9 SEARCH FOR LIGHT ON LIFE BEYOND GRAVE IS PASTOR'S TOPIC Rev. John H. Boyd Discusses Quest of Mind for Revelation and Speaks of Development in Christ-Likeness. TIIE SUXDAT OREGONIAN, PORTLAND, JUNE 6. 1915. Ol'n DEAD." Fradiel In tfc First Presbyte rian Church, Portland, Or, Mar 23, 1915. FOREWORD. This sermon is the record ef thoughts born of a sorrow, tem pered and sweetened by Chris tian confidence. It claims for it self no worth, beyond that of a candid exposure of a. faith which sheds light in a dark place; and of my own heart's attempt to think today of one who yester day walked with me in holiest fellowship, and wrought with me the willing tasks of his kingdom. If others shall find my faith helpful, and my best thought of "Our Dead" comforting, I shall be satisfied. JOHN H. BOYD. Texts. Second Corinthians 6:8 "We are of good courage, I Bay, and are willing rather to be sbaent from the body, and to be at horn with the Iord." Phllippians 1:23 "I am In a strait betwixt the two, having the desire to depart and be with Christ; for It is very far better." Klrst Epistle of John 3:2 "Beloved, now are we children of God. and it is not yet made manifest what we shall be. We know that, if he shall be manifested, we shall be like him; for -we shall see him even as he la." . Ktrxt Corinthians, 13:13 "Now atoldetn faitb. hope love, these three; and the createst of these la love." BY im. JOHN H. BOYD. Taator First Presbyterian Church. WHEN the anxieties of sickness have given place to the realities of death, and the precious body lies silent and pallid upon the bed, or lias been shut away in the prison house of the tomb and no longer responds to the call and ministries of affection: when the soul which we knew and loved can no longer be reached by the Ave nues of sense, then those that! live on and love enter into a. state of eager, yearning question ing. I do not mean that bitter ques tioning which arises from distrust of the goodness and wis dom of God; I do not mean the outcry of doubt which won- Dr. jot,m M- BoyaU aers wnetner tnere is life beyond the grave. I speak of another state of mind, an other form of questioning. In this there is no doubt of immortality. In fact, there is an intenser conviction, a firmer assurance that life does continue be yond the grave. I speak of that in stinctive, irresistible wondering and outreaching of the yearning mind which desires to follow the dead into the new abode of life, to know where they are, and to understand how they live and what they lo, in order that we may imagine and sympathize with the new forms of joy and blessedness into which the loved ones have entered. - Now, just when the mind enters upon this eager questioning, it meets a most OPERA ARTISTS BEGIN SCRAMBLE IN SEARCH OF HOMES FOR SUMMER Light Offerings Held Forth in a Few Theaters Except Standard, Where Excellent Company Is Presenting Such Classics as "Cloches de Corneville" Madame Fremstad, Born in Norway, Now More American Than Ever. BY EMILIE FRANCES BAUER. NEW YORK. June 5. (Special.) The conditions In the musical world at present have resolved themselves into wild scrambles son the parts of the artists to find Summer homes, aa many of them fully believed that the war would be over by the time Summer was here, but, unfor tunately, this dream of bliss was not to be fulfilled. Most of them are in search of quiet resorts, a thing that is difficult to find In the East, and. to quote Madame Amato, who no doubt voices the feel ings of others: "We roust find a home that will al low Mr. Amato to take complete rest, es he has never had a more compli cated season and he has studied a num ber of new roles, as well as new oratorio roles, which means, of course. In Escamlllo. in French, and several In English. He has filled a great many engagements in private musicales and his list of festivals, coming just when the season was over, and, beyond this, just when his heart was torn with the agony of conditions in Italy, it has made it impossible for us to accept the vast number of invitations which we have had for Summer, and we must take a quiet home where he can begin his study for next season. If people think that the life of an opera singer is a quiet one. they should see the activity of Mr. Amato. who never stops working from the minute the eeason ends nntil it opens. Only when he Is on the steamer, where he must be away from things, does he get any rest, and this year he cannot have that. The boys are happy at the Idea of a Summer home in. America, and all I think of is the possibility to get a few hours of rest." a Summer opera has come and gone In most cases, including the Aborns, who closed In Brooklyn without com ing to New York. Light opera holds forth in a few theaters, including the Standard, where a. most excellent company is present ing such old classics in the way of light opera as "Cloches de Corneville," "Mikado" and "Erminie." Incidentally it may be said that the chorus is made up of members of the old Century Com pany and is as well equipped on upper Broadway as they were on the Circle. Dorothy Morton, the well-known comic opera star, is in the title role, and the company is more than ordinarily good throughout. The only question that presents itself is how far Summer at tractions are affected by the tremen dous rush into moving pictures. One sees nothing . else advertised, hears nothing else discussed, and. as a matter of fact, the newspapers devote them selves as seriously to dramatic crit icism so far as moving pictures are concerned as they do to the real thing. But for those who still enjoy