THE OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, SUNDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 19,: 1919. 12 4 1 CUriaa I. Ohseaatatn, ft S. B.. nbtr of .the Boaid of Lectureship of the Mother Church, . tint Church of Christ, Rcienust. In Boston, , Wturad at ' tha Hallts thaatie Monday I mi, October IS. and Fourth Church of Christ, HrUotlst, Monday evssuB om tbo aubiect of i.'hrisUaa Selene. Tha lecturer, who was ln "t troduaeu at tha Helhs theaua by John Norton, f fTTHE preparedness, "safety efficiency ' A of Jesus- were 4he result of bis de 'monstrable knowledge, , the scienco.f -' toeing which constituted hut Christianity, i This -Christianity was no mere cere- moniallsm or belief. It .was. the science of living; and of living- more abundantly ; -the -.science, of .health, V of, peace, of .." blessedness; the science, that made Jesus ithe. Savior, ' deliverer; ' redeemer ; the ecienc which be came to? teach man- kind, r In a word, it was itheunder- standing- of Ood, the supreme power ; that 'la all good and always with. us. ' ', Must not we then ' in' order to i S Christians,' to ' benefit by this Christianity, gain this understanding of Jod? Must not we ask who or what is this God .of whom Jesus had such Inti- mate, exact knowledge or science? ; t Going to this master Jew, this master i Christian, - what do , we learn. God a? tomething different from what was in ' the beginning t ... Not at all... ., I it should be remembered that Jesus I did not .write; he spoke, i He spoke to f his own people, the common people who I- heard him gladly; and he spoke in their t tongue; One of the very few Instances - preserved to us of what he said in that I tongue is An thes words whlch'-preceded I his giving up the "ghost, the mere sem t blance of life, which he said be could 7 lay down and could take up again, as '. be later proved. These -words, all will f remember, were "Elol, EJoi, lama sa ? bachthantr which are translated, "My Vod. my. God, why hast thou forsaken r'mer The word Blot, which Jesus used, t Is the Old Testament Chaldean word for "what tn English is called God. It means strength, or power, a meaning wnicn is entirely devodi of anthromorphlsm or j corporeality. According to Jesus, then, God was his power, the power upon which he always relied, with which he ! accomplished everything,. .Nor did be V leave us tn the dark as to Just what this . power is. In speaking to Ills disciples he ' said, "Call no man your faiher.upon the earth: for one is your Father, which Is " in heaven." In 'other words. there Is ir only one creator. Vr'Cauae.rand the unl " verse Including man is its product, .the ' product of Elol. the one and only power. , , Again, speaking to the -woman, arthe well. Jesus said,-"God is Spirit," which would certainly i mean that ' his power, rthe only power be? ever used, the true " cause of all, and consequently ths cause of only that which is true, was Spirit or Mind, not matter or any kind of phy sique. And looking it th teachings of ' Jesus, looking at his words and at bis ! works. words and works ue,to, tm I belled by. emanaangafrom thi Elol or v power. Spirit, Mind-, intelligence.- ' ' s we not bound to-, conclude , that this : power. SplrtW'Mind was Infinite . Xjovo. -and that this oivln Love was ;th4 very ' life of Jesus which nothing could-destroy nri which was able to raise him up at ' the last day? This one 'power .then, this one Bulrlt. Soul, or wnu, mi one e : Life, this one reality . or ' Tmih. this ana Infinite Love., this di - viris PrlnciDle. was, all that constituted ' J the Saviouti who 1s the same .yesterday, today and rorever, .,wn wnom w ,uw arlablenessfvjlther' shadow of turn fing," who Is with us always -ThW is Just what Christian, ucienoe aeiines uoa ,w be, as will be seen from the following passage: "Ood Is Incorporeal, divine, su- i preme, lnimite juina,, spirm ooui, -nu clple. Life, Truth, Loye." J Science ; and Health, p. 465).v .- 4 . , ' ; ;mah : - - - -c .;v-t -iNot only did Jesus illustrate, fft only ' does Christian-Science teach; wfrat God is, but in doing this v Jesus, Illustrated and - Christian Science teaches what man Is. .:- t vV'' ''''-s- Does not the father wnt the son to "be like himself, and does not a son want to be like his father? So true is this, that . yi ght In ' the beginn Ing we read that ; ''Ood created man in his own image, male and fsmale created he them.' In other words, He created" them Just v hs( a man Is like? J3o we know it by , - what he . expresses ? Was . It not the f manifestation,! the expression' of the i power, ,the Mind, the Spirit, the Life, the j ; Truth, and the Love, which, are alto- gethef good, Ood, that made Jesus the '-best-prepared, the safest, the most ef ficient, the most, able or. powerful, the X most godlike man that ever lived? Did 'is not make him so godlike that all Christendom has called hfm God, wor -shipped him, as God? It has done this, ' too, notwithstanding the fact that Jesus rebuked the man for calling htm, not Ood, but merely good, saying, . "There - Is none , good but , one, that Is God." VHe did this because he recognised, as ao one else ever has, that even all that - he manifested- of Ood -did not begin to ? express," bvW only" indicated, the: infinite fsrood that la God. v This, is shown by the fact that he expected.. not only the emu lation of his example by his followers, ; but- more,' ''H that bellevetb on' me, :the works that J do shall he .do, also; 'and greater, works, than these shall he ' do ; because I go unto my Father;" be , cause I illustrate the way. and show. - mm.ii. f Mim.i uio oon cu oo i Deauniui vompi Daily elimoiatxm rids the system of poiscms.' if ' .' ' ' WnniM IkntJ ..1!.. tL.s I ' ' ww wawsvuu 1 "---f '. S,'. .:.'