1928 Nov Dec Part2

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    1HE HE;LTH RI TO RATB y r I. !lrs . 191m B, Henderson

    The Health. \1"1 tocrat i but a normalindividual, just a each bird of the air andevery deer of the f resu are but normal;each one being equally trong, ually effi-cient, equally beauti ht! and equally happy,Between the IOTII . ! ' eternity f the I a tandthe long eternitv of the Iutur , the i -TcatCreator bas O 'iY en )' II and Ole . tl1e b n oflife' b dily r pre ent d by .1 . liying rn 'chan-ism, the greatest which d Ifimself evercreated; it i plac d il our kc ping withan individual power for it.pleirdicl natura]development or fur it d truction, Thetr uble cern t have Ii en in abuse of thatpower.Til Health Ariabout l Dh y iQ lo gy to better under tand andappreciate the m chanica! workin f tbhuman body that bas the poi er of thinking,seeing, hearing ta tin r and feelin .

    Mechanics of the Body, e may ay that th human body 1 abound volume iUu tratjngcvcJ.'Y knownand

    unknown rule of mechanics. very re ealedand unrevealed principle f, cience, v V eare tuld how it i capable f ru re than12'00 motion. p rforrned by mu les andbones ill xnnbination : hat th re aloe 208distinct bon and 502 lnntary muscles,each with a name: that in th ir ramificationand in partner hip with the brain. th re areo er [0,000',,000 lin . to upply the ele-graphic y t m of nerv ' that be heartengine pump b. at in health 7 times aminute. 2 y . ; ounces of blood pa ing throughat each heart b at; hi means 175 unce:a l11iJ1Ute. and 7 Y 2 ton: daily: tha in normalvi Or, each dr p of blood make! the entirecircuit of the body ill between two andthree minute, a faily trip of about I >ru iles through rrrand canal. nnd endle tri-butaric: . Phy iol gists also t~1I us that inorder to di tribute nutritive matter andcarry away effete material. an eighth of a.hor e power of energy i daily rnanufac-tured. How thi i chemically accomplished.is a little onger t ry. What we alreadykIlOW, however, is that in perfect hea1t l i ,all the e activitic funrri n a accuratehand 1I100t l11y, that 0 11 uncoil cious 0 'them excepting in caself di ea e.One ould naturally think that reason-able man would appreciate this marvelous, ork a quite sufficient for all hi purpos ;but given til power of a certain control. he

    ch e. to abuse hi great privilege. Forthe purpo ' of covet d f r eel nsationsof Iife , he often tile to cheat natu re o Byintroducing a Iii n lunve er small intothe divine machinery, 'we ca n God to theue 0 expel it; the 'wonderful telegraphicy ei f nerves quick] spreads th alarm'to all th vital organ : th - normally hard'worked h art 1eat: fa t r and every vitalorgan re, ponds to the rail. Man njoj-s thecomm ti n. P r f 01! FOT iuch a '10 inggame! All physiological sin are paid forfr In th reserve fun 1 in the bank of life.gain, for another 'forced sen ation ofrep e, the I i011 he intr luc i. tr ngenouah paralyze or partially paralyze thetelegraph y tern f nerves. Tobacco, caf-f in . alcohol and drug all have this per-rri .iou effect to iorne degree.Em r all thu peaks of it: "A manhardly know how much he is a machineuntil ~11 begin 0 make telegraph, 10m,pre s an lIe In ti in hi O wn image' butin th se., hi' for eel to leave ut his folliesand hindrance. Q that when we g themill. the machine i. mer moral- than we.In hegingharn mill. a br ken thread orshred 'pL11Is rhe 'web through a piece . o f ahundred yards. and i. traced back to thegirl who v ve it ami [e ssens h r wages.ATe YOU .-U "1111ninz, Mr. Profitlo ,and doyou . rpect to swindle }-our Divine Masterand employer in the web you weave? Ada r is a rn r maznif nt loth than anymuslin, an I you . hall 110t e nceal the sleasy,fraudulent, rutten h ur .' 11 have slippedinto the piece."Carlyle ( 11 .harae ristic says : "The.1ealthv kn w not uf their health, onlv the. ick, ~Thc per Iection of bodily wel I beingis, that the oil -ction f bodily activitiesseem one. The working right or working\Irnn~ ()I the power . called vital, holds to -nurral. 'in elk-ental. political, poetical, as well3 If! Iller c rp real therapeutics,

