and a fortune to gether arid left his fortune to a weak son. The story concerns the disintegration of the family, and this gradual process is told, well seasoned with romance and drama. Readers should bear in mind. at the outside that they are not confront ed with American fiction, but the entirely different type of continen tal novel. If this is considered the book may well be thoroughly ap preciated. An Introduction to Economic History, by N. S. B. Gras. Harper & Brothers. New York city. Written in a practical, concrete and very simple style, this new text book on the economic history of civilization has certain points which should make it distinct in its class. It was designed for beginning stu dents of economcs and the interest ed novice and its facile explana-' tions and expositions are entirely comprehensible. The author has his own ideas, of course, and he puts them forth. ! While the book is pri mary it is thorough. It is well-indexed and catalogued, with ade quate tables of notes and references. Wintergreen. by Janet Laing. Ths Cen tury company. New York city. There is a deal of fussing around to establish characters and settings in the first 100 pages that seems tedious, but in spite of such a handicap "Wintergreen" turns out to be a very good book of light fic tion. It is farcical in character, and one is apt to say something about a tempest in a teapot if not in a farcical mood. That, however, is apparently just what the author sea I III in us than we have yet encompassed. It denotes the spaciousness of our prospects and the range of our pos sibilities. It suggests that the rise of man may be endless; that he may ever grow toward God: that he can ever have more and more abundant life, and that eventually he may ul timate in God. The old catechism in quired, "What is the chief end of man?" And the answer, you recall, was. "Man's chief end is to glorify God and to enjoy him forever." But the answer of the catechism told but half of the truth. We are to do more than to enjoy God forever; we are to grow in his likeness forever and forever. We are to grow for ever in the image of our Heavenly Father. We are to be one with him. We are to be identified with him, not as a drop becomes part of the great ocean; we are never to lose our identity or our individuality. We are ever to become more our selves and more like our Heavenly Father God is the end of man. He is the goal which man is to proxi mate by a process of endless becom ing. Man's Future. The Christian character is to have a future, a glorious future. It doth not yet appear what we shall be. There are forces within us of which we have never dreamed and which we have never yet set operating. Our nature is an unsounded deep. Humanness is but very imperfectly manifested in ourselves and in our contemporaries. We have but be gun to be. No man except Jesus ever completely expressed his full self. "Man is not man as yet." He has put forth but a few of his pow ers. At least nine-tenths of ms na ture is as yet undeveloped. He is the crown and climax of creation; yet he is largely a bundle of possi bilities. Man is a strange compound of majesty and meanness, weakness and power, transiency and trans- cenciancy. AS nr. 4 .nnson sus-srests. aimed at. for the story goes far in showing from wliat small be ginnings large misunderstandings grow. Wintergreen, in the person of Miss Julia Glenferlie, is of good sound Scotch parentage and a spin ster, she is an exceedingly good character, well-drawn and ade quately done. Past 50 years of age she discovers that her resources are suddenly limited and decides to go secretly away and enter domestic service. In the house where she finds employment, she also finds life much disturbed and goes about setting it to order for the various persons involved. For this sort of thing Wintergreen, as she comes to be called, has an amazing knack. She shows the doctor's wife the way to regain the doctor's love, and while she brings the coffee for an other man to slip a poison powder in, she calmly makes him want to live a while longer. There is a double love story, which :it first is criss-crossed, but which Wintergreen straightens out quite nicely, and in the end she does herself a great deal of good and is enriched by more sound friends than she ever dreamed Ipf having. While the book is not strong and will not be a best seller by a long shot it has its merits. An Intrndnction to the Htudy of Labor Problems, by Gordon S. Watkins. The T-.omas Y.. Crowell company. New York city. While all