. - .... ' ' . . ..-Si .. v.: 'AMY worsen complain . dailr .of 1VT uVek cooplexioa, of their -head, aches and general ill health Km. leakoaf that , the trouble is cofittipahoa. Woomb,' aoev are stuck more sub)ect to ' such congestion than smi. and much more casslesf of iL'Tke rctuh t seen m luster. Ie, weary eyes, ia.'isuow, pimply cea. plexwe, fa ksnude, Ud bream, and in" word so often uted, IsdHpoasd,' M Ae first sign of tnete trmptomt' tne wise woman wuT taU's'laxalive, and will see that the young gut sad other m . kef care do likewise, Dr. Caldwell's Syrup rVpaVt m the favorite wah thou. ' d of woraea becauM k is auld and gentle is as scheo and is the end trains, lb stomach and fcowel musclea to do mec work avAsauy wkheut the aid of L,'-::'- 'v"--- .eZl-'ni r.i; Thk eombinauos of s simple laxative herbs ,wkh pepaia can be bought at any drug store for 50c and $1 a bottle, the Utter for fatailies, for jt abo a very - rtKng firwid colds, fever, and oS oddem- a. that male ; adviahW , nothing' of himself, 'but what he seeth the Father do: for. what things soever he doeth, these also doeth the Son like wise.? . 4 . MAS A3TB MAITXI3rX ' ' 'V w . We have seen what was the, power, the Life, "the" Mind,' the Whole reality or Truth, the Love that 'animated,' enlight ened, Impelled, capacitated, and enabled the -man Jesus. We have seen rthat It was omnipotence, omniscience, God, and that the - expression of this' made him the godlike and true man that abe Was. ' All-of us also know the kind of -power, life, mind,' spirit; truth.' and love that are expressed or manifested, by mankind or. a kind of men. a All of us know that this power, life, mind,- spirit,, truth;- and love are all believed tai Inhere . In the flesh, matter. Is not this" true?,' . The - man twhom t Jesus presented is spiritual, and spiritually minded, the real 'num. The man that humanity in sists upon ss real, the kind that is really no mantis 'fleshly or carnally minded. Tet Christianity- teaches that -"to ' beJ carnally minded Is death; but to he spiritually minded is life and peace. Be cause the carnal mind is enmity against Ood; for it is not subject to the law of God,- neither Indeed can be." To be the one kind of map, then, is to be the son of God..' To be the other kind of man is to be like those of Whom Jesus spoke when he said, "Te are of your father the devil," and the devil he called "a mur derer," that which is destructive, and "a liar," that in which there is no truth. All Christians have certainly called Jesus their pattern and their guide ; and he spoke of . himself . as "the way,' the truth, and the life." All Christians are also instructed; "Let; this ' mind be In you. which was' also. In . Christ Jesus.? If this teaching be' correct, should .not every Christian claim for himself Jand for -others the spiritual power,. Intelli gence, Life, Truth, and Love which con stitute the one true good of all, or the one vtrue 'God, infinite, eternal, inoe structlble,' Incapable of impairment, loss, or lack?,; And should not every one dis claim a limited 'material power, mind. life, . truth,' love, subject to disease, de cav. and death?- Can one be a Chris tian without 'claiming the former., and disclaiming the latter 7 TBS BEGKnfEB. , Now let us .take one "who 4s learning to know this Christ-way,' arid beginhing to walk:- la it. - what .effect , has this upon him? - , He. has been believing, like everyone else,' that he is a material organism with his -life, health, strength. Intelli gence, and love all inside of him ; that aU that he is and. all that he has is limited by heredity and environment. He knows it because he has been experi encing it. Of course he. Is unprepared for any emergency, feels unsafe, is in efficient It is not strange if he is ais- courared,' perhaps sick, dissipated, wow, the unheeded CHrist. the spiritual idea of being, 'the Truth, oomes to -such a one In Christian Science. He hears, and hears for the first time with this new meaning, that God is the only and all power; that God . is air his God; that God is Life, his life r that God is Mind, Truth.'Love. and that God, 'who ls all this, is 'all his God. If he admits this. and slow or fast, if be ponders it, he is bound to admit hV-will not everything that la rlrht become more and more pos sible to him, and will not everything thsiSla wona become less-ana less com- inant over him. and finally impossible to him? -Will he' nof at once' be' better prepared for every-demand upon him, feel more safe, more efficient 'than r be-; fore? If he is fallen, will this not uplift him: if be is sorrowful, will this not comfort him; if he is discouraged, will this not encourage ' him ; ' if he is ; sick, dls-eased, will not this ease him until it heals him; if he has been-a failure, cannot he with this Christian, this right idea of Jjeing,- rise to success? Let me say that In thousands of Instances this has' been demonstrated;? and examples are not ' far v to seek., :v The neighbors, friends. -relatives of many of you here can tell you their experiences, and I am sure you will find them corroborative of this. . 