    Our Inward Germ AnniesFor further proteeti n of the human body.the. Health .-'\ristocrat must not neglect thestudy 0f rnicr lb , r al living organic oc-cupants, re idenr by millions inside our jiv-ing body., God i. great in Teat things and greatesti l l least,"In the gCll ral _ heme of nature, therenothinz wasted, leaf withers, falls

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    and decay only to be transformed into Jl .Wplant life; the arne with the human body.along with other f rrn of life which C ' n-tinually grow or d cay. , .For' thi carrying work of building ordestroying: the laboratory 0 nature ha i,nit service several e ts 0f germs, orne am-mal and orne vegetable. In ide our body,there are organized germ builder calledleuco yte and an organized army of gennoldiers called phag cytes-e-our d < f nlers oflife. Out ide, are organized germ cav-enger of death and d struction calledpathogenic. germ,. ...Our army of phagocyte an! divided intooldier guards, and again into a flying squad-ron, which in time of danger ru he' to theplace of attack. Each t lhag- cyte cha '~foraI~ enerny.gertn, grap" . wallow' and digesthim.Nothiug can equal the germ pow r efreproduction, their di regard of pac ~ndcold, and their endurance and j(lnO-CYlty.They are diminutive enough tray Itbrough th human body regardle.iflesh and bone) with the arne ease amirapidity that light penetrate thr ugh. tran:-parent glass, Their numbers lm'ln~ly 1 1 1million - alta billions, enough to suit thececa ion necessary for their ervice ...The true tones of the microbes are rn rethrillinz than those of our childhood. tellingo f goblins. iant with se 'e~ league b t.several-headed dragons belchinz srn ke andfire' and the feats t Jack the ziant killerand of Hercul t cetera. pale in compari-all. with the true wond rs of germ lifevitally connected with ur "\,,"'U,

    RECOGNITIONB'jI lJI1au~fi.eld Srflsdf!'

    Upon my dear t fOeI -uan" facYour lovely lineaments Itr,Ke:Above the h arto' rfille I with guilI find the we tnes of Y ur mile;And when ab tit me era. h and fallMv arthly trea sure . one an I all,The remnant in my trembling handShall for Your perfect [u: tic' tand.I do not ask that You should beShaped by In)T own poor arti try,But recognizing that rOil areI strive to find ) ou near and far'In mali, in great, in high, ill low,In every thing You live and glow;When thu I find You, I can eeYour perfect Haven ncir ling me.

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    AN ARTISTlC TRIUMPHA bl riou vrst mf beauty descendedupon Broadway rc utly when the e l i tin-zui bed hakesj ea r e an actor. \!\"alter Hamp-den, pre sen ted his laborate pl .ay, "The

    Light of ...-\. ia," at Hampden' Theatre inNew York, The production, ....rlii .ch dealtwith the life f PrinceSiddartha of India,wh afterward be-am the Buddha. wasin every r p c fin-ihed, flawk us-rained in intere r atrue and 010 t fa ci-nating account of oneof th In t S U I 1 ! i U 1 Cfignres 0 human hi -torv. The cene ofBtlddha 'under theB dhi tree, with dimlight revealing Marathe alluring one, andthe r wraiths ofternptati n ; and therV ci.J tcr H a'ln pd en a s final illurninatieu ofPrince Siddarilui the Bles ed One, wahreath-taking in it 'beauty and ill,piration,An .,r ie nt',L l ba lle t arranged by Rnth t.Denis. Hindu, ong by the eminent RatanDevi, Hindu dance by the beautiful Ragini,art direction by laude Bragdon mu ic onHindu them - by Elliott Schenck played byan. r -piece rche tra, and a company 75 upporting the illustrious ~r. Hampden,mad up thi unusual production,\:'\ hat wa the result? The I lay cI edafter three week of public indifference, duelargely to the IUO t tupidly unfair reviewsby the dramatic critic. They can, appar-ently, sit night after night viewing the crimelrama ..

