PAGE EIGHT THE NEWS AND THE HERALD. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON April 24, 1931 Fight Against Bang's Disease Enters New Phase May I BV PAUL W. HARVEY, JR. ALEM, April 10 (P) If Ore fan's cows bad sense enough, they would give the slate department ot agriculture a mooing vote ot tltanka for almost wiping out Bt-ng's disease a malady that for a time threatened to spread through the nation's cattle popula tion. But the cow, generally consid ered to have a relatively small amount ot brain power, doesn't realise that In the past four years the department, cooperating with Uncle Sam, haa reduced the per centage of cows having Bang's disease from 6.7 to 2.6 per cent. The present loss to the beet cattle and dairy Industries from Bang's disease, commonly known aa Infectious abortion, amounts to $260,000 a year. The two In dustries, which have 945,000 head Soaring to New J Not long did Ed Warmerdam's world Indoor pole vault record of 14 feet 6 inches stand against the assaults of the champion. Earle Meadows. Meadows, -former University of California star, holder ot the world outdoor record of 14 feet 11 inches, is pictured regaining indoor supremacy with a lift of 14 feet 7 inches, just enough to top Warmerdam. Scene, the recent Chicago relays.. Close as Close Can Be "f; &4'V' 8PS (Judges at the Southern California-California track meet at Los 'Angeles had a tough time naming the winner in the 440, aiter Brwln Miller, right, and Howard Upton of Southern Cal breezed Ad the tape yards ahead of their rivals. Miller finally was de- atlared winner by a matter of inches. Time was 48.3, The meet was won by the Trojans. From I la to F Uy.yi -' M i 1 ik HIM. I'iniiiii.T inViiJ ila Ruth Firebaugh, 5, daughter of a deceased veteran, couldn't t)uite make it so President Roosevelt helped her fix the first buddy poppy of 1939 in his own lapel. Eugene Van Antwerp, commander-in-chief of the Veterans of Foreign Wars, looks on. ot cattle, are valued at 155,000,- 000. There Is no cure for Bang's disease, so government agencies must kill the Infected cattle. At first, livestock men were reluct ant to kill them, but the payment of subsidies changed their minds. The federal government In 1934 paid S20 for killing grade ani mals and J50 for pure bred, hut this was reduced to one-third the difference between the appraised value and the salvage value. On May 1, a new program will become effective. The state, by a $52,000 legislative appropriation, will pay $4 for gr.ulo animals and S6 for pure breils. Counties are expected to pay up to $5 for grade cattlo and J7.60 for pure breds, while the federal government will match the totnl ot state and county payments. The maximum amount available World Record - r Poppy D. R. a would be $13 for grade rattle and $17 for pure breds. Perhaps this won't he enough to compensate the owners for loss ot their In fected rattle, but It should go a long way toward preventing fur ther losses from the disease. Tha following, leftist oral dtlttfrrd It tha FTrmont aohool aiMllorliira on 8tin.la. allornoon hy LotitM Knltfit Whoalloj Cook. tS H.. of kait mi Olr, Mo., momhor of tho Roard of Uolurv. ship of tho Mothff Itiurrh. th Klml ttiiurt) of Itirftt, SrttniHt. tn Rotton, Mamrhuoflt.. Mn. Cook ro IntroiliKTit br H. R. Nflmi. Im Hltl: "rhr tr Ihrto mitiltiKllns nfnH tn tht irtritml uiifol.lmfnl of lt CTwtt I. Vm. tit tiling of tho law or M,wi, rtirn lit ..tifnl of Jena, oho tattefct u tht tntrrprrlallon of llw U; an.1. flnall-. tn tht fullness ot lin-. ramt ths mflstton of Chrtttlsn Sclrnrt, thnvivh Mary KsW K.ktr, mbirh trarltrt us lbs pradlral aprliratlnR ot in. law to all lot Klnuttat of human affairs. "Anions tho many aminos Ky h!oh Chrltlaii Solonoo Is roaohliu out to tho mrniA. Is ihrwish tho R.urd of LofliirrJilp of tho Mothor niurrh. lho r'lrst tlsisrrti of tliri.t. Solrntist, In Cuton, Mass. Hits atlomooo ao hs.t alltl us a mrnthor of that Roant. ... ami It Is mv pftilkco to Introthiro to ron Mrs. Ititto Whoatlrr Cook of Kansas CltT. Missouri, aho lilt sroak to us on Christian hVltnn: WHAT IT IS. anl WHAT IT I10KS - Mrs. Coot said: Mv Friends: Will you let your thought turn back for a moment to something which happened a very long time ago? It seems that once. In a cer tain village, there lived a man who had never seen the sunshine nor the blue skies, nor his mother's face, for he had been born blind. But one day It happened that there came that way a stranger, whose heart was alwavs reaching out to those who were distressed, and he and his little band of followers stopped be. fore the place where this man was sitting. Upon seeing the afflicted one a member of the group Inquired, "Master, who did sin, this man. or his parents, that he was born blind?" Doubtless you all recall the Incident, as recorded In the Bible, and know that "the stranger" was none other than Jesus, the Christ. And doubtless you recall his reply, "Neither hath this man sinned, nor his