'Neither should these experi ncf ? ences seem so strange after it has been as it has, what uoa is ana what -man's relationship to God Is; and I am sure it does not seem so strange as it 'did: that God should comfort the sorrowing make the weak strong, heal the. sick,, yes, raise the .dying and the dead.. But perhaps It can bV made' still plainer.-; -- .'fa:'.fc, - v y HOWESTY THB CHIBr BZQCISITS .. Tou have all been taught to be truth ful and honest, I am sure. If the temp tation came to any of you to tell an un truth, or to take - something, that , does not: belong- to you, this education, not something inherent in your brain - or anywhere in your body, would, recall to you that you must not do so. I re member that as a very little boy, when ever I touched anything not mine at table-, my mother very quietly ' said, "Hejs r meaning that taking; things not mine would burn me. Throughout -all the : years- that' have gone "by. - when about to touch things not mine without 1 tt,' , v . C,5P"al permission. I have heard that wordv: is1lGllut"otkone who Is the Spirit that it. in, my Drain i xso ; u is in my educa tion. We are 'the children, not of flesh and "blood, but. of -our education : much at It; TJKa mAat.1mMrt,it hart a t -'ma oDtauiea w the schools, and It is our exion - g al faTAAAstaO UaACs " r always hsve a bottle b the It I free from aatcotics sad sals for utt uaiett bsby. ,- , x .y & J tpitt f th art that Xr:CliwVi rm u tkt Isrjsjf telling Uqwid? v ' ''' th-world, thn hinf ovtr " - . 4 Ui'M: ravs'yfar, wiMy " "tf ? net yt ut. f 'J''T 'f90mT T - ? ClTwisl tuffrnJf" W",u" St" . fliL 1 education that - we constantly, express, live out. ' - , Now, suppose that we not only learn the letter, but become Imbued with the spirit of what has been said, and so learn the truth that, the kind -of God; thatiJias been indicated here, is the only God there is ; that only he Is man,' male and. female, who is like ibis God , 4fi-.n k Y God ; suppose, when we have done this even in the smallest 4egree,we always aaa, 01 :uus very,- primary eoucaiioa. What belongs to-, us, any one of us, -as the image. andJ likeness of God? Could i we not thus get correct answers? Whai for Instance, belongs to the reflection j of power, infinite power?' Do powerless hess, ..Inability, incapacity? What be longs to--, the reflection of Mind? Do lack of purpose,',lack of will, and ignor ance of what we need -to 'know? . What belongs to1 the reflection of divine Spirit, infinite Truth, ; Love, Life? Do sen sualism, ... untruthfulness, fear, distrust, aversion, hate, sickness, death? , Would not . the truth about what man is and what ' man has be ' Just ' the opposite of all such claims, and did nqt Jesus say, "Ye shall know the ruth, and the truth shall make you free?? . . Suppose that the likeness In a looking glass of any of us here was claimed to be unlike us, to lack something we pos sess, or to possess something foreign to us, would we admit the claim? If we did, would wei be truthful or honest? Would we jiot be claiming for it some thing that it did not possess, claiming a distortion rather than a reflection, a fraud and an imposition as our likeness? Can your image and .likeness in the glass have something or take something that you f do not have-or take? . Can man, then, the image, and-- likeness of . God, be different from God? Can he be unpre pared for anything, unsafe lnefficieht, helpless; can he take a cold, sickness of any- kind,: and; die? , Not unless' God Is and does these things. How.- truthful, how. honest is one then who claims to be man, meaning v man or woman, the image and ' likeness of God, and also claims to be, to do, and to have every thing contrary to God? Is he then de claring the truth which .alone makes free ; Js he obeying the commands "Thou shalt;..' not 'bear-- false " witness" and VJudge not according to the appearance, but ' judge righteous Judgment" ? ; ' i. . 'We all need asaurarice." All will agree that if God 'is the Principle,-the basic reality of all, claims contrary to Him are not-true. " Tet 'these claims. " the educa tion of generations , upon , generations. I crowd upon us, clamor for admission at every turn,- upon every, hand.' . They' as sure us at every Impact, every contact, that there is danger danger that 'we cannot, that nothing can ward off ; that cold, heat, dry, wet. everything we breathe, drink, eat, touch, smell,, feel, everything- 'we - undertake to do, , is fraught '-with 'danger, danger that we havetnot sufficient Intelligenoe or power to cope with ; that aU these things have power . over us, not we the . power over them which God .gave us and constantly gives us. . We have plenty of assurance. our whole education is the assurance-of struggle, - of strife, of ultimate defeat, disaster, death. ; - v ' - ' How like "the gentle rain from heaven? dropping upon the dry earth be. neath, comes