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    INTERE TING IT E : V IChurch Acclaims Faith Healing

    \\rashington. Oct. 22.-l'be repert of thejo int cOlmni. i.u of tb ,e Episcopal J1Ur~h011 Chri i t i an healing, which ha spent Iyears it ! e, . t igat i l lg the work ,f oci ~eoon ce rn ed wi h faith hea l i ng and tabulatingI er onal experience wa pre' r r t ed to the1:1ouse of Deputies today b), H. . '" yckoff.I~ declared that " hristian h e a J : i N O ' haspassed bey nd the t~ge of experiment andit. alue "cannot b question d. '. 1 l0 1 mit1 g u p the tes timony obtained f ro~lI'lhysiciall., . urgeons pastors ; ; : n d . benef i t l-aries 01 faitll healing, the emt rnss IOn drawsthe couelusion that 'spiritual healing is '110Ionger the hope of a few, but the. beJ~efand the practice ( i ) , f a large and mpidly in-crea ing number of pel ' '0 1 1 ." ,Expte~ j,ug the COD.Vioti011 that the 111111-istry of .healing in the .cnL1~tb shOt~ld.beexercised so far as po sible iu co peranonwith medical science and I~r.tct:ice, the re-port l'~0.t:lllJ,lends that the present Episcopaleonveution reccguize the "deepening 'of thespiritual life of. the ' l11I1~~h that comesthron 11 thegJ."owmg recogrutiou f th e heal-ing POWeL Dt . ~d.".The COIDfm , ron r commended mcrea edattentinn to the whole ubject in the teach-ing of the t11.coil,'lgical scho I ,-lYe'(~ YorkTunes.

    GOCildWlll CongressThe ~~tb Annual {eet iJ; l .g of the" rldAlliance' f (\)r .Intennational Frle1'lc:;lhipThrough the Churches "will be a . C T O o d ~Vil1Cengress 1 0 be held i : i l New York on Nov-ember U-J:z-T3th. The cen t r ad . rheu te , tobe dis cussed by a whole 1 1 0S t of eminentleader and edL10l:t0~S, j's Must VI/ Have'"air' A few of the speakers wil l be theROIl. Fmnk B.Kellogg o n ''The Pari PeacePact"; _R~\.K Stattley jone: of India on

    rientalImpre sions bf coidental 'Mars' ;Mr, Roge l" \1\. :gae o n on "Die EconsmieImplications of "Va~";and Dr: ~, N., DasGupt-a on. "The Univers at Religiou Peacec ; : , n.terence:"Blessed are th peacemaker. May theCQ:Qst ruc t ive in f luence 0 ' uch bene f icen trg

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    IV . ~.IifBER,DECEJliBER 1928Antique d' ranee", U , > French Bayreuth.with actor and acrres: . from the medieP raucai e and the

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    J2science 10 1 pre ent state fail to explain.cc rding to Dr. L card Gaillard pes-esse- the power to mummify animal ti sueslJy the imple tou -b 01 hi hands. Amongthe objects which he produced for the doc-tors inspection were a mutton chop, harda weed, and s l lOwrng no signs oi decem-I.osition, and the mutnruified hedie. of apigeon a . perch and an eel.The doctor' examination of the e peci-mens and of aillard bas sari fied the scien-tist that there really lies an iextraordinarypower in tile toueh of the man'. hands,;raillard ha for a long time . tudied hyp-notism and magnetism hut it was not untilla tDecember that he discovered his ili.aillard claims, and the dector 11a' notdenied this doim,that his gift call arrestthe grov,i:h of cancer by being applied tothe noxiou ti ues. From the Con: l1 l1 i s s a rvof } alice Dr. Locard obtained a cocainaaddict. who was submitted to Caillard'streatment and immediatelv 1 0 t all de iref r the drJI('I'. Gaillard declines to treat apatient whose case has not been first sub-mitted to a regular ph}sic.ian.-Xtrr, lorkTim s. -