parents." The great Metaphysl clan refused to see before him either a blind man or a sinning man. If he had, he would not have been able to heal him. Jesus beheld ever In consciousness only the perfect man of God's creating, never blind, nor sinning, but every whit whole. The narrative is too long for detail here, but it is interesting to note what happened after the healing was accomplished, and Jesus had gone on his way. For he left be hind him a startled little group ot people, tense and silent, staring In frightened wonder at the one whom they had always, until that moment, known as blind, but who was now standing quietly among them raptur ously drinking In the beauty of a world suddenly turned from darkness Into light. "Is not this he that sat and begged?" one ventured to ask. Some replied. "This Is he." Others, more skeptical, admitted, "He Is like him." But he said, "I am he." Still baffled, they sent for the Pharisees, those supposedly wiser ones, but they In turn were equally mystified. So they questioned the man's parents. Their reply, however, could not be consid ered very enlightening, for they merely said, "We know that this Is our son, and that he was born blind: but by what means he now seeth, we know not ... Be Is of age; ask him: he shall speak for himself." So they asked the son, and he did Indeed "speak for him. self" and In no uncertain terms I Although he evidently did not know who Jesus was, nor how It all hap pened, he said plainly, "One thing I know, that, whereas I was bund. now I see." Christ Reals Today If some distressed heart has long been crying out In its despair, "Oh, If Jesus were only here today I Then, I. too. might see the light of day! let him lift his head, and .rejoice, Jesus has long since left the earth but 'he Christ remains, that imper sonal, ever-operative, ever-available, healing Truth, limited to no time, and to no period. A Christian Sci ence treatment may be called the coming of the Christ. It Is Truth, entering some discordant conscious ness, to recompense fourfold for those dark hours before the daylight came. It Is a process or salvation, distinctly mental process, a prayer, high and holy. It Is a spiritual benediction, blessing both him who gives and him who takes. It Is strong, clear, vigorous affirmation of the Allness of God, and of the un touched perfection of man In His Image and likeness; a refusal to be lieve what is not true and God bestowed; an utter repudiation, as causelec:, baseless, and spurious, of any evidence which would try to present man in any way but as God made mm joyous, siniess, siauuess, free. It admits the existence of but one power, one presence, one cause, one effect, one law, one Mind, and all these wholly good. It replaces beliefs with spiritual Ideas, pure and perfect. It maintains that the sup posititious opposite oi ims real man, calling Itself "a mortal" Is but a false sense of man, the result of the deep sleep which fell upon Adam In the Scriptural allegory, wherein he saw the creations of his own dreams, and called them by such names as nniteness, limitation, be ginning and ending, birth and death, sin, sickness, sorrow, sensu. ality, pain, poverty, fear, death. A Christian Science treatment proves, or demonstrates, that all this, and much more, are but phases of be. lief, without any real substance or foundation. It might be termed a process of awakening. And it need n t be prolonged or difficult. No matter how long one may have been In a bad dream, the Instant he awakes, he Is free. The metaphysical healing of phys ical disease has come to be accepted by most persons as an accomplished fact, since for nearly seventy years now It has been practiced among us through the understanding which Christian Science furnishes of the onbroken relationship between God and man. Those who have not per sonally felt Its beneficence usually know of someone, or of many, who are standing as living witnesses of that same divine power which Jesus understood and utilized. But history repeats Itself. When some remark able recovery takes place through Christian Science, friends and ac quaintances often express the same Incredulity which was so apparent In that healing two thousand years ago of the man born blind. While, as In his case, they cannot deny the healing, the comment Is sometimes made, "He would probably have got ten well anyway." Or, "The doctor was evidently mistaken In his diag- . There Is some danger of trans mission ot Hang's disease to hu mans' 90 persons having contact ed It In the atnto last year. In humans, who get It through milk from diseased cows, It Is culled umlulont fever. nosls." Or, that very familiar one, "Well, he couldn't have been so sick as he thought he wasl" With the latter remark we will agree, for a Christian Science treatment always starts from that verv basts. Only It goes still farther. It says that tho patient not only was "not so sick as he thought he was," but that he was not. In