MY RELIGION by Helen Keller pessimism Sk Copyright by “isbleday, Doran & Co. 3 ar we e I’ ..¢ ean enjoy the sun and fl. vers and music where there is nothing except darkness and sil:nce you have proved the Mystic Sense—Helen Keller i WNU Service (Continued from last week.) Isaac Newton, who was like minded with him in his pure, devout senti- ments, was inspired to see the laws of attraction in the physical realm. Swedenborg perceived that love is the corresponding attractive law in the spiritual realm, and he testified that he beheld the radiating source of love actually as a sun, giving life to all souls and beauty to all creation. From his “Divine Love and Wisdom” I will quote one or two extracts to illustrate the facts and laws he calls inner re alities: i ly by all Protestants. the sun of the natural world has! hitherto been unknown. The reason | is, that the spiritual of man has so | far passed into his natural, that he | does not know what the spiritual is, nor consequently that there is a spiri- | tual world, in which are spirits and angels, other than and different from the natural world. Since the spiritual | “world has remained so deeply hidden | from those who are in the natural , poet ~~. - \ world, therefore it has pleased the’ rd to open the sight of my spirit, | ““ithat I micht gee the things which are | 4n th:z® orld, as I see those which are in ‘2 natural world, and after-' ward J.seribe that world, which was done in the work on ‘Heaven and Hell,’ in one chapter of which the sun ef the spiritual world has also been treated of. For it was seen by) nie) and it appeared of the same size as the sun of the natural world, and also | ‘fiery like, but with a redder glow. | And it was made known to me that the universal angelic heaven is under that sun; and that the angels of the: third heaven see it always, the angels of the second heaven very often, and ithe angels of the first or lowest heaven sometimes. : ince love and fire correspond to each other, the angels cannot see love ‘with their eyes, but instead of love that which corresponds to it. For angels have an internal and an ex- ternal as well as men; their internal thinks and is wise and wills and loves, and their extenral feels, sees, speaks, and acts; and all their externals are correspondences of internals, but spir- jtual correspondences, and not nat- ural. Divine Love also is felt as fire by spiritual beings; and therefore where fire is mentioned in the Word, it signifies love. The holy fire in the Israelitish Church had that significa- tion; when it is customary in prayers to God, to ask that heavenly fire, that it, the Divine Love, may kindle the heart.” “Man in his thought has not pene- trated deeper than to the interior or purer tings of Nature; for which reason also many have placed the dwellings of angels and spirits in ether, £—~4 some in the stars; thus within Nature and not above or out of it; when yet angels and spirits are entirely above or out of Nature, and in their own world, which is under another sun. And because in that world spaces are appearances, there- fore it cannot be said that they are in the ether or in the stars; for they are with man, conjoined to the af- fection and the thought of his spirit. For a man is a spirit; from that he thinks and wills; and therefore the spiritual world is where man is, and not at all removed from him. In a word, every man as to the interiors of his mind is in that world, in the midst of angels and spirits there; “That there is any other sun than | ¥ and he thinks from its light, and loves from its heat.” “As regards the sun from which che angels have light and heat, it | appears above the lands on which the angels dwell, at an elevation of about forty-five degrees which is the mid- dle altitude; and it also appears dis- tant from the angels as the sun of the world from men. That sun ap- pears always in that altitude and at that distance, nor does it move. Hence it is that the angels have not | time divided into days and years, nor any progression of the day from morning through mid-day to evening and into night; not any progression of the year from spring through sum- mer to autumn and into winter; but there is perpetual light and perpetual - spring.” Finally, in forming an idea of Swedenborg’s place in the life thought of the world, we may recall the religious teachers of mankind. Buddha lived his gentle life which shone as an example before the peo- ples of the Orient. Confucius taught by pr ‘ahomet carried his mes- sage ¢” wod with fire and sword throu; sls given over to idolatry. Swede. 1 strove to impart a sane, clear-evcd faith—rational truths that alone can protect religion from ig- norance, brute force, and the cunning of thosz who would use it as a means of oppression. Those other leaders, earnest and sincere as they were, did not possess the science, the perception of human motives, and the militant truths which alone can prevent so- ! Word for the human race. ' will. wisdom, power, and joy. ciety from forging fetters for the minds and bodies of men. Martin Luther protested against the superstitious practices of the Dark Ages, and the Reformation be- gan. Wesley broke down the formal- ity of the English Church, and the enthusiastic service of his followers to humanity is now world-wide. But many of the fundamental teachings remain, and a noble exponent of the Catholic Church, Cardinal Newman, whose “Apologia” I read attentively years ago, laid bare great inconsis- tencies that ought to be faced square- Swedenborg brought to all sects in Christendom an abundance of new truths, he was the Herald of a new dispensation. It is worth while to note the comment of a Roman Catholic theologian, Pro- fessor Johann Joseph von Goerres ir +his connection: “Throughout the voluminous