    Music While FallingDeath by falling from great height! jplea ant-provided the sma h-up at earth isthorough. Professor Heim of Zurich, whostated so recently, once fell off a precipiceof Mount aentis. He Ii OLl hi head anddistinctly heard the thud, tout, h re-overed; intros ective, he recalled hi fall-ing sen anon. Delicious mu it oughed byhi ear. He was very call. nly after

    all hour from his rooky l;llldh1.gdid he fedthe pa in (jf his broken Lone ..The experience set 'him researching, .Hequestioned AJpini ts "tho had tumbled overprecipices. He talked with people fallenwith disabled airplanes. with foiled suicides,From all he got a concurrence of te tirnony :that their thotlght: were lucid and followedeach ther with weird swiftnes I i l ia. theywer fully aware of. and re igned t - o dea h.that mu it ounded, orne felt as ifthey were pa sing through .osy clouds.None felt pain immediately \1p011 strikingearth.-Tillll?

    Man's Electrical Nervous SystemBERLIN October 4.-Two Munich sci-enris t have ucceeded in photographing thewaves of electric current that flow from hehuman b. ly. By means a t amplifi ationthe current was magnified to a point atwhich pictures could be taken, bowing a

    series oi park radiating rom the fingerof all outstretch d hand.Only wh Ll the kin is dry and the fiagersmove will the current flow into space thephotograph sh ws, th ngb even a lightmovement will then produce electricalparks.\i\'hen the , [j!;ti closed and opened rapidlythe (J ciltations increase proportionately in. trength,Th . scieuti t b liev their r e o earch workwill. h w the 1 dy' nervous system to bean intricate an 1 lelica e electrical networkwith the bruin :1", a emi-automatic switch-board.-i\ lI'l" i"(frfl' Tivnes,

    Two Travelers ReturnDr. Sudhindra 130 re 01 the niversitv ofIowa and his wife, Mrs, . 'inl1~Z. Bose ofLindeuwoed olle e, lvfjssouri, have re-

    Dr. ami Mrs. Sudhilldnt Bosecently returned to" merica from a trip ofseveral months to India, 'where they werewarmly welcomed by the Indian pres andmany friends, and honored , nb 1 1 1 a l 1 Y pub-lic function ziven by variou dub andor anization 0f .India.In reply to a qu stion a ked her by wamiYcgananda, :Mr . Bose wrote: ou wouldlike to know \ hat I think of my Indiansisters. 1 have a good deal of love, re pectand admiration for them. for their weer -ness and patience. ~LttcJ3' we 1 1 1 Americacan learn mttch from them, and 1 for one,did." .

    First India ConferenceThe Fir t India Conference of Americawa held during ctober in New York: Cityand achi v d nota le II ce. in i aim to

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    Or -EJ l lBERDECEMBJK 1928more fllily present to American under tand-ing the various a peets of Indian cultureand her place itt the world of today. Theonference opened with an. exhibition ofmode-rn Hindu paintings at Corona l\{umliArt Center. Among those who contributedto the success of the Conference wereMadame Sarojini Naidu, ho spoke on"Indian \ omanhcod." Dhan Gopal Mu-kerji, whose topic was "What has India toontribute to Modern Civilization?"; Rev.T. T. underlaud 011 "America's Interest inIndia" ; Dr ... K. oomara wamy, on 'Re-cent Discoveries in Hindu Art and Archae-ology' ; Hari G. Govil, director of the Con-ference; Prof. Herbert Adams Gibbons.Prof. Harry F. \~ ard iII ' . Robert MorssLovett, Ir. Oswald Garrison Villard, Prof ..George O. C. Haas of the Interaationalchool of Vedic ani Allied Research; Mr.Brian Brown, editor of Wisdom of theHindus' . Prot. S. L. Joshi of DartmouthCollege; Prof. : E . . R. .. eligman of Co-lumbia University, Dr. Alfred Vil. Martinof the Ethical Culture Society; Rev. JohnHaynes Holmes of Coremunity Church'Sri Ragini, distingui hed interpreter ofHindu songs and dances ; Mr. Claude Brag-don noted writer ; D1.". V. R. Kokatnur;Mr. I. T. Mu zumda r : wami Glla..neshwa.r-ananda ; Mr. N. Thakar ; Mr. H. K. Rakhit ;Bi hop Paul J ones and Swami Yoganandawho wil l be a gue .t of honor at a "banquetto be gi en by the India ociety of Americaill i\'ew York City in January.