reality, sick at all I It refuses to accept the patient's bo ner in nts own lnharmony. jusi De- cause one "believes" something to be true, that does not necessarily make it so. When a college profes sor, mentally unbalanced, once be lieved himself to be a turnip, that did not make him one. His friends all agreed that he was the victim ot hallucination only. And the Christian Science practitioner who was called upon to help htm proven their opinion to be true, and re stored him to his right mind through an understanding of his true status and Identity as a child or God. untouched by human uiu. slons. But if that same college pro. fessor had believed himself to be, not a turnip, but for Instance, a consumptive, would his friends so quickly have agreed that he was the victim of hallucination only? I think not. Yet Christian 8clence teaches that one belief Is no more real than the other, and that both are corrected through the same mental process. The Christian Science Textbook Every vain misrepresentation of the carnal mind, so-called, must go down before the unanswerable argu ment ot one who. after perhaps a lifetime of helpless servitude to some false god, now stands among his fellows a free man. No flowery elo quence Is needed to convince any one of his healing. He has only to say, as did that man of long ago, "I am he." And he has this advan tage over that other he knows how It was done. For It Is no mystery, no hidden, occult, secret process, revealed only to a favored few. Gladly and freely did Jesus explain It to any, and to all, who would lis ten. I have sometimes wondered If there were a school, a university of learning, where these truths could again be taught In all their origi nal purity, would not the whole world be flocking to Its doors? It one knew of a place where the deep things ot God would be made so clear, so simple, so logical, so win ning that the one receiving such In struction would not only find his own life made richer and more abundant, but that he could go forth to bring that same richness and abundance to others, as did Jesus, would he not be ready to sell all that he hath If necessary, to en ter that university? There Is none such, as we know. But there Is book, easily available to all, wherein these same principles are fully clu. cidated, our textbook, "Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures' by Mary Baker Eddy, the Discoverer and Founder of Christian Science and Its only Leader. And one Is not required to sell all that he hath to possess this book, and to receive the benefit of Its Instruction. All he needs to "sell," or to "dispose of," Is his prejudice, his pride, his lifelong theories and human opinions, and to give this book his fair, honest, and unbiased attention. If he Is already an earnest Bible student he may find much within Its pages which he has always believed, since our re ligion Is founded upon the Bible, the only book which Mrs. Eddy used as a textbook In writing hers. We differ, however, from other religions In that we maintain that the heal ing factor must once more be re stored to Christianity. Many signs and wonders are being wrought to day by those who are demonstrat ing, or proving, the ever-presence of the Christ. I know personally of a young man whose X-ray photograph showed an Internal growth so sit uated that delay was deemed dan. gerous, and he was hurried to a hospital for an operation. He was not a Christian scientist, out his brother was, and to this brother In another city the mother Immedi ately sent word: "He says, pray for him. Do what you can." The sick man was In the Middle West, the brother In New York, but all that night across the continent sped such clear, strong declarations ot Truth that in the morning, when the sur geons started to operate, the growth could not be found. They searched, and probed, but It was gone. How they explained It. I do not Know. only know that he Is a well man today, attending to his business affairs as usual. No Criticism for Others Christian Science has no criticism for the splendid men and women of the medical profession who are helping suffering humanity In the only way they know. We respect them lor their tireless efforts, and I believe that we are all growing closer togetner in tnis noiy ton. An Instance of this mr.y be seen In some observations which were made re cently before the American Acad emy of Optometry In Its fifteenth annual meeting in Chicago, The case waa mentioned of a young girl whose vision was blurred at times, although a thorough physical exam ination had failed to locate any trouble. It was found, however, that the girl had taken a bitter dislike to someone who came often to her home, but whose presence she was not In a position to prevent To use her exact words, "I hate to see him." The optometrist expressed the opinion that this powerful ha tred was causing her vision to fall. To quote his exact words: "Once she was brought to understand the