the Id melodies, such as those Just heard in the "Bells of Corneville." Erminie" and next week "The Chocolate Soldier." the performances at the Standard will be a relief. Jose "Van den Berg is the conductor and Mr. Conger is the director. Max Rablnofr is planning a consid erable departure from the manner in which the last tours of the great Rus sian dancer, Pavlowa. have been con ducted. A musical feature will be added by which several first-claBS operatic artists will appear with Madame Pavlowa and her company. Those already engaged include Marie Nedllzoa, lyric soprano of the Imperial Opera of St. Petersburg: Rlccardo Martin, of the Metropolitan Opera Honse. and Maggie Tayte, the English soprano. The form of entertainment, which will be given is new in this country, and may be called grand opera, in which dancing and pantomime are given equal importance with the vocal find instrumental numbers. These are baffling and painful experience, an In capacity to think. We cannot think at such an hour. We cannot adequately think at any hour. Whatever we have known of the life of that mind and spirit whom we loved and treasured was associated with a body, it was in relationship to earthly things, it was a physical presence, but now the bodily form lies in the silence and darkness of the grave, the spirit is otherwhere. We find, ourselves utterly incapable of conceiving of the place, or of the mode of life into which the spirit has entered. How can one hear without ears? How can one see without eyes? How is the spirit related to a euper sensuous, spiritual environment, as the physical was related to a physical en vironment here in the earth.? There is no answer, the mind is driven back, defeated. It has no categories of thought, no powers of conceiving, and hence In attempting to pursue the dis embodied soul into the realms of the spirtual. it comes back, utterly baffled. Then, the imagination takes up the task. The lonely, bereft heart of grief thinks of a land of green fields, and beautiful trees, tremulous under the touch of soft airs; of flowering vales, with bubbling springs and singing brooks; or else it pictures an all-glorious, radiant, perfect city as in the Apocalypse of John; but no sooner does the Imagination yield itself to the de lights of these conceptions than rea son acts and reminds the imagination that there can be Bo reality in these things. The help of fancy is vain. Silence of the Bible. Then once again, impelled by sor row's desirei grief turns to the in spired revelation. Surely in the Book of God, which addresses itself . to the common need of humanity, there will be light on these hidden things. Within the Old Testament, there Is no help whatsoever. Not a satisfying word or image only vague suggestion shadowed, formless, fearful. In the New Testament, Jesus assures us of the triumph of life over death. He brings life and immortality to light, but he never opens a door that leads Into the other world and shows what really lies there. Laiarus spent four days In the world beypnd, and returns, but ever after ward is mute. Sacred writers tell of the "rest which remains," of "the "HeavenHes," of being "caught up into Heaven," of "Christ sitting on the right hand of God," but never srttempt to supply information concerning,- the world beyond which in any degree is definite and satisfying. John dreams in apocalyptic vision of a city with its walls of jasper, of radiant glory, of palms and golden streets, but we know that John never designed such imagery to be a de scription of the eternal residence of the souL o we come back from reve lation, disappointed, frustrated. There is nothing in all the word of God, be yond poor, faulty, earthly symbol, to tell us of what lies beyond the grave. No Symbol of Hevelatlain. Why this silence of the Bible? Be cause of the intrinsic, essential impos sibility of revelation. Before a thing can be revealed, there must be a lan guage and a symbol of revelation. Be fore the mind can conceive and under stand, there must be an essential ca particularly well known in Russia, where the terpsichorean element Is ac corded the first place. Among those who have written works of this sort are Auber, Rachmaninoff and Joseph Holbrooke, the English composer, who wrote from a scenario conceived by Mr. Rabinoff. The Auber work is called "The Dumb Girl of Portlcl," and the Rachmaninoff mi mo-dramatic-grand opera is called "Aleko" the gypsies). The Holbrooke work, which will have its world pre mier by this organization next Fall, will be called "The Enchanted Garden." The company now being formed will Include the Pavlowa Ballet Russe. con sisting of 52 members, operatic prin cipals, the former orchestra and chorus of the Boston Opera-house, Ignaz Cooper, first conductor of the Imperial Russian Opera of St. Petersburg, and the stage director will be RyBzard Ordynski, long the chief colleague of Max Reinhardt. The company will open early next October in New York City. a m Titta Ruffo, who has been singing all season at Havana, arrived in New York this week and is sailing for Buenos Ayres, where he will join Caruso, who is already delighting the audiences of South America, . While in New York the eminent baritone was considerably under the weather, but no doubt he will recover In time for the next sailing. Before this, however, it is understood that Ruffo will give two concerts in New York, either at the Manhattan Opera-house or at the Hip podrome. Madame Fremstad has decided t6 be an American, notwithstanding the fact that the country which she can claim as hers is still among the