    Hindu 'I'ernple UnearthedExtracts from a recent di patch from theBombay correspondent of the e t Yo1'k

    Times are ziven b low :One of tile finest known gem of thHindu temple-builder s art is being broughtto light near Kidrapore in Kilhapur, one ofthe native states of the Bombay Pre idency.Enough of it bas now been laid bare toidentify it as a unique jewel among themaster creations of Hindu al,"chitecture,adream in stone. dedicated to Siva and en-riched with all the lesser gods and goddessesof the Hindu pantheon. Beneath the enolinterlacing branches of the p iP a la : l1 d O a 1ty m t,at a point '\ here the acred Krishna Riversuddenly loops itself into a ere cent, thifine achievement of Indian art has provedto be in a remarkable state of preservation. _..It Ilelong to the Chalukyan period, whichdat, s it somewhere between the year wooand 1200...'Hindu ulpture is perhap without anequal lsewhere in the world, The Kid-

    rapore sculpture is overpowering. _ Treateringellui?,' in lllt.r:ieate.design it wculd Jlardlybe possible to nnazine. The roof of thestar- haped shrine is supported by l'OWS ofpillars delicately carved with representationsof epi de from Hindu mythology andocial life. _ round the central shrine thescheme of the !!l-eat templ is far more in-tricate than u ual, for the innumerahlei

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    MME. NAIE>U IN AMERICA~[acla!1le 'arojini 1\aidu, leading Hindufeminist orator writer) poet and states-WOlTt;In former president of th Indian .Na~tional Congre - an f rruer -\'faT l f

    Hornbay arriv d til New York all October26th for alecture tour of America .Madame J_ aidu wil l lecture all over Arner-ica and part of Canada until probabl_ theu ginning iMarch, 19~9or later, 1 I e rle ctu r e IIb -j ects will indude "Tnt r-pretations 0 fIndian Wotn-anhood": t TheMystic pinner-.\.u IntimateSaroii ' l l i 'aidll 'tudy of Ma-hatrna J"andhi": "Irrterpretation f . ' t f thpiritual Life of India,' a r id recitals fromher 0\\'11 published and l10puhlished poems ..

    Presents Garland of Welcome[1 th day foil win her arrival in

    rnerica, the Nai Iu Re .eption C. mrnitteeof the Hindu re o iderrts elf New York gavea ltll1 . th eC lln in h on o r a t J\.(adh~t! and thy feet.I Iow doth mv heart tran: mute.Itself into a -Sllbt'lc" I lve r flute,'To lure thy care, to C TIgUeI' hy distressEnchant fhe wearine .Tho' thou are unaware,The ecstasy and anguish 01 my prayerL 1 : urlv t ec1ee l l1 f rOlU the sharp toll ofdeath.Thy fragile 11unan breath.

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    CHRISTMAS MESSAGEBJ! Swami, 1 o!)CllUmda