meaning of her 'disease,' she was enabled to adjust herself Intelli gently to the situation. Within a very short time afterward, her symptoms vanished." Hate I If hate can do that to the human eye, why not to the human ear as well, or the throat, or the lungs, or the heart, or to anything else? If "adjusting herself Intelli gently to the situation," or In other words, thinking differently about It, could relieve the eye, why could not some other oppressed portion of the body be relieved In exactly the same manner by thinking differ ently? If materia medlca admits, as In this case, that thought affects some parts of body, why not others? Why not all? Christian Science ssyi , In 1935 there wero moro than 25,000 diseased rows In Oregon, hut by last year tho number had been reduced to about 1,000. And moro thnn 350,000 animals are tented by tho department each year. A LECTURE ON CHRISTIAN SCIENCE that It can and proves that It does. All will probably agree that tears have a wholly mental origin, that they are the direct effect of some. thing which touches or saddens the thought, in respoiuo to which cer lain muscles relax, and the tears flow. A blush Is tho outward ex. presslon ot some Inward emotion, such as pleasure or embarrassment una nows received while one Is eat lng may occasion a sudden and complete loss ot appetite. Extreme fear may deprive one temporarily oi me power of speech, nervous ness turn the hands to Icy coldness. au mental, every bit of It I But where, I repeat Is one to draw the line? Christian Science does not draw line at all. It maintains, and proves, as In the case of the man In the Middle West, that there Is no place in tno human anatomy, so-called which Truth, specifically directed, cannot reach and where It cannot nnd Immediate resrjonse. Our text book states this very definitely In the following passage: "When we remove disease by addressing the disturbed mind, giving no heed to the body, we prove that thought alone creates the suffering" tSclence ana Hcaitn, p. 400). Mrs. Eddy It Is possible that such questions as tneso came to Mrs. Eddy also, and caused her to long for "the more excellent way" which was eventually to be revealed to her. now far she was even then In ad. vanca of her time, tho world as yet out faintly comprehends, but It coming more and more to under' stand her, and to give to her dls. covery of tho allness of Mind and the nothingness of matter Its right tul recognition In the history of hu man development Those who knew her In Lynn, Massachusetts. In those early days when she was writing "Science and Health" nrobablv never dreamed of what the future was to hold for their friend and neighbor. going her quiet way among Uiem. She was fond of walking, after her years or invalidism healed through her own understanding of the truths which Jesus taught and they often saw her pass along the street, slight in ngure, delicate and graceful, with expressive hands, and a face se renely beautiful. No ono had then the faintest Idea of what those soli tary walks portended, as she went between her home and a near-by point or land, called Red Rock jutting out Into the sen. There she used to sit, when the tide was low, looking out across the bluo Atlantic, and I have sometimes wondered It even she herself then knew what the future was to hold In store. Did she then realize the place In the world which the Christian Set fftice movement was destined to hold, as years went on? Did she ever en vision tho church edifice which was to be, one astonishingly largo for that day and age, stately and beau tiful, etched In gray loveliness of outline against the sky In a neigh boring city? Yet there It stands today, her church. The Mother Church, The First Church of Christ, Scientist, In Boston, Massachusetts, a tangible tribute to the fact that like Paul, she was "not disobedient unto the heavenly vision." But did she then know that its branches would one day extend to all parti of the world? And as she listened to the lapping of the waves, did they ever seem to prefigure the ceaseless hum of busy printing presses, which would some day be preparing her glad tidings for distribution among all nations? Did uplifted spiritual sense foresee the quiet Reading Rooms, to which tired humanity would turn for rest and refresh ment, "without money and without price"? And the Sunday schools, where the little ones would be taught those "simple verities," which she says, "will make them happy and good"? (Science and Health, p. 236.) And a Metaphysical Col lege, where the future teachers wero to be prepared for their great work of Instructing otners? Ana the con secrated practitioners, giving their lives to Ood's service? And the Readers In the churches, privileged each Sunday to present to their con gregations the weekly Lesson Sermon, "on which," she says, "the prosperity of Christian Science largely depends"? (Manual, Art III, Sect 1.) And the midweek meet ings in the churches, where those