text books are complete in a sense. Professor Watkins, who holds the second chair of economics at the University of Illinois, has provided in this particular volume a great deal more than 'a found in the average, and while it is primarily a text book there is also probability that it wll be found useful for em ployers and employes as well, for i is a sound and broad discussion ot all the elements which go to make up the relations between la bor and capital. The author has divided his work into three parts; the nature and de partment of labor problems; the an alysis of thj problem, and the agen cies and methods of readjustment. There are few, if any, of the factors which go to make up the one big problem, which have been omitted. Labor's side is discussed from the viewpoint of 11 ving ' stands, wages, social science and many other angles and the position of the employer is considered from all sides. The author turns over both the individ fal and the national aspects, and emphasis is placed upon the social implications of the problem and the necessity for social control. The l ook should prove both valuable and timely. Crime. Its Cause and Treatment, by Clar ence Darrow. The Thomas Y. Crowell company, New York city. There are a number of points in the treatise by Mr. Darrow, a crim inal lawyer of 40 years' experience, that will arouse discussion in that circle of readers who are interested in the suppression," cure and gen eral treatment of crime. His main contention is that crime has causes in every instance, and that the study of crime should first be directed to these causes as a preventative meas ure rather than to the subject of j punishment. Mr. Darrow leaves no doubt in the reader's mind that he is against the prison as a place of punishment, although it may have its uses as a place of isolation for the criminal. His theory of the cause of crime concerns the delinquent and defec tive. Environment, he claims, has far more to do with the situation than heredity, and he denies the theory of existence of a criminal type. Aside from the merit or value of hie findings, the book contains a good discussion of crime and crim inals, based on bare fact and devoid of opinion. It is a good survey of criminal conditions, and throws much light on various problems having to do with moral reforma tion. Why Europe Leaves Home, by Kenneth ,L. Roberts. The Bobbs-Merrill com pany, Indianapolis, Ind. It is scarcely realized that the individual magazine stories of Mr. Roberts carry such strength and weight until they are read as essays in book form, and this recent vol ume conveys the impression of depth and reliable insight, espe- Third Printing ELINOR GLYN'S Newest and Greatest Novel MAN and MAID AT ALL BOOKSTORES 92.00 J. B. Llpplncott Co.,-Publishers ftoQk$ Iprocvred reviewed at- Z? GUVS may "Man is both a groveler on the earth and the gazer at the sky." Man is composea or two elements- one grain of dust to one of deity. But essentially man is not dust; he divine. He is not of the earth, but of God. The dust is there, but it is not the most important thing about man. The earth is there, but man will one day slough off all things earthly. Man lives in a body, but oy and bye he is to have a new and better embodiment. The deepest and best thing in man is his kinship to God. The greatest and finest ca pacity in man is his capacity for God. And that capacity is to unfold cumulatively until man ultimates in God. As man develops he will find tne ricnest kingdom and the great est field of discovery to be in his own soul. Perfection Men's Goal. Perfection is to be the goal of man. That is the far off divine event toward which all' creation moves. Man ' is to be made whole. Some, day in the remote future he is to become entire, lacking noth ing. Then he Is to be fully a par taker of the divine nature. When man's growth reaches its consum mation he will be more. than blame less; ,he will be complete in Christ. "We shall be like him when we shall see him as he is." That is what God had in mind when long ajro he said "Let us make man in our im age." That is what Jesus meant when he urged his disciples to jour ney steadily toward the perfection that they saw in God. "Be ye perfect as your heavenly father is perfect." That injunction is not the. moral prospectus of a fanatic; it is not the exhortation of an idle dreamer. It Is the edict of one who was the greatest and best of men and who ever knew what was in man. Jesus never said a contemptous word about human na ture. He never spoke of any