the opposite assurance that 'now are we the sons of - God,"- even though this Tdoth not yet appear f. that as such we 4re the Teflections of Qoii that 'because of this w. now have Just wnj uoa nas, ail that Is good and noth ing else ;. that now Is .all this available to us through being; truthful, honest, through not bearing false witness, not claiming and' not taking what does not belong to us as the sons and daurhters of God, so heirs of God with Christ ; by not . entering, - not appropriating - In thought, not "expressing 1n word or deed aught contrary to this new. this hieher' education. - - ' ' THOUGHT FBOCESSXS V v - If God is the 'all-enabUng -power, and God is Mind, the operation of this power must primarily be by way of Ideas. thoughts. Who ' can- straighten out his finger or bend it without thought dic tating the ' action? Who-can bend it when thought - dictates to bold It straight? Try it. . Will the hand not do kind thteg-s under the impulsion of toy ing thought; will it not do cruel things under 'the Impulsion of contrary be liefs?- Will It not do brave, powerful. steady,-, skillful, efficient ' things "under the direction of confident. Intelligent guidance,-' and . trembling, weak, ineffi cient things under the impulsion of fear? All have experienced this. Is it not a common saying that one is paralysed with fear? Do not; people die of fear? Does any part of the body not reached by thought do anything or feel any way? li it. aoes, now do you know it without thought? -The schools are beginning, to recog nize,, and in some degree ' to acknowl edge, that in Christian Science a light has come into the world, but they are not able to see that it is all light, and that in It is no darkness at all. Theol ogy is beginning to teach an incorporeal is all Love, too pure to behold intaultv. evil of any kind, to cause it or to per mit it. The heaUng arts are beginning to teach that mind is -at - least in part cause, but without recognizing that Mind Is- God, good, so never the cause of disease, and death, but always the cause of restoration, of. health, and of life. 1 They call that mind which is but law eaucauon. Illusion., suggestion, the ultimate cause of sin, sickness, death. But the- human beliefs that still obacur cannot forever hide the true light, which Bniues. ana-smnes unto a perfect day when all-ahall be Illumined by it, and there shall be no darkness, ignorance, iUuslve suggestion, dls-ease.-fear, and so no sin, no disease,' no death. GOB'S THOUGHTS . 'And the angel of his God's presv ence saved them," .we read in Isaiah. We are also told that after Jeeus had with, stood being , tempted by, the devil, and aU should now be able to see that the devil was just what Jesus called him.-, "a murderer," that which te destructive, and "a liar." that in which there U noii truth angels came and min istered unto him. What does this mean? Does it mean that corporeal beings with wings healed the people spoken of in the Bible,' and ministered unto Jesus f - B Christian Science text book. "Science and Health with Key to tha Scriptures" by Mrs, Eddy, on naere jwi. we read : "Angels. God's thoughts pass- " . , - spiritual intuitions, pure and perfect the inspiration - of good. ness,;.purlty, and immortality, counter. Cannot all see bow such angels could t..., ? B,aeea n1 to chUdren of oow uiey could and did minuter unto Jesus: how 4hv n !7r7?ne' nd ini8ter to us all? Have not . all of you entertained Just tta time again, una wares? Have-not him i"nfin!piniton" 01 aoodnesa, come to atvami Have they not been helpful to you? m, aa from : from your brain, or from anyone's bralnr They came frnm urir.li h. ril?d' God, to Inspire, to enlighten r. Jt. up. ana to Ket.y.u ut on high. Have we .aU . been inspired then? Of course we have. Have we "all J neeaea ueH uuiunuDoii iosi m uw question. It is not uncommon to hear that some ona, i inspired by malice or hate. Everyone is ready to credit this, but let some one be said to be 'Inspired by God, who is Infinite power,' tntelli genoe, Life, ..Truth and Love, and de rision and reviling are sure to be hi lot. Is not everyone inspired with Life? : Xt not, how then does anyone live? Are not all Inspired by Mind. Truth. Love? If not, how do you express intelligence, how is it that you are. truthful, kind, lpving? , Doea this surprise you?. Then let me say that you were Inspired before you. ever breathed or saw the light of day, 'and that; inspiration is the one es sential of existence. ? - - ' , Everyone Is most particular as to the " a9 iwwuie fflo: winouv anso- air he breathes. Xo: one without abso- breathe foul air, - Everyone Is most par tieuiar as to the food he eats, what rai ment he- puts on, and so forth. How much - more particular should all be as to -what they are ' inspired . by; for whether the thought that comes to us be good or bad, it is one that comes to us. not t one that1 originates with us. and sooner or later we. are bound to express 1C' Js itJ.'pure, beaptlfuU good, true, the thought of health, of life, of immortal ity, of courage, and of love for all? If so, it comes from the one true source. Bid Jt welcome; let It abide with .'