who had come out or great tribula tion would have an opportunity to give glad and grateful testimony of benefits received? I wonder to what extent these things, and others, un folded to that pure consciousness, as she sat alone there, day after day, listening to God. We shall never know. Whenever I think ot It, I can seem only to find the answer In a statement which she so perfectly exemplified all through her life, from her own book, "Miscellaneous Writings" (p. 158), "Let us be faith ful and obedient, and God will do the rest." Salvation Through Prayer The aspect of physical healing which Christian Science presents hu been dwelt upon at some length, j- 'i the Impression must not be given that It Is the only factor In our religion, for It is not. In fact. our Leader herself has stated that "Healing physical sickness la the smallest part of Christian Science. It Is only the bugle-call to thought and action. In the higher range of Infinite goodness" (Rudlmental Di vine Science, p. 2). Some of Its outstanding achievements Include changes In character and disposi tion, the correction of bad habits, perhaps Indulged for a lifetime; the overcoming of sorrow and fear. It adjusts our business complexities. smooths out tangled human rela tionships, affords unerring guidance In Important decisions, silences self pity and self-condemnation, and utterly annihilates that lawless and devastating thing called "human will," which seems responsible tor Just about nine-tenths of all the Ills "that flesh is heir to" I Many nn Ill-tempered and chronic fault finder has gained through Its teach ings an entirely new viewpoint of life, wherein everv man's hand is not against him, as a! had always sun- posed, but wherein he begins to dis cover that, as his own thought changes, this Is a world of kindly people, who are his friends. Some one who was just learning to drive a car waa told by her Instructor: The department hopes tn have na much success as It did In vind icating bovlno tuberculosis. For Instance, 27 per cent ot nil Mult nomah cnuuty'a cows had tubercu losis In 1912, whereas the figure "Don't be afraid of crowds. Remem ber you aro In friendly truffle." What a relief It must be to some lifelong pessimist to find that ho has been living in "friendly trafDo" all tho time, only ho didn't know It I But tho greatest wonders wrought by Christian Science are those of which the world will never hear. The splendid testimonies alven every Wednesday evening In our churches are helpful and encouraging, but no matter now remarkable and untm rallrlcd they may be, wo know, and tho ones giving them know, that "tho halt hits not been told." It can never be told. For deep down In the ncarr. or every ono of us, I think, lies the memory ot some demonstra tlon so sacred, so unutterably holy, that It Is difficult to put It Into woros wnicn the world could un derstand. Although It may Iran scend anything else which has ever come into our exrjerlence. wo can. In thinking of it, find expression only oy putting the finger on the lip, and manning uodi Mental Caases One who Is earnestly striving to make practical what ho already Knows of our beautiful religion will do well to remember that Mrs. Eddy nas given as tho cause of all sick ness, either fear, Ignorance, or Un, tSce Science and Health, p. 411.) rear, as most of us know to our lor row, Is tho haunting, dark dream shadow which seems ever to pursue mortals In their struggle toward tho ngnt tear of poverty, fear of old age, fear of failure, fear of ridicule, fear of losing something, fear of making a mistake. As distressed hu manlty looks over Its long list of fears, It can truly say. as did Isaiah of old, "O Lord our God, other lords beside thee have had dominion over us." Then, too. Ignorance of man' God-given dominion may delay one's advancement Into tho kingdom of heaven, his lack of comprehension of his right, hero and now, to be wen and happy. But what of sin Are we to Infer that tho greatest sufferer must necessarily be tho greatest sinner? That would be cruel and unjust, and Christian Scl ence makes no such sweeping asser tlon. Wo all doubtless know of soma case of chronic Invalidism where tho dear sufferer Is a marvel of pa tience and resignation, lovely and lovable, nn almost unparalleled ex ample of human goodness. But hu man goodness Is not enough. Beau tlful and desirable as It may be, and a human quality for which all should strive, that alone does not heal. What this sad world needs Is not "resignation." but a knowledgo of God's eternal laws, a realization that they are ageless, changeless, ac live, dynamic, Indestructible, un assailable, unalterable, and univer sally applicable to everything In tho universe, from the flower by tho roadside to the lost, lono star. God In order to conquer fear, Igno ranee, or sin. It Is essential to get a clear understanding of our Father Mother God as the ono creator of all that really Is. Christian Sclcnco has many names