few neutral spots left in the world. Madame Frem stad says: "I am an American. It Is true that I wajr born In Stockholm, that my mother was Swedish and my father a Norwegian, and of course I studied In Germany, and in Germany I had my "first great successes in opera. FOE OF ROSE DESCRIBED AND REMEDY SUGGESTED Birth, Life and Ravages of Plant Louse Are Rehearsed and Effective Method of Eradicating Pest Pointed Out- Francis E. Blackwood-West. F. E. S., F. Z. S.. the author of the following article, was formerly Government entomologUt or Ceylon, scientific adviser to the Fruit Com mission of Australia, pathologist for the Society of Destruction of Diseases of Crops. Australia; chief of the investigation for the extermination of the house fly in Colombo, Ceylon. BY FRANCIS E. BLACKWOOD-WEST. THE aphis or plant louse is the pest most familiar to those who grow roses and I suppose there is hard ly a place in the world where roses are grown so abundantly or on such a large scale as in Portland. This pest breeds with wonderful rapidity and practic ally destroys not only the Individual rose, but the whole plant by sucking the juices from the tender leaves and stems and draining out the vitality of the plant. The lice or aphides are protected in their work by the ants, who guard the aphids and keep them in flocks, as men do cattle, tending them, carrying them back if they stray, and "milking" them by stroking them with their an tennae to obtain a jelly-like substance called honeydew. The ants will usually fiercely attack trespassers and the aphids are thus as sured of a protection which Nature has denied them, in return for which they supply their keepers with food. This aphid is a European species which has pacity within the mind, a faculty to receive. There is no language, there is no symbol to portray, there is no capacity within man's being to receive & revelation of the life lying? beyond death. The Imagination cannot con ceive, or intellect rationally accept, that which lies wholly beyond experi ence. The missionary to Siam endan gered his influence when he tried to make the King understand that In -the land from which he came the water sometimes became so hard that a man could walk upon It. It was so abso lutely contrary to the experience of men in Slam that the missionary was accounted a prevaricator and exagger ator. When a blind man 'was asked what he thought of the sound of a trumpet, he "said he thought it was scarlet showing his utter want of any capacity to conceive of color. When Henry W. Stanley came Into the great forest of Africa and there met the roaming bands of pigmies, who knew only of houses of wattles, or of branches and leaves, though he had mastered their language, he found himself utterly un able to communicate to them any con ception of the life -as men lived it in civilized England. He could not tell them of the great steamship by which he came to Africa. He could not tell them of the vast buildings, or of the commerce and inter-relationships of life, or of the spiritual content and idealisms of civilized life. There was no language, no symbol, no capacity within the pygmy to understand the modes and thoughts of civilization. We marvel at the silence of Revela tion. We are keenly disappointed be cause there is nothing in the Old Tes tament nothing in the words of the Master, nor in the writings of inspired apostles, nor in the visions or John naught in all the word of God which uncovers the dwelling-place of the dead or reveals their manner of life. This silence arises from the utter in capacity of language, of imagination, of reason. Revelation of such realities Is impossible. Some IlltunJnatlimr Truths. Is this the final word? Can we know nothing? Can we find no thought of loved ones departed in which our minds may rest and the bruiBed heart soothe itself? Yes, there is more to be said. There are truths and realities, in the word of God, when associated with an analysis and interpretation of the con tents and processes of our spiritual being, which will enable us to con struct a rational, satisfying idea of our dead, as they live and move and have their being in the unseen world. There are three lines of thought along which we may move with certainty. Beyond Change and Defeat. The first is this. They have entered into a state of permanency. I do not mean fixation or stagnation. I mean that they are blessed in a state free from all anxieties of change or of de feat. They are blessed with a sense of Infinite leisure and repose. They have come Into an existence where no hope is ever frustrated where no plan is ever broken, where .no task ever remains unfinished, where the limita tions of earth, the' checks and hin drances of failing time, -and disease, and weakness are unknown, and where every enterprise and hope and plan Notwithstanding all this, the greater part of my life I have passed in Amer ica, and I feel myself an American in all my sympathies. I have decided to include more American songs in m repertory than heretofore, and perhaps in that way I can really express the Americanism that is within me." Madame Fremstad has gone to the Maine woods to get away from th clang of the war news, as she want to study quietly on her programme for next season. She says that the war has made her a more ardent American. The German Saengerfest, which opened Saturday night in Brooklyn, has been one of the most Important musical events ever held by the United German Singing Societies. It is esti mated that not less than 15,000 people have been in attendance, and it is cer tain that there has never