-you. entertain it, make it your honored and your - welcome - guest. It " comes ; from God, and is the word of God, an, angel visitant, sent ss or old to heal, to min later, to save, Is that ewhich clamors for admission; a base, sinister.: degraded thought, a thought of want, discourage ment, hate, fear, anger, sickness, death? Then bar it out. for It will express " it self, bear fruit after its kind. How bar it, say you? By recalling and recalling the thoughts, , the angels of God and of His Christ, the : truths taught In1 -the tsiDie by Jesus, emphasized, illuminated and made practical by Christian - Sci ence, until these shall be an angel legion round about you to - guide . you, guard you, ana nave: charge over you. How often, do we hear -. the question. How can I help what I think? and the assertion, No one can help , what' he thinks. We not only can help' what' we think, but in order to do better, feel bet ter, be better, we must help whai wwe think, for as a man "thinketh inihis heart, so Is he;" and the way that has oeeir. indicated, the way that Christian Science teaches, Is the only way ' In which this help may come; the only way under heaven In which men can be saved here, now, anywhere, everyhwere. -from ills of any kind and of every kind. It is the. only way in which one and all,-Irrespective of - time, place, vocation,, cir- cumstances,' can , be truly armed -and prepared, have absolute safety and com plete efficiency. ' AWhat has been said will but dimly indicate the teachings of the ideal, yet most practical and scientific system of ethics and. healing 'discovered in the words and works of our Master by Mrs. Eddy.' 'Through " her - faithful, loving. Christlike leadership Mrs Eddy founded this, system,, Cnu-istian Science, and ad vanced ltt its 'jpresent world-wide e- ceptance. Bringing wnat she aid to the world. the ."pearb-ofrreat price." 'the Applicable, rsfemonatrahle.: iuristlanlty of Christ iJesvsi't which has proved itself such py, cemtorunrrerormina- and heal Ing thfe yaSt majority hf those who have honestly earnestly studied her books, she has enriched the 'world -beyond all reckoning "Hundreds' of thousands of her - beneficiaries':- rejoice". ; in bearing grateful witness; to their- appreoiatioa of her diviner service to : them: and toall mankind, -f, ' ; : As one who had the privilege of visit- tag. her home, let me say. that all about .Mm. Eddy -was of the - very simnlest. In . her the world inieeA had true example ef -.simple ...living jand . high . thinking. 'Those -who were with her bear, loving witness to the ' fact that she watched, worked, prayed without ceasing, and that she eMd this for all alike. That this tin tiring-- consecration - has borne fruit the fruit of purer, happier, healthier, more useful -and loving lives is attested on every hand. The modest fortune that came to Mrs.; Eddy through the publi cation tnd sale of her written works is by her direction, like. her. life, being de yoted to the 'promulgation of her jiftrn teaching-; to the establishment of "on earth peace, -good, will toward men;" to the establishment of the kingdom of God on earth. In which there can be no sorrow, no pain,, no death. Mrs,- Eddy was at times reviled, but she reviled not again. So unmindful of the world was she and so mindful of God that His thoughts, messages .that came and do come with healing and with blessings in their wings, were always her thoughts. Her one prayer was to be God's faithful messenger. The answer to this prayer was certainly vouchsafed to her. Mary Baker. Eddy founded a world-wide religion, a religion that is Science, a Science that is Christian -and that both heals and saves. In doing this she has' risen to her rightful place in di vine Love Love that is reflected by the constantly increasing: esteem of 'the world, and the grateful appreciation of hundreds of thousands of her benefi ciaries. 1 rS- .... -r vSfe2gj, .. Your Hair Needs Danderine Save your hair and double its beauty,' ?iYou can hare lots .of - long, thick, strong:, , lustrous .hair. ' Don't let it stay lifeless, . ! thin, scrajfly or fading.; : Bring back its color, vigor and vitality. .' Get a"3S;cent bottle of delightful "Danderine'f at any drug or ' toilet counter to freshen your scalp; check dandruff and falling ? ? hair.v 9 Your hair needs , stimulating;; beautifying ' "Danderine" to restore its life color;- brightness,-abundance, Hurry; Girls! Science May Endanger World Vast ;Energy ; Locked in' Atoms rmr Lfirin. sons of British SdestlaiB ssd pradicta chtnistry will aaoa prodooa aa anariy of . i ... . v. i a n , L 1 . Ut tat very exiawnce m m pun mut mm iiimii. . Sir OHtw potnU est a chesnlcaj alemrnt kaewa as sites is apootaaaotulv seUfe that s single peend radiatsa aa rmcmr ef tea thoaaand aonapewer. Ha expreaaaa the hope that taa antarpciains aatios whoaa invcatiTe senna perfects this all powerful energy will prove aa humanely etrUiaad as to bold Its destructive power la check, :- - - --f - . , . "" ... . , ,t. jb sir uuver xioase , ' - r London. Oct. -7. (By Mall.) A pinch of coal . dust or a thimbleful of .'oil - represents at present . the . most - portable form of - power. , If the Whole of the energy resulting from these, when combined with oxygen, could be really utilized, they would yield quite a considerable store, 'r - - , An ounce of