for Deity. It de fines God as Principle, the supreme basic foundation upon which all en suing conclusions rest; that which eliminates all mistakes, Just aa does the principle of mathematics. One cannot "forgive" a mistake In mathematics. Neither does the Prln ciple, which is God, "forgive" any thing unlike Itself. It utterly oblit erates It, and when this Is done, there Is no mistake left to be for given. Our textbook defines God as Mind, one and Indivisible, whose ever-presenco Is tho complete de. structlon of the counterclaim of minds many, of a belief In divided Interests, of a "thine" and a "mine, of countless personalities working at cross-purposes. Another namo for God Is Soul, the only real substance, with unlimited resources to bless and comfort, to smooth the friction ot human conflict with the "Peace, be still" of Its own allness. And God Sp'rlt, Inspiring, uplifting, strengthening, Invigorating, giving new wings to Impulse and endeavor. And God Is Life, supersensible, har monious, eternal, without beginning and without end. God Is Truth, ex act, unswerving, Inexorable, Incapa ble of change, chance, or deviation, straight as the lino and the plum met. And God Is Love, shining through every mist of doubt and fear, enfolding man, tho beloved son, In a tender surety which only those can understand who have felt Its never-falling beneficence. Love Mrs. Eddy has written much about love, not only as God, but as that quality which Is the pure and per fect reflection of the divine, and she must have realized that what tho world calls "love" sometimes falls far short of that. In fact she says, plainly (Miscellaneous Writings, zso), no word is more miscon strued; no sentiment less under stood." The Love which la God stands alone, untouched by selfish desire, pure, perfect, Inviolate, the most stupendous word In all the world. But that human emotion which Is sometimes called love may be as far from the reflected quality of the divine as darkness Is from daylight. Unlike the divine, human love Is susceptible to change. It Is erratic, Inconstant, Inconsistent, sometimes turning with incredible swiftness Into hatred and revenge. It Is often only selfishness In dis guise, accepting someone's devotion as Just anotner nattering tribute to Its own vanity. Real love. Imper sonal, Impartial, universal, Is In no way connected with that fulsome quality of honeyed sweetness which Is so distasteful to the average per son. Love Is a strong word, a clear word, a clean word, a sturdy word, which can buffet the storm, and come through unspent. It sparkles. It does not cloy. Mrs. Eddy says (Miscellaneous Writings, p. 2S0): "I make strong demands on love, call for active witnesses to prove It, and noble sacrifices and grand achieve ments as Its results. Unless these appear, I cast aside the word as a sham and counterfeit, having no ring of the true metal." It was this sort of love which enabled Mrs. Eddy to leave the quiet shelter of her home, and to step Into the glare of public life; to face courageously that which hu always been the lot now Is one-halt of one por rent. Hang's disease Is renioimllla for many calving losses, sterility mid a reduction In milk production. The ilepnitiiienl must concen trate lis efforts on eastern Ore gon. (Milium county has the of every pioneer of truth, tho world's hatred of those whom It does not understand. Let us nut confuse love with sickly sentlmen tallty. It was love, and not hate, which caused Jesus to drlvo the money-changeni out of tho templo wiui a whip of small cords, and on ar.otner occasion to tell tho hvno critical Pharisees that they wero a generation of vipers, "wliltcd sepul chres, , . , full of dead men's bones, and of all unrlcaniicss." It Is love which Inspires the Chrlsllon Science practitioner to devoto his life to relieving the distresses ot Ills brother man. tempest-tossed upon some sea oi adversity, Help In Business At this particular moment some of us may, perhaps, bo feeling that t .la sea of adversity seems particu larly temiwst-toasrd when It comes to tho question of financial difficulty. It Is needless to explain why. Wo all knew the reason, so let us proceed at onco to find out how one so be lieving Is lo bring his little bark to land through tills storm of popu lar unrest, to rldo tho waves, safely and surely. What can we. u In dividuals, do about It? Wo can do this; wo can refuse to rive our consent to It. And this comes first of all. Mrs. Eddy has written t Mis cellaneous Writings, p. 2M): "Float lng with tho popular current of mortal thought without questioning tho reliability of Its conclusions, wo do what others do, believe what oth ers believe, and say what others say. Common consent Is contagious, and It makes disease catching." This does not necessarily refer to physical disease only. The word "disease" means simply a lack of ease, lack of quietness, of confidence, peace, and assurance. Let us refuso to "con sent" to world conditions as true. Let us refuse to add our mental quota to the weight of universal mesmerism, which. In the last analy sis, Is only Individual mesmerism multiplied millions of times. 