been a more elaborate list of soloists. Madame Gadski sang two numbers Saturday night, and five selections were given by a male chorus of 6000 singers. The soloists Monday night were Madame Schumann-Helnk and Herman Weil, both well-known operatic stars. In the afternoon a contralto, Edith Magee, ap peared with the chorus of 4500 school children, who were heard in choruses. Among the conductors were Carl Flque, Felix Jaeger, Ernst Schrupf ana others. The judges include Horatio Parker.' of Yale University; John Lund, of Burfalo; Louis Ehrgott, of Cincin nati; Kurt Schlndler, of New York, and other noted musicians. These united singers are competing for a prize sent by the Kaiser for this occasion. The Bach Festival at Bethlehem, under direction of Dr. J. Fred Wolle, closed Saturday night after one of the most successful performances ever given here. Dr. Wolle had the as sistance of the Philadelphia Orchestra. It will be remembered that Charles M. Schwab, who has made many musical enterprises successful, has stood behind Dr. Wolle, both in moral and material support. long been known as a pest of peach foliage in this country. ine lire nistory is as follows: The Winter is usually passed in the egg stage on one of the deciduous fruit trees. The eggs are small and oval and are laid in the axils of the buds. The first generation hatch in the early Spring ana multiply upon these buds and give birth to young all females called stemmothers. These stemmoth ers are all of a deep pink color and begin to give birth to living young. These young are a pale yellowish green and UBually there Js a medium and two lateral dark green stripes passing over the abdomen. About the middle of May, and often before, the third generation are born and become winged; they then leave the fruit trees and alight upon various succulent plants and vegetables, such as roses, snowball, astors, cabbages, tomatoes, celery, etc. All aphides die by late Fall, but the eggs are laid, and remain deposited until Spring when the same round of life Is repeated. Many remedies have been tried from fumigation to washing with soap and water, sprays of all manner are man ufactured, but most of them are use less. A good contact Insecticide Is the only safe and reliable spray to use, because the aphid is a sucking and soft bodied insect and therefore the Insecti cide must come la contact with its conceived will find its completion. Its uttermost fulfillment. This is the promise of the Apostle l PauL He says. "If the tent in which we are living should be suddenly borne down by the winds, if it shall be struck by the mystical hand of death and taken away, we are- going to move into a building of stone, erected by the hand of God himself." Or, in sweeter phrase, "They who are absent from the body are 'at home with the Lord." Oh. the words, "at home" to a lone, wearied traveler! You men who have been upon the road In pursuit of business, passing from city to city, from inn to inn, with constant changes of place and rela tionships, in hurry and worry of-rest-lestlesa living, the sweetest thing In your existence is the homecoming, be cause of the permanency of it, because change has passed. One of the most tragic elements of our life finds expression in that trem ulous threnody. Change and decay In all around we sea. Our affections are hindered and stifled; .Life's delicious marvels and treasures are taken from us by the inevitable changes that come to us. We form our plans. Some adverse event breaks them and they fall. I am looking into the faces of men and women who have dreamed sweet dreams of joy and repose in companionship with one you loved. When your for tune was made, the home was built, here on the mountain side or yonder on the plain, you would settle your self down and enjoy instead of this, emptiness and desolation have come. There are three kinds of homes among the habitations of men, the lowly cottage and its meagre, simple furnishings; the great mansion of wealth, with its splendid appointments; then there is the little cottage with furnishings large and magnificent. There has been some change of for tune here. Out of the wreckage the family has saved a. remnant of the old and better life. Beloved, our natures are like such homes, lowly, simple, but with magni ficent, divine furnishings. There is something within us too large for its earthly setting. There is need of another building. There is need to occupy the house builded by the hand of God, need of a home-coming. Oh! Blessed are these home-seekers of ours. Restless, tired, tearful and desolate, because of the change and stress and tain and sickness, they are at home. We. too. are coming home sometime. as our loved ones have come, into a state of permanency, where defeat and disappointment shall never frustrate, where sweet companionships are re covered, where hopes are all completed. and all tasks are accompnsnea. Companion! hip Wltm Christ. The second thought is this. I re peat, it is absolutely impossible for the mind to conceive of the place of the residence of the dead, or the forms and modes of their life, their activity, but, while we cannot know of the en vironment or place of our loved ones, w can know something infinitely better. We understand and realize the sniritual associations of the soul be yond death. We shall be present with the Lord, "I am building a mansion in body to corrode the skin or to be sucked into the body and so suffocate it. Many manufacturers say that their' articles do this but to have this effect on the insects, the insecticide has to be made so strong that It burns