oil completely bornt would heat - between six' and seven pounds of water from freezing to boiling-point, which la the equivalent of 410 foot tons. A ton talllnr height of 410 feet would generate the same amount of heat, s ' . . An. ounce of coal completely burnt spoonful of, nlrto-glycerine, again, energy, though of rather a violent . But Is there any kind of energy the Interaction between molecules, atom? ; Does a single atom of matter stUuUon? And, if so, is there any Previous, to the discovery of radium the question could hardly have - been saked. -- The answer Is now, known, in radioactive substances there certainly Is a store, of atomic energy and some .of the -energy is liberated by the mission of -tfivinar Barticlea flung off from time to time whenever the atom is degenerat- ing or passing from a more complex to a 'more simple form. ; " - ' -(. 'Andfthis emission of - energy is very great.- When it was first observed that a- few grains of radium was continually giving off a great deal' of energy and yet . not - disappearing, - some scientific men, even Lord Kelvin himself, spoke of It as a sort of miracle. The stuff burned, as it were, and yet was not consumed. , 1 It soon ' became lelear, however, that there was no flaw in-the law of conser vation of energy. .- The stuff certainly nossesses , and - certainly .' loses all the eners-v it emits, but ifloses very HtUe weight. - The disappearance . of a single arraJn of matter out or. say,,a pouna is onlv detectable by careful weighing. but tha power emitted during tn aisappear. ance ef ' a-, grain wouia oe enougn to raise the temperature of a ton of water from freezing to boiling point. " - ? We must remember, however, that no such effect would be produced even by a pound xtf radium in any reasonable time, for it would take a year- to lose a grairt .;.,- ' . CAK3T0T HA8TEX OE EETAED V AnrT so' the ' cower - is diluted down there Is' nothing violent about it, and we know no means of hastening It, nor Indeed of retarding it either. It is a- remarkable fact that whether the bit of radium-be made redhot In a furnace or cooled hundreds of degrees below sero by .liquid air, its rate of die integration remains practically constant People sometimes speak of radium as lr it were unique. rpt so ; n ts a strix- ing member of a class, and It serves well to Illustrate theropertles of that clasa iCverv -now said then an atom of radium explodes or .fires off a projec tiie what is called an A" particle. The projectile, bears: to. the residue of the atom something of the" same proportion that a ahots-bears- to a gun. It is like a twot-ton gun' firing a 100-pound shot.' ' : Only now and then-id oes a radium atom, get to this -explosive, stage. .-For -every; one thatj thus exerts Jtself tn- the. course, of a ear -there are about 3000 which remain' .tjulescentr for, that period. , , y,But tdlrectr ne shot has been fired. the . rest1 of - that -particular-atom does not settle : dowm Into- quiescence again tin It has fired off 'tour . more, convert ingl itself each time Into a different ele ment. ' ' - '' Some jof these' shots follow each other quite: jqulckly, barely giving time to the experimenters tot examine the properties of the intervening substances. Tet these substances, are real elements,, with chem ical reactions of -their own, and with a characteristic spectrum. Their pecularlty Is'fc'fhey'are.-short-llved.,- ' The greatest energy- per unit weight of combustible; material Is the burning of hydrogen in oxygn. This emits heat to the yalUe of 4000 units of heat for every gyamme ' of .water formed by the com-. WnatlWk" -; But ." by T the w time. that - a gramme of radium has gone through Its changes. a million times . this quantity of enersjy." would, have been emitted, f Let It not. be ,;swpposed,v however, that only the atoms'- of radio-active, substances . pos-1 sesS .this atomic .energy...,. It. is pretty certsln1 that every kind of material atom must'-pbssess It, some more, 'some 'less;' but--lor , most atoms tne-energy , is an locked ' up - in ; their Intimate structure, and f quite inaccessible. , afeTLBBK-'EBGT; SECBET r- ' The radio-active elements, are those which do not keep the energy completely locked', up.' ' Once an hour one out of thirty millions atoms goes off with vio lence, and continues-to fire at known ooa l tha aaaat Powerful thlnken is tha worU. sack ooaceatiatad power and explosive viotoaee . 4 t " - would yield slightly less energy. A represents a considerable store of and Intractable kind. locked sup not In the molecule nor In but in the , actual structure of , each contain energy by -reason of its oon- means of getting; at lt?j though not ' quite regular Intervals ' five times, till ; it becomes ' quiescent . again. It thus gives 'away the secret of a vast tore of energy. . . '. Every, atom Ik - a : com f Heated ' struo ture. a region of law and. order, and ia all. probability, no- element Is namuMnL Dislntergratlon Is probably only -a' ques- uvu-.v,. UCSjSWW. .