8he who used to sit upon Red Rock, and watch the rising and (ail ing of the tides, onco wroto (Mis cellaneous Writings, p. 384): "Tho seasons come and go: I.ovc, like the sea, Rolls on with thee. But knows no ebb and flow." "With thee" not against thee! The Love which Is God knows "no ebb nd fiow." no fluctuations, no changing moods, no variableness nor shadow of turning. In reality, each on-coming wave brings us but a lit tie nearer to tho understanding of Mind's Infallible laws, which govern tho universe u certainly today as they did when our Master, by ullliz lng them, quelled that other storm of long ago with tho well-known "Peace, be still." Our textbook says (p. 00), scienco Inevitably lilts one's being higher In tho scale of harmony and happiness." "Higher" and "Inevitably" higher. What a glorious thought for some discour aged mortal, who moy, iwrhaps, bo feeling mat no has failed In his life purpose, that In spite of his best efforts his general situation Is stead ily growing worso Instead of better. How It will rest him to realize that success la "Inevitable" when ho onco places himself and his affairs unre servedly In the caro of God I And why Is this sure and "Inevitable"? Because by so doing he thereby allies himself with the only power there. and becomes automatically at. ono with a spiritual law which will operate In his behalf with moro cer talnty than does the so-called law which brings the sun each morn ing to a world asleep. At this point, however, someone may be thinking, "But just wnat aces it mean to place oneself and his affairs In the care of Ood? I should like to do that, but I don't know how." It Is a mental process, not complicated, not difficult. It only means that ono shall deliberately, sincerely, and consciously bring all tho mlnutlao of his business affairs Into absolute accord with Principle. And this Includes his personal af fairs, and his personal conduct as well, for since one's business Is but the outward and visible expression ot his thinking, he cannot expect It to succeed If there is still something In his mental home which needs correcting. Principle Is exact and Imperative. It sometimes may make quite unforeseen and disconcerting demands upon those who would ally themselves with It, who would gladly receive Its benefits, and yet who may seem not Immediately willing to make what they call the "sacrifices" which will really bring them Into :cordancs with It But It must be done. Talking the truth Is not enough. Words are sometimes but empty platitudes. Jesus once stated, "Not every one that salth unto me, Lord, Lord, shall enter Into tho king dom of heaven; but he that docth the will of my Father which Is In heaven.' The Way Dear friends, I am wondering If at this point you are waiting to hear some deep metaphysical state ment, which you believe will In stantly clarify your entire business situation. If so, you may be dis appointed, for It Is from this pre cious book, Bclonce and Health, that you should get your metaphysics, and not from me. The best that I might say hu already been said a thousand times better by Mrs. Eddy, My exact phraseology might bo for gotten by the time you reacn the front door, but In her book you have everything you need, In all Its crys tal clearness, to read over and over, to study, to ponder. So what I am going to do Is this: I am going to tell you In the simplest words at my command what hu always helped me most In times of stress. am going to give you an idea, ono Idea, for you to put Into your own words after you got homo. For by so doing you will provo that you ave really made it your own that you have mentally assimilated Its true substance, and that It Is un folding and developing In each In dividual consciousness, not as a mat ter of rhetoric, but of realization. am doing this because I know that the same Ood that helped me will help you also, and make your relcaso inevitable." And it it this: rrtoc worst record with 14.6 psr cent of Its rows having the disease, Figures for oilier eastern Oregoa counties Include Jnffnrson 0.1, Wheeler 8.0, Crook , Clrant I, Klnmnlll 5.0, linker 6.5, Unloa 6.1, and Umatilla 4.6. , Ood more. That sounds very slm !i but It Is not always u euy a It sounds I Huwover, It Is the world'! great need at tho present time, when everything seems to be going wrong. For I tell you truly, and la all earnestness, Unit In my put ex periences as a Christian Scientist 1 have always found, sooner or later, that whenever my domonstratloa seemed very long In coming, It wu Invariably because of my failure tt do this very thing to trust God moro. I would find that I trusted Mini a little, but not enough; that I trusted lllni sumo of the. way, but not all of Uio way; that I wanted ills will to bo done most of the time, but not