man as being cheap or insignificant. He ever saw the divine handwriting on ciaily when the subjects are immi gration and post-war conditions ii Europe. Kenneth L. Roberts is something of a political observer, of a statis tician and of an historian. Above all he is a thorough and accurate reporter, and possesses the ability to blend politics, statistics, econom les and everyday life into a highly interesting kind of reading. His reviews of the conditions in Europe, accounts of emigration studies, interviews of authorities are informative and entertaining, and he writes apparently without preju dice. Why Europe Leaves Home, is but one of the essays which the volume contains, but it explains the reasons, from the European view point, for the tidal waves of emi gration which swept American shores before restrictions were in troduced. It also provides adequate word-pictures of the kind of emi grants and the kinds of places from which they came in greatest num bers. There is admirable frankness in Roberts" style, and this is strength ened with frank humor when he turns his light on the British liquor problems. His exposition of Eng lish beer drinking is subtly amus ing to the American, but not to the Englishman, and after piling up a mass of statistics against the English he multiplies them in the case of Scotch for Scots. All of the essays are decidedly clever. Ihe Day of the Beast, by Zane Grey. Harper & Brothers, New York city. An inspiration worthy of com mendation prompted Zane Grey in the selection of the theme for this last, and undoubtedly his best, novel. He combines in it the prob lems and the situations which con fronted the returned disabled sol dier and the hectic life which has been followed by the younger gen eration since the war. Daren Lane, a soldier who has no hope of pro longed life, returns home to find the circle of friends he lived among interested in nothing but the mad whirl of frivolous and frequently disastrous life they are in up to their necks. Both of these phases', that of the soldier and that of the flapper, are vital and important even outside the realm of fiction, and interdependent, just as Mr. Grey points out. That he should have combined them and written a strong and intelligent novel is, an exceedingly clever stroke, and the work he has pro duced will be one of the widely read books of the winter. One criticism which will be heard perhaps more often than any other is that Mr. Grey has condemned too freely and that he has taken a trend toward the prudish. Certainly it will be said that his preachment Is too prolonged. It is true enough that the flapper, male and female, has set a rather strenuous pace and that the speed has been too much for many virtuous children who have fallen from grace. But the age of jazz is not alto gether bad, and it would probably be better to condemn specifically rather than generally. Which brings back a criticism that was made of John Dos Passos' "Three Soldiers," that if only one such case existed as Mr. Dos Passos presented the book was warranted. Zane Grey's "The Day of the Beast," takes up the soldier In a slightly similar way. but in another part of his career, and let it be said that Mr. Grey ennobles the soldier. The same criticism can be used in this case. If there existed only one Middleville, with such life as is de picted, the book would be war ranted. It is more than a novel; it is a REX BEACH, HIS NEW FLOWING GOLD A ROMANCE of the oil fields as breathless and exhilarating as his great Alaskan f tories. A regular Rex Beach story ihe first Beach novel in several years. A story that every reader of The Spoilers and , The Silver Horde will want to read. A story that is typical of the author in its humor and vigor and wealth of dramatic incident. $2.00. HARPER & BROTHERS Established 1817 New York every soiled fragment of humanity He didn't ignore the mischief that sin was working in the human soul. but he insisted that there was some thing In man which when reinforced by a sense of God's presence would make man any easy match for every evil force that would reach out to wreck or ruin him. V The old orthodoxy used to say that there was. no moral health In man. It found a kind of pleasure in describing human nature as inher ently vile. Indeed, some of the old thinkers thought that by disparag ing the nobilities of human nature they magnified the nobility of God. Pascal was in his day one of man kind's greatest thinkers. Yet his favorite and frequent theme was the utter worthlessness of man and the