the foliage and therefore does as much harm as the aphides. There is, however, one aphiclde that I can recommend and that is a spray placed into operation sometime ago, and called Myzus, which is an article prepared from resin. It is a really re liable aphicide and for many years be fore It was put on the market it was rimental stations. This solution can be used on the most delicate flowers ana iruivo. I have seen it used on orchids and even ripe peaches and, besides killing all aphides, it also acts as a protection to the plant from the ravages of fungus. ALCOHOL TEST IS FAILURE Federal Experts Find Milk Reaction Indicates Little. WASHINGTON, June 1. The alcohol milk test, used to some extent in Europe and believed by some investi gators to be a quick means of testing the condition and keeping quality of milk, is not a satisfactory substitute for bacterial examination, according to bacteriologists of the United States Department of Agriculture. The al cohol test is based on the fact that when equal parts of 68 per cent al cohol and milk are mixed and the mix ture shaken gently in a test tube, a flaky, white precipitate will .form under certain conditions. The occur rence of this precipitate is held, by those who believe in the test, to indicate that changes have been produced in mixed market milk as a result of bacterial fermentation. i The department's investigators, who have reported on the results of this test, in bulletin 202. "The Alcohol Test In Relation to Milk," however, find that alcohol will produce this precipi tate when the mixed market milk con tains a certain amount of lactic acid or rennet produced by varieties of bacteria which form these BUbstances. As a consequence milk may be high in bacteria of other varieties without showing the precipitate when alcohol is added. Moreover, it has been dis covered that even with lactic-acid or rennet-forming organisms present in the milk, the precipitate does not show until these organisms have produced a considerable amount of the special substances which seem to cause the reaction with alcohol. In the case of mixed market milk, which frequently contains many va rieties of bacteria other than the lac tic-acid or rennet-forming kinds, the alcohol test may be negative when the bacterial examination shows a high count. On the other hand. In the case of milk from a single cow, the investiga tion apparently establishes the fact that a positive reaction in a 68 per cent alcohol test indicates that the milk is abnormal. Even here, how ever, the value of the alcohol test with milk from a single cow, or a small herd, lies principally in the fact that It will show when the milk Is abnormal and will give warning that a careful examination of the herd should be made. It also might indicate the need for improvement in the method of handling and chilling the milk, with the object of cheeking the growth of milk-souring organisms. Coke Supply Being Stocked Up. UNIONTOWN, Pa., June 1. Perma nent runs of five days a week are be ing planned-for the H. C. Frick Coke Company, which has fired 1096 ovens since May 20. 230 additional ovens be ing put Into operation last Friday and Saturday, while 860 nave been ordered into operation. The company has been operating on a 63 per cent basis, but for the last two weeks it has been working its men six days each week. Thirty plants are affected by the last increase. It is understood a supply of stock coke is being prepared. Fortunately the public at large Is not af flicted with as poor eyesight aa the girl who paints seems to think. order that you may be with me where' I am." There is nothing, more satisfying than the spiriutal associations of life. To know a, great soul, to feeK the warmth of a great heart, to com mune in thought-life and friendship with some superlative mind and char acter is the highest privilege and bless edness of our being. Our loved ones have Jesired to know Christ to un derstand the mystery of his beauty, to enter into .communion with him. They tried while here .to follow him in thought across the fields of Gali lee; to imagine how he looked, how he lived and in the hushed, separated hour of prayer, they tried, as we try. to realise his presence with us. In that other world, through tne mysteries of spiritual fellowship, soul meets soul, the earth-child comes into the nresence of the eternal, divine Christ, and that association is affec tionate, intimate, essential. Our loved ones ere under the shelter of his en folding presence. They look down into the deeps Of his lniimte nunc They understand the movings of his al mighty loves. They measure tne reaches of his redemptive sacrifice. I cannot tell you, fellow sufferer, where that dear one of yours is living today in the wide universe of God. I cannot find the path over which my loved one has gone from me, but when I last saw her face it was uplifted to ward the master whom she loved and served, and I think of her as being with him. She sees him as he is she is "forever with the Lord." Bereft love sometimes conceives or Us lost object as out yonder, far hence amid the lonely spaces of an infinite world. This is wrong. There is no loneliness there. Our dead are en folded in the love and peace of their eternal Lord and Savior. We see the strong workers lay down the unfin ished tasks of life and we wonder what their hands are doing and how life expresses and fulfills itself. They have gone to be associated with a master worker. They enter into his perfections and become partners in his larger thought and larger tasks, which fill tjie spaces of Eternity and com