all of the time especially when It Interfered with mine I I could not always seem to get a big enough sense of Die over-presence, the "Incvltablcnras" of Ood, filling all space, and leaving not a pin point of matter In the whole universe. Once, I remember, after an un usually difficult day, I stood at my window looking out at the stars-, millions and millions of them; and beyond those, millions and millions more, discernible only by telescople vision; and beyond those, again, that Incredible, humanly Incompre hensible thing called "stellar space." And yet, in n t Itnt Immensity, from beyond the lost siieck of star-dust to tho very placo where I wu stand ing was only God. And I saw that, u Individual man. I wu Included In this viut. limitless abundance of good: upheld, guarded, forever se cure and Immune from harm by reason of my Identification with this Infinitude of good. I saw that I ' surrounded by It, encompassed by It on evory side, enfolded In It as tenderly u some little child I enfolded 111 Its mother's arms. As I pondered this, alone In tha tlarknrM, pence liko a river de scended upon my troubled soul, and I rested for tho first tlmo In many days. It was u If I stood among tha snowy fastnesses of some great mountain, remote and still, utterly aloof from the rarth-nolscs In (he vtilley below, the turmoil and con flict of poor struggling humanity, crowding, pushing, loving, hating, working, playing, treadlna each other down In the fierce demand to know "who shall bo greatest?" The echoes of It, tho memory of It, the ordldness of It, began to fade, and fade, and for a few holy moments 1 seemed to see, as from some mount of transfiguration, all mists of error disappear In the white light or ills eternal presence. I seemed suddenly In understand that noth ing was real nnd true but the right And 1 taw how utterly futile were onv efforts which did not havo Prin ciple back of them, to give thrm life and substance. I saw that te succeed I must be willing to say, from my very heart of hearts: "Dear Father, I am so tired of my way, so tired and weary trying to mako It work. And It never does. Show me tho better way, dear Lord, Thy way. I am ready now to follow wherever It may lead." Truo Identification In her book "Unity of Oood" Mrs. Edtly has wrltten tp. 64), "Mortals may climb tho smooth glaciers, leap tho durk fissures, scale the treach erous Ice, nnd stand on tho summit of Mnnt Blanc; but they can never turn back what Deity knoweth, nor ef cape from Identification with what dwelleth In tho eternal Mind." What Deity knoweth can bo only good, for Deity knoweth naught else, only good for ills children, and this good, with which man Is over Identified, Is available, here and now. Man can not "escape" Identification with it, by right of his unbroken relation ship with tho ono Mind, wherein Joy Is spiritual so cannot be turned Into sorrow, where success Is nor mal and natural, where there are no failures, no disappointments, no disillusionment, no partings, no pain, but all Is well. As we return to our homes, shall we not quietly ponder these things, and tomorrow approach our problem, whatever It may seem to be, with renewed cour ago to master It, Instead of letting It master us? Shall we not trust Ood more, knowing that His holy pur poses are even now unfolding In bo half of those who do this, like the petals of some lovely flower? We may not, at the moment, always see these purposes fully, but wo can al ways nsk. In all humility, that He will show us plainly all that we need to know, In order to do all that wo need to do, to complete our dem onstration. Perhaps a prayer like that, given In all sincerity, may bring to light many things not yel realized u obstacles in tho way. Perhaps wo may find, In some cases, that what is keeping back the an swer for which wo long, is just our own lack of moral courage Porhaps something needs to be done which we are afraid to do, something which over looms before us like some Impenetrable wall, blocking all progress, ii so, let us try looklna out upon a night full of stars, and watch our fears melt away before the boundless immensity of that Love which Is the only power, and with which man Is eternally and In evitably Identified. Afraid? Whoa this Is here, and Is ours? Beauty aids have an annual turnover valued at $1100,000,0011 In Kngland. with hair preparations rnnklng first, fnca and skin foods Rccond and fnce powder and rouge third. The province of British Colum bia, Canndn, produced 1.439,401 Ioiih of rnal In 1037. an Increase of 100,000 tons ovor the preceding year. Man could build structures as high as Mount Everest If. he worked with the efficiency and nk 111 of tho tormlte. England's Forestry commission In Clio biggest lantlowner In that country, with 618,800 acres of land plnntod with trees. Kgyptlnn frescoes ahow nlclurea of nnclcnt Kgyptlnn wnnvers with llir-lr loom, nnd these frescoes date hack to 3000 years before tha birth ot Christ,