-rv. , . The Unsjable ones attract attention and . enable measurements to , be made, Some of these are fairly sedate, and like Uranium. . last millions ' of years. Ra dium lasts at moat a few thousand years ; but other elements are. so prodigiously violent that 'they last only . a, few min utes, i These, therefore, make themselves The Development of Advertising Puts Business on a Higher,:Plane It Has Created a,Firier Code of Buoineoo- Ethica It Has Made Possible Better Pianos and Player-Pianos at Lower Prices Owing to the Large : Volume . ot Sale Created by Our Advertisements Oiir Factory Clearance Sale Advertioemento r r- mjM i w - m . w , v rm i , M .-w zw a i Tasjasa- m . mwrii aw- a. ... .-.-"- 1 I aC i Vr JtM II t ' H mK IU W "X.Vfc j. . W TO KEEP DOWN what the sovernment ls doing: lor food now only w put it specifically 26 lower IMsn local market prices on' new models and, after scouring the Eastern piano factories the past months, we have made It possible for you to sidestep the repent advance in prices, by securing many carloads of new samples, wholesale stock pianos, discontinued models and used pianos.: ., ; - . ;i. . . .-. ; . PITT flllT TIIIC DBIPC I ICT.Take it up with dad, husband, son' or daughter, determine then and there whether yott WU1 UUrUUI iniO rnlUC LlOt pty the advancing; prices or take advantage of this last, opportunity at lower prices..,. DiscontinuedRebuilt , 5TEINWAT & SDNS WW ?S 1750 $435 125 cash, til monthly. HALLET & DAVIS tSSLgf&E $450 $195 . " $15 cash, 7 monthly. - t STARK PlAha co;ue:uoo $295 Wmtif unu. V IUVIIUUi 0011 CD Duun M' W. uiinimi.ii i innu uu dun man.. ivnr f 15 cash, f8 monthly. ,uT GAYLORD COMPLY dun 1910 mod, fancy S2S cash. VOSE & SONSrTniT JAZ STOREY ft XUUir.S $26 cash, f S monthly. HARDMAN P'NO GO. ST 72 '1450 $265 $25 cash, $1 monthly. THE STEGEB THK MOST VALUABLE PIAlf O IS THE WOKLD. . In magnificent mahogany.' Circassian walnut, fancy American walnut, hand some oaks, fumed, satin, dull finishes and high potlshes.'-mcluding cabinet duet benches. ; v Wholesale factory Rsnples. Local Sals New, Dlacontlssed Models. Talse Pries Steger rft fancy walnut...... I7 560 Steger in magnificent oak... I6S 560 Steger In Circassian wai..... 1i 560 Steger, mission in oak.;...., m 465 8Usr Circassian walnut.... 8S " 595 Bteger in finest walnut.....-, 76 562 Steger ebonlsed ............. $t6 435 Stegsr tn splendid rnah..,.,. Ill 43S Steger In fancy walnut. ...... 86 ! 596 Steger In fumed oak......... 545 It you have oreamed of having a first class piano today the price you need pay elsewhere for . second - and third grade cheaper: pianos will buy one of these "most valuable pianos in the world." . Kew : 1S asd 111! Ortglsal .. Sale Model rusos " Loral Tales Prtee 1 Tkostpsoa In fu. oak.. $476 f 290 4 Sehreeder Broa mah..... 46f 337 4 TkoBpsoss, mah, wsl.... 476 . 356 4 ThomytOB'a, tnah oak.... (6$ 375 5 Thomstoa's, wal., mah. .. . 66S 395 1 Singer, mah; and fu. oak, S5 412 1 Steger A Boss, man., oak. 851 487 t Sleser ft Seas, fine mah..' 751 - 562 2 Steger A Sons, mis. mod... 744 562 TDIITIinif AnVCDTICIVfi Thl tore InUinrUL AUiUINOIiIU ity is our ssm lanitmi jommy ...nM .i.... I1BPDTY PP'n? or other securities taken In part or full payment of Pianos or PUyer-Pienos aunnr u saw, yaw UCLill I bUiJO eld Piano, Organ or .Talking Machine. - , . C - - ? , -. -' . . - - - OHDER YOOS Fltt'O BY HAIL i5T- ra'ffSSsl, " DOT-flf-TOYiH BUYERS r5 SITJ iZBJi'l.T?. paid. ' This virtually give you a one-year Ulal of th piano you order. j t '-" " - " Every piano or playcz-piano purchasea carries wtta It Use Schwan ' Pisno Co. guarantee of satisfaction, -ss also t usual, guarantee from, each manufacturer of these new musical Instruments.. Open Saturday v4nings.j. , . .'., Jtassfsetsrsrs' s - . - n 1 ,-".,, snm ' " .sVirViJ 55' SsWTairi--PSaini'e :Co.-r5i conspicuous even in small quantities, but naturally are extremely scarce. The - point" for 'present " consideration, however, ts not the rate at which differ ent elements choose to give out their store of energy,-but the existence of this store and Its marvelous abundance. v-, .v Tha particles shot off from radium are shot with a speed quite am axing about one-fifteenth that of light To get some notion of . this speed we may compare it with the highest speed of a bullet Dur ing the time taken by a rifle bullet to fly without resistance from the mussle of a rifle to a. target 100 yards away the M.fS .AU .lmMl.MA.Yu .Va radium .would have traveled the , 3000 miles from London' to New Tork. ' The time needed Is only a quarter of second. - ' - And as to the energy of such a pro jectile It Is not much in itself, because its mass is - so minoia, our. .weigm xor weight it is four hundred millions times more energetic than a. bullet . LIXITLESS NA.T0XS ".', . , But it mayvbe said, radium flees them off so seldom. ..Kacb projectile iff violent enough, truly, but you say there Is only on out of B000 which' explodes in the course of a year. That is so. but think how many atoms there are tn any -visible speck of substance. - Take a , milligramme of radium that Is. take 'one-seventieth : of a grain tnd ask' bow, many projectiles such as Vre have been describing are fired, off by It each , second. The number is no less than thirty million. . even from - radium itself; and the number of projectiles Is really, five times a great as this If the products of j disintegration are not al-' lowed to escape. . : ,, - ' ' Thirty million projectiles, each with a fifteenth of the speed of light'' come away from a milligramme of radium every second, yet the speck will last a thousand years before it Is half ex hausted. '-'. ' 'Chemical combination is "not in it" with energies such as this. And this is the kind of energy which la . locked up. then Analyze our THE CnST AF LIVINC. WE ARE DOING FOR PIANOS HERE . ' '? . Original , JLoeal Hale Pries Ref inUhed or Used 0 II 0 U 9. 