plete the purposes of infinite love. Earthly Things )hall Pass Away. Let us mark to a third considera tion. We can -understand something of the changes which death makes in the spiritual activities of.our life. We can understand a little concerning perma nent elements and phases of our eter nal being. In the great chapter on love, the Apostle Paul speaks of the inevitable changes which come in the growth and drift of lifie. The child-life has one environment, one interest, one employ ment These soon change ana pass. We who have reached maturity have dropped from our hands the toil, the thought, the little things that once en gaged our little lire, our mannooa ana womanhood live a different life. Our hands are filled with other, larger in- Now, the apostle says that In the world to come these earthly interests. these earth-knowledges are going to drop from us, but there shall be a residuum of the eternally permanent. It is terrible to think of the etrlp- BUNTING AND CLOTHES SHOULD BE FIREPROOF Simple Mixture of Ammonium and Clear Water Makes Cloth Safe From Blaze, Says Physician. . JUST now, when the Rose Festival is near, a method of f ireproofing buntinsr and other cloth decora tions should be of interest in Port laud. Such a method is described In the New York Times by Dr. Charles F. Pabst, of Brooklyn, in the following ar ticle: In the course of my duties while Coroner's physician in Brooklyn I was deeply impressed by the large number of deaths among children caused cy their clothing catching fire while they were frolicking around bonfires or playing with matches. In one period of 16 days I attended 21 children who were burned to death in this manner. I have compiled the statistics for 19141 which show that there were 18a deaths from accidental burns in Brook lyn alone, and at least 90 per cent of these cases resulted from carelessness. I sougrht for a means of preventing ac cidents of this character and the fol lowing description of my plan shows how this can be accomplished without trouble or expense: There is an easy and efficient metnod of fireproofing the clothing of children which every one should know. Many tragedies can be averted by fireproof ing the children s play suits, as well as lace curtains and such other articles of an inflammable nature as may easily come into contact with fire and so cause serious accidents. Simple Mixture Effective. A solution of ammonium phosphate is used for this purpose and can be made quickly and easily. Dissolve one pound of ammonium phosphate in one gallon of cold water, and a clear so lution is formed- in which the fabric to be fireproofed should be soaked for five minutes. The garment can then be taken out and allowed, to dry. after which it may be worn with perfect safety, as it is absolutely fireproof. The solution produces no more harm to the material than would the same quantity of ordinary water. It will keep indefinitely. Is non-poisonoue and can be used for several suits. Am monium phosphate is a common white crystalline powder, not patented In any way, and sells for about 25 cents a pound at any drugstore. Any article fireproofed by this EXPERT ADVICE GIVEN ON RARE AND COMMON ILLS Dr. F. M. Rossiter Discusses Ailments, Answers Questions From Sufferers and Cites Methods of Relief. Worried writes: I would like very much to know if you can tell me the following through The Oregonlan: 1. Is hyocine hydrobromate given for contractions or spasms of the muscles? 2. Is It given for hysteria and chronic nervous cases? 3. Does it have bad effects on a person taking It a long time, and does it affect the person's head, making him dizzy? 4. Does it have a quieting effect on the nervous system and on the muscles? Reply. 1. It may be used for that purpose. 2. It may be necessary to use this drug In severe attacks. It is not the best preparation to use for nervous ness. 3. It is not a good plan to use this drug for any length of time. It is a heart depressant, and it has a de pressing influence on all the mental faculties. 4. Yes. It is only in exceptional cases when it is wise to use this power ful alkaloid for any length of time See a Physician. Anxious writes: I am troubled with neu ralgia and sever headaches, and feel tired all the time. Am very nervous. Reply. It is not scientific to treat symptoms unless the cause is known. The cause of your troubles should be determined pings which death makes with us. 1 When Columbus set his foot upon the : Western world, in that moment every map. every, book of geography, every speculation and guess of the old think ers passed into uselessness. He had proved the rotundity of the earth. He had uncovered a new continent, and all the past of man's knowledge of earth and sea dropped into error and im- pertinency. Men of business, who know only oi trade or office work, notes and mort gages and routes of transportation, of modes of manufacture and distribution. and you, who know only of the petty things of your homes and the little in- consequentialities of your life, the mo ment that death comes to you all this knowledge disappears. All these in terests are stripped from us. If you have not another content, life will be absolutely and sadly empty. Things) Which Abide. But the apostle says that there are things which abide. What abide? Why, he says, "Now abideth faith and hope and love." What Is faith? Faith is trust. Faith is a leaning upon God. Faith is a means by which we unite ourselves to the invisible spiritual. Faith is that attitude of the earthly life which looks forward and leans upon the eternal and unseen Father. That