    Greeting to all Yogoda sind tI[ every-where. n the occa ion of th ming pir-itual Christmas ea n.-Tbe truth of ogoda is rnarchine . readily011 through the territorie of dark ignor-an ce. New region have b en conqueredbv the armie of divine love. - tddier ofs~lperf,titiol1, narrowness, rni understandingand dogmatism are on the lUD. Wake 01-- dier of ogoda I Train your" elves ill theart of elf-contra). Drill yourselve by reg-ular meditation. Th me age of Christ"3 n t of weakness, His me sag j ofpower. which can rout the le gle l'l . . of ignor-ance. His m t h Q ; d of battle l more p wer-fnl than -all the rna hine gun 311! b rnb-shells of lh 'world annie . Before the powerof love, the a.sphyxia.ting gases of interna-ional hatred and bigotry, and the colo, alarnrnunitiou of war. are belittled andstre1Jgtble s.To answer war by wa r , hatred by hatredwickcdne br evil, caste and clas prejudiceby retaliation, does- not olve but increa CJthe problezn,Let us make this coniine hir tma ea-

    soh ar occasion not merely for exchange 0 fgifts and feastiags, Let u rise above theplane of candie and gaudy things, Let ulearn to heal' the command of the hrist-general within us. Let \1, discipline our-elves to de-ve l ap our lec! ing 8 1 iri ualpower. that we may conquer the atan ofi""l1orance. with all his allurement and delu-ion. .. Let us estahli h the Prine of Peacewithin us that wemav meet our cr e. andt e o t of Jife with P[)~\er. ictory and tram-quillity. Let uslearn to 10 e those W}lO loveus not. Let til' give ba ie to vi! only byo d. L t 11 111 et religi us bigotry by ourinner conviction won bv realization, Let u.influence th .errnr-stri 'Icen with our healthyspiri ual examples. L t 11S Iiv 1 r i t inwi: tI rn, ) \'C and meditatio, and therebv.how oth rs how to IJe true e l i siples of thebr-i . t hev ~-(}11.hip.

    Let us break all our mental lioundariesof color. cr ed and nati llal1trJ, and eceivall---even our inanimate and animal brother-in the endle 5, all-emhraciug arms 0' OUfChr i t-con sci usness. This wil l be truc~j~'brationof th camina of hri t 011 earth.

    , . ~ ~ ' . ~ _ . . 1 1 1 . " . I I " ~ - I I I . " . I l . I l ' " j-,.IUI

    ODE TO MY MASTERSwami Sriyukteswar Giriji

    By, ; : Ja/lli l"o!JanctlulllWh 1 thirsty {OJ" G dI left the portal 01 parental loveAnd became a wandererCaned by thy magnt;:tic will)In the sacr d city of Henares\ here Gauges laps the feet of saints,r met thee-thou polestar of my shipwreckedthonghts-And w a c . .11wn t1 1 Lmpkl LakeWherein 1 and all may quench our thir t.Thou great bond of at- anga" fellowship'sinvisible c rd'Tw en East and vVestTween two pole. of b iterous activity_ nd calm spirituality,In thy teachings science 0 f matter and of. pirit~ r. ake their age- 1 f udAnd ill et in ~o(Todfl:~{ balancer! realmNe" r to part a,ga.ill.The 111 'age of Babaji"And Maha 'nyu Lahiri'Ha come through theeTo link troth aad theol g).To bridge religions and realizationTo reach :'od by .meditation,T CfU h the wall of darleneBv the flood of wisdom' lisht.J.~~e. leeping w rld, awake!ons of God ba\ e c m to takeTh burden of your cries away.

    1 . . awakener. of the Chri t in mev Y:ith 1 0 ing reverence I bow t thee,1Sat-Sanga is fellowship of religions. and ofthe good in alL"ogoda Is the scientific teclmi_que. or de-veloping body, mind and soul harmoniously."Babajj is the S\tpteme Master of the Yogoda

    Sat-Sanga movement in America,. and India.His disci-ples claim that he is several hlUl.dr,edyeaTS old.'Lahiri Mahasl!-ya was the disciple 0 : Babaji.Thefol"mer revived the art of realization aniipractical Yoga on a gr-and scale in, Bengal andIndia, teaching thousands of disc.iples. He wasan ideal prophet and Christly man, while mar-ried and performing the duties of arm.nary life .We can picture saints in the for.ests, but whenwe find them in the jungles of civiliz:ation,th_en

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    we can hold hopes of spiritual salvation forthe 'Worldly man.His disciple and :my M!ister is SwamiSrlyukteswar Giriji. Tbe inspiration and com-:mand for the spread of Yogoda Sat-Sanga inAme.rIca is due to him. The whole credit be-longs to him. He is one of the world's greatestinJeUectual and spiritual giants. In him, Eastand West meet He came to u.nite\:he best inEastern and Western civilizati.ons. His mes-sage combines the necessary lessons of rna-ter:ial and spiritual nfe, bridging: the cbasmexisting between thelillo_gy and true inner 're-alization.