6 C D T 7 M 4 mod- rnah., DUdH tt DCn I L4 tu t in. high.. .4.. ' ' f 25 cash. 18.60 monthly. CABLE & SOHSrSgS Tales OTnOCV- ft ilHl Oiuntl G ULIUlPi burl walnut, gooa.. Clf ITU ' 9. D 1 BtlCC Refinished, plain. keys. SAhll Vhh omii.il r ynnnto ft t in. high I, . 126 cash. If monthly. case. CitTPrn : ftll I'd $125 $290 oinucn rinu monthly, 7, T . - 11 $475 1 ri i un llBOtrUT model, oak. ea- t C flD C I ft In records purchased de a)9 Un -)IU livers one of these mod els to your homs.' i . ' . ' tCfl n Cests IL26 Weekly Weekly Xew II1S.1I1 Model Grand Piaaos , . Origtsal Sale Local Valse Tries 1 Artemis, dull oak.: ..146$ f 487 3 Mssaessa4ls,jnah oak... 75$ 562 2 Thomssoa, mah., wal.... Ill 675 .l Slsger in fine mah 168 i 712 4Cf .58 Casts fVk ? $100 satisfies the people tnrouirh Its unprecedented values." Truths H named.; Hinoer. f - chiet busmes policy. We tell you now, prices are going bighsr, x .m m wmm x ahMtM inarirjtt values not be observed? Why should . you pay Inflated prices? Let u finance your piano purchase, and . at present .Inaccessible, i in ' every ; , atom of matter.- ' ' . ' -r- . OUXCK COCLD LIFT 3IATX. ' A little arithmetic would enable us to ,y paraphrase the late Sir William CrOokes ; -.y: and say that if all the energy In" an ' v .- ounce of matter could be extracted and fully utilised It would be enough to lift the German navy and pile It on top of ' Ben Kevia '-'.- ' f 1 " ' -, Sir Ernest Rutherford reckons that the v gaseous emanation primarily given oft from radium after firing its first shot- this emanation being Itself a,', chemical . element called niton Is so spontaneously -active that It actually does radiate en- r ergy at the rate of ten thousand horse- ; power per pound, v Undoubtedly, if the progress of dis co very, enables us to get at and utilise the energy locked up in a ton of ordi nary matter per diem, no further mo tive power would be needed. 'V And If. further, we found ourselves able to liberate any considerable portion ' of such energy in a short period of time, ths explosive violence would be such that : the very planet would bo unsafe. , It Is to be hoped that no such facilities, will fall to the lot of an enterprising sclentlflo nation until it is really and humanely civilised, and Is both willing and able to keep its destructive power in check. - Humanity is net ripe tor every., discovery, but in due time, and .when itr can -be applied to useful and beneficial ends, . I doubt not some such' power as that here foreshadowed will be attained. - 1 r , .'Keeps Pledge to "Buddy; . . - Carlisle, Pa ' Oct. 18. When ' his "buddy," Doyle Ashburn, : asked John . Mllbrandt during the Argonne battle to visit his parents when he got home, Mll brandt did not forget He cams' hers from Cleveland to keep tile pledge, though a stranger, for- Doyle 'Ashburn was' killed In the same attack tn which he was gassed. He spent three days with his dead pal's folks. ' , Have sold more planes Isst month than dur ing . any one month - In - our entire history of merchandising in this city. - V4 VP'V' . . . j Our $900 " factory . clearance sale player-piano for $675. - . $50 sends one home; $20 monthly or 2 V4 years' time. sjyertisemcnts for yourself. Orlrlssl Ivoeal Sale Tslss Fries $475 $295 it- in. high,,.. L17h 5?qF. 925 cash, f S monthly. IDs Art Style,l15 model. rtenn qqc 126 cash. monthly. $375 $245 ftfl l' model oak, good uui. 26 cash. $12 monthly, yryJ; STEDER & SONS SB2554GS $60 c&Mh, $14 monthly riiBsiiiiaar-jsg.'' mio S26S . $26 caah. $8 monthly. T.,,-w AVA8 IBVUUf Vssa VaV1 a saaa A- ' Changs department,. ' 1425 S28S 19& Mh- HO mmNihr. f "VAW aaTilW4 Kew U1S.181 Veiet -. Orisisal Sal Orssd Planes ri , . . Leal Tslss Pile 1 Seed A at, fin mah...im feSS -8 Heed A Seas, man., waL..l44 750 2 Steger A Seas, matL, eak.llM 862 - orlglsal Rate' Basal ast TJsed Flases Talse - pries Paris A Sea, fumed oak.. ..$464 B290 Steger A Seas mission ....... 416 395' h, usrs, small pngnt..,,. 7t KlmkaU ACV lar.e oak..., 664 Coliard A CelUra, small up.. 184 I. P. Hale cw ebony,... 816 Baah A Oerts, larg walnut. 661 Ielaad. golden oak. ......... 416 T alley Oesi, Flemish oak ... 464 Taeaasaes, dull mahogany.,, 64 Paris A Sea, fumed oak ,... 476 Terms : $16 or $26 cash; $, $8, $10 or i ... .; .. . ,$11 monthly. . - ;" Xesale ' asd tTssd " . v , Orfgtsaf Sate' PlayerPIase - ? ' - Talse Pre Taestaaes, mah., 88-nots.. ,.$t f 495 Thomases, 111$ model, used. $4 560 Thorn pses, in handsome waL t4 695 Peerless electria player,..., 164 295 f $54 cash, $12, $14 or $18 monthly. ) Orlglsal Sale fjse rarler Organs ' , VXS Closgh A Warrss organ, f st.144 f 28 Kaley A Co. organ, stops....-146 . 38 Chlcag Cettogs organ. 10 sC 186 38 Paellle Qaeea organ. 11 stops 164 s 4H Mases A HaUs organ, 10 st 145 , 60 Terms: $14 cash, $ to raonwy.. $15 or more cash, $8 or more moaimy. V,