transcendance of God. Calvin did some patient, persisent, penetrating thinking. Thinking men will ever be his debtors. But he said far too much about the depravity in men and too little about the divine in men. The theologians are not the only thinkers who err in this par ticular. Mr Huxley described man as if corruption was his father. Mr. Carlyle referred to the population of England as "thirty millions, mostly fools." Matthew Arnold looked down with contempt on all outside his own caste and called them "bar barians." Emerson declared that the worst of charity is that it pre serves lives that are not worth pre serving.' And there are still some preachers of the gospel who find more delight in talking about the acquired corription of human na ture than about its splendid possi- slbilities. Jesus Eulogise Man. Prnm the Una of the son of man none of these libeling and vili fying conceptions of human na t.ira cuar fall Rarhpr. .Tpriir indi cated that man's fundamental peril is that he shall not think enough of himself, and shall not believe in his own capacity for God. Jesus ever sermon and a good one, and the preacher is . Daren Lane, the wounded soldier. He returns to America to find- his sister, his fiancee and all his friends flappers past redemption, and he sets about devoting the last shreds of his fail ing strength to redeem them. There is no doubt that the cor ruption he findf is prevalent in every city in the country. It exists in Portland, and there is just such a gang of wolves here within our own city as Mr. Grey describes in Middleville. Fortunately, the ten dencies toward the immoral are but a slight one-half of 1 per cent of all life and the situation is not as alarming as might be supposed. As a novel "The Day of the Beast" is powerful and absorbing. Zane Grey will be discussed because of it more than he ever has been be fore. Xonsensorship, an Anthology of Criticism by Various Critics. G. P. Putnam's Sons. New York city. The reviewer must admit that it If appalling to pick up a book which contains the satirical explo sions of such a galaxy of writers. Censorship is frankly and daringly discussed by Heywood Broun, George S. Chappell, Ruth Hale, Ben Hecht, Wallace Irwin, Robert Keable, Helen Bullitt Lowry, Fred erick O'Brien, Dorothy Parker, Frank Swinnerton, H. M. Tomlin son, Charles Hanson Towne, John V. A. Weaver, Alexander Wolcott and the author of "The Mirrors of Washington." All of it is edited by G. P. Putnam, who lightened his enormous Job by editing In the same frank light with regard to censorship that the sundry and var- I ious authors wrote under. Censorship, or nonsensorship, of everything which is served non sensored Is discussed; i.. e., movies, the . stage, literature and mostly prohibition. The book, by the way, should be particularly interesting to Portlanders just at present be cause several of the list whose writings it contains are included in the Putnam party coming this way to view the great and glorious west and its adequate exponent, the Pen dleton Round-up. These are Wallace Irwin, George S. .Chappell, Charles Hanson Towne and Ruth Hale. There are also Hubbard Hutchin son, Walter Trumbull and John Held, the illustrator. But the book Heywood Broun talks of censorship of the movies because it cuts out the part which would create an aversion to just whatever sort of part it happened to be, as, for instance, a movie of a highwaymen which convinced Broun he didn't want to be one. Ben Hecht writes nimbly of how non sensorship ruined M. L. Mancken, and Ruth Hale says woman has come to the rescue because it has always been up to her to do the scheming and managing and now she can scheme and manage to get booze in spite of prohibition. Wal lace Irwin's best is perhaps his verses about the drinker's tummy, "My beautiful, sensitive tummy that once was so rosy and pure. My dainty, fastidious tummy O what you had to endure." Robert Keable, the writer who could write of a womaji's bosom but did not dare use a plural synonym, sets forth his case, and Helen Bullit Lowry writes of the uninhibited flapper. In such vein is all the book, a lively volume for the liberal mind ed and free thinkers. My Northern Exposure, The Kawav at the Pole, by Walter B. Traprock. G. P. Putnam's Sons. New York city. No sooner did the trusty Kawa get back from her long excursion in the South Seas . than ' she was put NOVEL urn reminded, men of .their divine par entage and destiny. He seemed to think that people were made strong er and better not by entertaining