    RECIPE MESSAGESBy S'lI.!ailll: l'o g o n audc l

    Health RecipeOne of the main C31l,e- of arthriti > rheu-matism and many other disea es is auto-intoxication, which is due to faulty elimina-tion, Unelirninat d, decayed food tayslike a paste of glue on he walls of the in-testines and is absorbed into the blood.Disease naturally follow .Progressive doetors arc eudo rsing theplan of a fruit juice or complete fa t, 011eday each week. . nether sensible medicalrecommendation which will improve the

    health of the average man who lives on th eordinary diet is to evacuate the inte tinesand flush tile b wels completely once ortwice a month by a day of drinking niyvegetable juices or two or three quart ofwater. Thi gene.ral 1101 .1 se-cleaning is help-ful, To flu h the drainr and pipes of t earteries every now and thel1' i. to preventthem from becoming clogged with poi 0115.Prosperity Recipe

    A beggar has no choice; he receive what-ever is given to him out f kindnes. Buta sort has a perfec right of p ses ion overhis father 5 treasures.'The inequalitie ,of fortune and a-calledluck are due to, deeper pre-nata! and p t-natal causes, which are partly created bybegging instead of demanding fr In Tod."Vhen we beg) W~ ate limited, ',Ve receivethen only a cordinz to the mea IHe of ourmerits and the limitation' of our em iron-ment. But when we demand as heirs ofour Universal Fa ther, we have acce toperfect health, balanced pro perity and deepwisdom.We ha e been b ggar long--t becomeagain conscious of our kinship with odrequires time, di cipl'ine and meditation.All nature's reasurc and force wait uponand wil l ing ly serve those who realiae theirdivine identity. L uch I ople do unt xeek

    pro peri" -it eeks th m. 0 we shouldhave od f r t. seekitlg piritual prosperity,and all eI e will be added. Per i rill VOLlrspiritual duties with undi id d attention.and your material dutie of life with go datt 116011. Keep your feet n the groundana your h-ead above the cl uds of ignor-ance 111 the ' r ea lm of th etei"11a!. nru hinef wisdom.

    Three Food Recipes{ilk Curd

    Curd i one. of the be t sub titute Q[meat. It' marJe by curdlin one quart ofmilk. l~eated"in a double boiler by addingthe juice of one orange and one-half alemon a the time the mill" bezin to boilWb n the milk separates, the solid curd willbe und floating. over slightly green waterbeneath. Drain the curd througb a chee e .-doth and let it drip for a half-h ur,

    Nut-Paste Pies.c \ wh le- vheat ple-cru t fill d withHeinz'. peanut butter makes a delicious pie.H i a good _ub titute f r meat and farmore whol me than mo t pie .An even better fi ' l l ing is a pa te of th r

    oughly grouud-up pecan , or almond I utter,t which br WI1 19ar a n d cin n a rn n ha vebeen added.J . cge/able Eggs

    Make little balls, imitation e' -volks, ofboiled and mashed yellow split .peas. orteamed com meal, mixed with a pincb ofugar, salt powdered mustard and onionjuice or fin ly chopped raw onion. Coverthe "yolk" with mashed potatoes, rollinz itOl~ yonr palm. to lnakeit 1 0 k like an egoI p these vegetable eg s int a deep pot ofho Cri co" When they art: cooked, placehem on ah rbeut paper to drain off theCrisco. _ paste of E lish mustard issometimes served with these e'FlJ:s- "'s .Fresh olid curd, mixed with a little dryllour (to bold) j even bet er than rna hedpotatoes as tl covering 0 1 - the "yolks,"urd 1 oks Like the white of an eg