shall abide. There never will be a time or place or state when the created, dependent spirit will not lean upon the eternal Father. Such a rela tion is independent of absence or pres ence. I trusted in my earthly father. as you trust in' your father. I leaned upon the bosom of my mother, as you lean upon yours. This is faith. This is trust, and the apostle says that this relationship to God will abide forever and ever. Hope is going to abide. "What is hope? Hope is the wing of the soul. Hope Is an inspiration. Hope is a forward impulse which sprfngs towards the future. It is that - thing which looks and moves toward the days that are to come. The apostle says that hope is going to abide. In other words, there shall be a restless attempting and aspiring and desiring to go on. to grow, to become larger and to go far ther into the deeper, holier experi ences and achievements of being. Such inward impulse and uplifting of as piration and of hope is going to abide, and ail the glorious processes suf fused with the spirit of love. With all the jealousies and envies of life purged away, with the pure passions of love burning forever and ever upon the soul's altar. This is the state of our dead. A Glorious Activity. Where are they? I cannot tell you, but I know that in intimate, eternal relationship with the divine Father and Christ, the freed, ambitious souls are reaching ever forward, all the pure passions of their being are burning in radiant flame, somewhere and a ways. You have thought of heaven as quiescent, reposeful, restful. No, no. there is a knowledge to be attained ambitions to be accomplished, growth to be developed, and the loved souls who went away from the limitations of earth are yonder, amid the pulsing life of that spiritual world, where never method will remain non-inflammable until washed or drenched with rain. The use of this solution is a safety measure which should be employed for pageants, carnivals and receptions, where flimsy draperies play an im portant part in the scheme of decora tion. It should also be used for scenery and properties in theatrical produc tions and as a safeguard at all ama teur Christmastide and New Year dis plays. Children Often Burned. Hardly a day passes without some child being burned while playing near bonfires or with matches. The records show that the accidents occur both to the children of the rich and the off spring of the poor. The cowboy and Indian suits which are so popular with our children are particularly danger ous, as they have a flimsy fringe which becomes ignited easily. These suits should never be worn unless rendered impervious to fire. The American Society for Fire Pro tection and several public safety com mittees have approved of this prac tical method of fireproofing and are urging its adoption throughout the country. Victims of the open grate have been plentiful In the past, and doubtless will- continue unless the proper safe guard is adopted. The fender is a preventive, but unfortunately, many homes are not provided with these;, and even If one's hearth is protected with a fender the child may perhaps visit the home of a neighbor where such safeguard is not provided and that visit may prove the fatal one. Teat Proves Worth. In order to give this ammonium phosphate solution a severe test I ex perienced with some strips of flimsy gauze, which ordinarily take fire and burn up completely in a few seconds. One of these etrips I placed in the ammonium phosphate solution and then allowed it to dry. The flame of a wax taper was applied to the edge of the gauze for one minute, at the end of which time the gauze was blackened at the edge, but remained whole In substance. first. It is possible that eye strain may give rise to your symptoms. At any rate you had better see a physician and find out what is the trouble. Use of Thyroid. R. C writes: Was much Interested in your article on obesity, which appeared in The Oregonlan on a recent Sunday. Would like to inquire if thyroid affects the heart any way adversely? At one time I used thyroid tablets for the purpose of reducing and they aid the work, but on being told that thyroid eventually would work an in jury to the heart discontinued use of same. In on of Madamo Sarah Bernhardt' arti cles in The Oregonlan she mentioned the death of a very dear friend and attributed her death to the use of thyroid for the pur pose of reducing her weight. Would be pleased to have your opinion In regard to this. Reply. For the purpose of maintaining health and prolonging one's youthful ness thyroid has been, used without ill effect through a period of years. In such cases tne thyroid gland has under gone degenerative changes and Is not producing sufficient internal secretion. The administration of the thyroid gland substance compensates for this lack. On the other hand in the disease known as "hyperthyroidism" there is too much internal secretion, or too much passes into the blood and the heart is quickly defeat, or disappointment where no check or hindrance comes; they an " there, living that glorious life of in conceivable activity. What is the goal of it? The goal of it is Christllkeness. . "We shall be like him." Dare to measure the diameter lying between your present proportions and the capacities and growth and the in finite self within! See how far your life reaches this morning! Thirty, 49, 60 years have led you from infantile weakness, emptiness, incapacity, to manhood and womanhood ability. Life is ascending. Life is growing. Life reaches out beyond earth it pene trates and fills eternity, and the goal of it is the perfectness of the man hood of Jesus Christ- We are to be come partakers of the Divine. The Final Goal of Beta-. , KelflVerl. IherA lies within thlai nnv- , tal, earthly self, within the mysicaJ, .: powers of human nature, a divine ca pacity to be like the infinite Son of God. Oh! Away with these earthly horizons. Break lhA nn.rrow!no- hnniiA of this cabined and cribbed conception of our being, and realize that yonder, along infinite avenues of ascent and . growth, lies the final end and goal of day, some day. with imperfections : miro-ul ti -. i . - W 1. 