belittling opinions about themselves, but by having a quickening sense of what was possible for them to become. There is much more inspi ration in trying to get to the head of the class than there is in trying to remain at the foot of the class. "Be ye perfect," insisted Jesus. He didn't apologize for the audacity of that command. He Intimates that moral audacity is Just what the av erage man needs. He suggests that there is not enough dare and ven ture In our minds and spirits. This command to be perfect may look like an imperative that is impossi ble of accomplishment, but Jesus ever told men to do the impossible. One day he bade a man with a with ered hand to "stretch forth thine hand." But a palsied hand has too potency that will enable it to reach forth. However, as the paralytic tried to do as he was told, his weak arm and hand were thrilled with strength. The very effort to do the seemingly Impossible developed in the arm the power to do it. "Be ye perfect," urged Jesus. It is a steep, s,iff ascent he bids us climb. But it is God's- intention that we should steadily ascend toward the un reached. It is his plan that we go higher and ever higher. On, on, always on; that is God's command and desire. The mount of perfection is exceedingly high; higher than we now Know. But up its almost vertical slope it Is God's will that we should climb. We will not reach the summit during this earthly life. For years that are here granted us are too few to match the expansive possibilities ot our souls To satisfy all our spiritual ambitions arid to translate our ever- increasing ideals into realities we will need to live as long as God lives. But if the divine within has been awakened and vitalised we will into drydock to have her barnacles removed and to receive a coat of Eskimo oils preparatory to her dash for the pole, and let it be said at the start that she got there and back again, neither a sadder nor a wiser ship. If Walter E. Traprock keeps on sailing the Kawa at such a .phodigious rate the shipping board will get him if he doesn't watch out. Already whisperings are heard about the authenticity of the au thor's claim to have reached the pole, but these will no doubt cease now that the book is published, be cause the sincerity and frankness of the chronicler and the valuable col lection of photographs of scenes of Arctic life are proof enough to con vince even the most skeptical. Just as surely did the Kawa'i crew reach the pole as did the Kawa cruise the tropical waters. And still more convincing proof is that when Mr. Traprock reached the pole and reached out to grasp it, he found three fingers frozen to it. He gave one each of these to three Eskimo women whom he found living beneath the pole, as keepsakes, although they were not kept very long. The bottle, he af terwards explains, was tied to the pole. Nerve-racking and frightful ar the terrible experiences recounted, adventures which have daunted for mer searchers for the pole. The crew gave way to mutiny and ran off with everything but the shred ded wheat biscuits; the women of the north fell fast and furiously for the explorers, fighting for the and when won, caressing them roughly but not too roughly. The whole book is a vivid picture of Arctic life as found north of "Eighty-six Sixty or Sink," written wit:, a conscientious concern for minute detail. Dr. Traprock kept his dairy with the utmost care and wrote the book after he returned. But if the pictures were taken in New York the ice bill was the most frightful experience of the whole trip. Claim Number One. George W. Ogden. a. c. McClurg Co., Chicago. The excitement which went with the huge drawing for government land allotments is well portrayed in tnis book of rather light, typical western fiction. There is a pleas ant little love story running through it, combined with the influence which- the suspense of waiting for the drawing for what is for many tne last chance. The scene is laid in a mushroom city which has sprung up with the announcement of the allotment and there fs a great deal of the wild life and fighting and gambling which were supposed to go with such affairs. Safe Put In Ice Box to Loot. PEORIA. 