1 J f ' 1 ( 1 .. lifted from us, with ampler fields of . occupations, with infinite reaches of . attainment with no defeat, or checks possible, we Tise, we go on, until, nn- v i uuw i we wny ti", nuw near w3 may come to the stature of Jesus xuuukui jieie ih vaio anu woras are empty but we shall arrive. The Confidence That Satisfies). So I think of my dead as climbing those infinite steeps, onward and on ward, the sweet spirit of earth whom 1 loved, tne mind that thought for tne and about me. the heart whose pas sions ever awoke the noblest and beet . witmn me 'i ininK ot her as rising on, on, and attaining unto the image of the Christ whom she loved, and the complete fulfillment of a nature whose radiancy and strength was the glory of 25 beautiful years. This is the thousrht which uHnflea me. You may picture groves of tremulous trees, a city radiant with golden streets and resplendent walls. I cannot conceive of my dead so en vironed, but 1 think of her in a land, beyond defeat, and change, enfolded in the eternal presence of the loving Christ, with faith and hope and love eternally active and vibrant, and mov ing up the awful slopes of human pos sibility into a God-likeness which she shall reach, some time, somewhere. This is my hope, the outlook of my faith, from the place of shadow and of loneliness where I stand today. Prayer. Oh! Almighty God, upon our bruised, bereft hearts, upon the loneliness and desolation of our emptiness, may there come great visions of life that is to be, and in the confidence of a radiant hope may we take up again the routine and weariness of the duties and lowly mission of our life here, and make all the future days bright and full of simple things well done and plain words epoken in tenderness. Amen! affected. The heart dilates and beats very rapidly. In the treatment of reducing fat in the body with the thyroid substance it is necessary to give quite large doses. For this reason the writer does not except under the advice and observa tions of a physician. There is no danger in its use providing the -dose is suited to the individual needs and there are no contradictions to its nse such as an, organic heart with poor compensation. If thyroid should cause an increase in the heart's action, with its discontinuance the heart immediate ly returns to normal. So if in the case mentioned the death was due to thyroid it must have been used beyond all reason and long after it should have been discontinued. Per haps in her case it should not have been used at all. SWINDLED MEN STRANDED 154 Pay $11 Eacli for Jobs Tbcy fcio to Get but Vail to Find. PITTSBURG. June 1 With the ex pectation of obtaining employment on roads near Tyrone, Pa., 164 forein born men who left homes in Aliance, Ohio, became stranded in Wilmerdlng. Their baggage, which would tax the capacity of a boxcar, is in the Wilmerd ing railroad station. The people were given shelter in the Wilmerding Police Station a few nights ago. According to several of the men a man who said he was John Smith, of Tyrone, went to Alliance two weeks ago seeking men to work on the roads near his home. Smith explained each man would have to pay him ?11 in order to get a position. Each of the 154 foreigners paid Smith $11. they ay. and he paid their train fare to Pitts burg. When Smith's victims reached here, they boarded a train at the Pennsyl vania Station for Tyrone. When thu conductor asked for tickets they ex plained "Smith will pay." They were put oft the train at Pit cairn and were taken to Wilmerding. UaMncirl u.nia ruilriKlll Officials ft TP making arrangements to send them back to Alliance. Kecluse Leaves $30,000. KANSAS CITY, June 2. James Brady, who died at Excelsior Springs, Mo., left an estate of S30.000, lived aa a recluse, and. so far as is known, had. no relatives. At the railroad shops he was known as "the man who swung the big hammer." Man. Hurt Seeking Health. COLUMBUS, O., June 2. Convales cing from Injuries received in one run away, John Dahn went for a drive on the first day he was able to leave his bed. The horse ran away again and Pahn received serious injuries. SOAP IS BAD FOR THE HAIR Soap should be used very sparing ly. If at all, if you want to keep your hair looking its best. Most soaps and prepared shampoos contain too much alkali. This dries the scalp, makes the hair brittle, and ruins it. The best thing for steady use is just ordinary mulsified cocoanut oil (which is pure and greaseless). Is cheaper and better than soap or any thing else you can use. One or two teaspoonfuls will cleanse the hair and scalp thorough ly. Simply moisten the hair with water and rub it in. It makes an abundance of rich, creamy lather, which rinses out easily, removing every particle of dust, dirt, dandruff and excessive oil. The hair dries quickly and evenly, and it leaves the scalp soft, and the hair fine and silky, bright, lustrous, fluffy &nd easy to manage. Vou can get mulsified cocoanut oil at any pharmacy, and a few ounces will supply every member of the family for months.