111. Using slabs of ba con as skids, burglars last night slid a safe of the Chicago Beef com pany into an ice box. where they looted It of $100, while accomplices stood In front of the building and fired many packages of fieeworks. You are cordially invited to attend the informal public reception in honor of the distinguished group of visiting literary people from the east, in the book department of the J. K. Gill company, corner of Third and Alder streets, from 2 to 3 o'clock on the afternoon of September 18. Among the distinguished visitors will be George Pal mer Putnam, Frederick O'Brien, George S. Chappell, Ruth Hale, Charles Hanson Towne, Hubbard Hutchin son, Ralph Barton, Wallace Irwin, Charles Wellington Furlong and Walter Trumbull. Immediately after the reception will occur the cere monies of the laying of the cornerstone of the new build ing to be occupied by the J. K. Gill company at Fifth and Stark streets. -lTiilllillMiliiiiiilllll'lllll!lill.iiii!ii.iMii.lli''ili : I have all the time there ever -will b anywhere to Journey gladly yet toll Isomely toward this far-off goal. Be perfect. That is a command. But every command that Jesus issued was a prophecy in the Im perative mood. Every precept he gave us was also a promise. Every obligation he Imposed upon us was also a privilege. For with the de mand ha bestows the adequate grace to fulfill it. He) requires nothing which 1 not eventually cer tain of achievement. The hesitant doubting Thomas exclaimed, "Lorn, we know not whither thou goest, and how can w know the way?" Because we know Jesus Christ we know the goal and the way. and we are empowered to climb up and on until we reach the goal of perfec tion. What is man? There are two ways of answering that old query. Yon may describe man as he now actual ly exists, or you may describe man as he exists ideally in the divine mind. Some men and women as they at present exist do seem to be In significant. But if you will think of what they might be and ought to be, and what God intended they should be you will know them to be potentially divine. The essential nature of man, what ia it? Is man essentially a bundle of animal appe tites and passions that live for a little while in a body of bone and muscle that Is lighted by a flicker ing candle of intelligence? Is that all that can b said about a man? No, man is not simply animal stuff plus mental stuff. Behind the flesh there is a mua of moral possibili ties. Back of the mind there is a capacity for the divine. Wordsworth, the poet, sang of little babes Tralllnr clouds of (lory da we come From God who Is our home. And In singing thus Wordsworth proved himself to be a seer. For all human spirits do date from God. Aristotle defined man as a political animal. Seneca defined man as a THE LITERARY PERISCOPE BY JEN'NETTE KENNEDY, distant in the Circulation Department, Public Library. W HAT is electricity, gentle men?" asked Professor Tait at the beginning of a iec- tare one day, at the same time fix ing his eye on a certain idle etu dsnt, who nervously stammered out, "I did know, sir, but I have for gotten." ""What a tragedy!" said Tait. visibly swelling: "the only man in this world who ever knew what eiectrlclty was and he has forgot ten." This story Is told in connec tion with John Mills "Within the Atom, ' a publication which treats very fully of present theories or tne nature of matter and electricity. A story of Jane Austen's youth with uncorrected spelling, Kngliah and arrangement, has come to light and is to be published this month. It is declared to be "an uproariously funny -book," and will be published under the title, "Love and Friend ship." with a preface by Gilbert Chesterton. The recent death of W. H. Hud son at his home in London deprives the world of letters of a very un usual producer in that field, a fa ii.ou.s naturalist, whose books on bird life are widely read, a novelist whose "Green Mansions" alone is a valuable addition to the literature of fiction and a writer whose gift for biography is shown in his de lightful memoirs of his boyhood life in South America, "Far Away and Long Ago." s. Hugh Walpole sto begin a serial publication of what he himself de scribes as "'Fragments of Auto biography" in the October "Book nun." The title is "The Crystal Box'" iu advance notices compare it very favorably with his novels. e The letters of that brilliant critic cf literature and art. James Gibbons Huneker. are to appear in Scrlbner's Magazine very soon and should prove a delight to the readers who enjoy his quick flashes of wit, and his alert interest in the new and un hackneyed. a The author of "The Love-Story of Aliette Brunton." Gilbert Frankau, confesses to the exhaustion which literary effort brings on. He says, "for a whole fortnight after the completion of that novel, I was so nervous that I dared not put a horse at a fence." A philanthropic millionaire , who desires to stimulate the Intelligence of his contemporaries could not use his money better," says Edwin E. Siosson, "than to place a set of J. Arthur Thomson's The Outline of Science' In every community in the country. m m m The Three Lovers'" is Frank Pwtnnerfnn's new ftill-lenirth novel. Invitation to the Public social animal. Jesus and h; apostles defined man as a fella ems animal. Man's Intrinsic. Inalienable and t am I u'nrlh la heat vwnre.aed h V the simple scripture phrase, "child of God." Perhaps man Is physically de scended from a long line of unnum bered animal ancestors who hsvs been slowly transformed throufh successive eons of geologic lime. But man is more than a product of nature; he more than a member of the species; he l the offspring of God. He Is not a hopeli-s brute or a triumphant angel. Ha Is a wound til, growing. stniKgllng. aspiring. .rrllual being. Memory tells htm of many past failures and some lew moral achievements. But his en lightened imagination palms for him vivid pictures of lessons learned from his mIMakea and ureal attain ment accomplished by the help of God. His deepr. flnrr Instincts urn him on. His ever receding Ideals allure him on. God within pushes him on, Christ, the ideal man. ths perfect man, God's thouaht of what a man should be, ever beckons him to come up hlirher. It Is a great thing to be a human being because a human being can always be a yet greater human bs Inr. I,lfe as 'we know It la at it hlirhMt and heat In man. Hut human life, because it is Indwelt and energ ised by God. will ever seek fuller and finer expression. Man, neraus of the divine within, la to express himself ever more completely as tne millenla roll on. What a wonderfu, thing la life! It has Ine. hauat this nnMlhihtlu. It la full of nrnmlae. It may become ampler and finer. Its significance lies far less In whst It Is than In what It mar hwnmi A' few hundred thousand years ago life's best expression was perhaps an ape. A few hundred thousand years from now life's finest expres sion will be a God-like man "Command" Is William McKee's latest sea story. "Lillian" is Arnold Ben nett's most recent humorous presen tation of lore and marriage, "The Cathedral" Is Hugh Walpole s study of the characters In a cathedral town, and Jeffery Karnol has a lata story called, " Peregrine s Progress." A new bonk on South America la Hiram Bingham's "Inca ltnd." and a volume of essays, which sounds Interesting. Is St. John Krvlnes "Some Impressions of My Elders." Evidently John t. Works was not satisfied with Mr. Gilbert Chester ton's analysis of '"What's Wrong With the World." all explained quits definitely several years before ths war. for Mr. Works has Just pub lished a -What's Wrong With ths World" Indictment of his own. Hs blames the wrongs of today on tha morals of this generation, and Its pleasure-seeking madness. "Ksst of Sues." by W. Hntnrrit Maugham is to appear simultaneous ly this month in book form, and as a play, on ths New York stage. It Is the result of Mr. Maugham's trav els In China, for hs seeks his ma terial in far-away places. "W never notice advertisements until the things they advertise srs familiar to us," Is Mr. Frank rtwln nerton's rsther novel stltude towsrd publicity. a Some autumn puhllcaf Ions of John Masefleld's will be "The Prnm." a poem. Illustrated by his daughter, and "Molloney Holtspur: or, Ths Pangs of iove," a play dealing with the lives and loves of two genera tions, and demonstrating the theme that "the sins of the fathers shall ba visited upon the children." In Seton Gordon's "Amid Snowy Wastes." hs tells of the cl f f loit it t - of coal mining on the Ire-bound no. man's land of Spitsbergen. lis speaks of going from the surface warmth and sunshine domn Into ths shaft of a mine which was lntenaelr cold "like a refrigerator." with walls hung with hoar frost and icicles. He relates that the mines may be worked without supporting timbers behind the "working facs." on account of ths solidly froi-n ground. "Lord Northcllffe. the Man." ts characterised in an excellent an alysis by Fllson Young In "The Sat urday Review." Among the things hs observes are: "Lord Northcllffe was an idealist, but no poet. . . He never tired his public; whatsvot tuns hs was piping, hs knew how to stop Just before his audleno had got tired of It and break Into anothsr key. . . Hs was alwsys young, and wielded his great powers In a elmpla and nautrsl way. never wearying In that enjoyment of them which is ths truest gratitude and piety towards life "'