works |! of Swedenborg, everything appears simple and uniform, especially as to the tone in which he writes, in which there is no effort at display in the imaginative poweis, nothing over- wrought, nothing fantastic. . . . In the cultivation of science, sincerity and simplicity of heart are necessary requirements to the attainment of durable success. We never observe that Swedenborg was subject to that pride by the influence of which so many great spirits have fallen; he al- ways remained the same subdued and | modest mind; and never, either by ! nea . my friends with eyes and ears, and ' they tell me how often their senses success or by any consideration, lost his mental equilibrium.” Whatever opinion may be formed of the nature or the value of Sweden- borg’s claims, it is obvious that his experience is a unique one. No other man, highly trained in all the sciences of his time, has ever asserted that he was in constant intercourse with another world for more than a quar: ter of a century, while possessing all his faculties intact. Partial, occas- jonal, even frequent and habitual . glimpses of the spirit realm are re- corded in every age and everywhere. Moses had visions of God and life. Through him the sacred symbolism of the Jewish dispensation was given, and he understood the importance of 1.adins his people out of slavery to a new civilization; but he did not sense the Divine Message couched in the The Prophets, also, had visions and heard voices, but Isaiah, Jeremiah, and Daniel the higher truths they were convey- ing tv all nations symbolically; most of them say only the narrower his- ‘orical meaning of the Message. The Apostle Paul comprehended , many truths of the Word spiritually, and his epistles are more illuminating than all those of the other Apostles put together. Hc was caught up into the third heaven, but could not tell what he saw. Indeed, he said he did or out of it. These instances were, so to speak, reports of local events in a strange country, while Sweden- borg was consciously admitted to that Strange Country, and prepared by long observation to make known the life and laws of heaven, the world of spirits and hell. The Apostle of Love, John, beheld in vision the fu- ture state of the Christian world and the glory of a new humanity. What he saw in symbol, Swedenborg saw in reality. He bore witness to the _ fulfilment of those prophetic pictures, "and explained every scene, so that the Apocalypse is no longer a sealed book; it lies open, its seals broken and its message shining with the splendor of the Lord’s second coming. “An incredible claim!” I hear _omeone exclaim. Yet it seems to me less incredible than the claim that a native of Stratford, with scarcely any classical education and no advantages whatever, should have produced twenty-seven immortal plays. What Emanuel Swedenborg with his “vast indisputable cultivation” does claim is, that he was the divinely chosen and prepared interpreter of the par- ables and svmbols and other myster- ' jes of the Word, to disclose the in- fluences of another world which we i often “feel” so vividly, and gladden the deserts of life with new ideas of That, he declnred. heralded the second com- ing of the Lord, a coming to man in a doctrine of right living and true thinking. If this seems incredible, it should be remembered that that is what most people say of anything out of the common. In 1880, men knew that flying-ma. chines could be equipped and rendered safe; but no one would listen to them because such a thing had never been done. So flying came slowly, and as the achievement of a small, faithful minority, laboring in an atmosphere of ridicule. Therc are other funds of knowledge building up. We know, for instance, that it is possible to plan the economic systems in the world that we could all be much richer and freer and happier in producing comforts and pleasures than we are to-day. We that we can reorganize the whole ed- ucational system so that the bulk of mankind will grow up more happily prepared for creative service. We peoples, the menace of war, are large- ly due to mental concepts which can be changed only by suggestion, per- sistence, training, and sheer devotion to humanity. Yet so-called educated people are incredulous of social, po- litical, and spiritual developments they may live to see and share. The must struggle on, bearing steadfast witness to their ‘truth in schools, courts, workshops, offices, and legis- latures; and what are they but mes- sengers in their way of the Loné’s second coming? know with at least an equal certainty | know that the international troubles | of our time, the hostilities between : small group of believers who know . + World events, too, seem to be fun : f this immense significance. Nations have become so dependent one upon another for the support of life that war is more than ever madness. Ex- ternal pressure is brought upon man- kind to make them see the need of living in peace and brotherhood. About a century ago man found out the use of coal and steam for the manufacture of goods in great quan- tities, and for transportation by sea and rail. Soon followed the telegraph and the telephone and improved ma- chines of every kind, and now come the radio and the ships that move through the air and under the sea. God has spread around the world | : oy ‘ing songs of praise, now sacrificing, three vast girders of coal and iron and electricity which have swept all the peoples into one great brother- hood of work! “But how can I accept such an au- | {acious and peculiar claim, contrary to everything I have observed?” someone again demands. It is true that when we read the works of other authors we have accepted rules and canons of criticism to guide us; but in the case of Swedenborg we have almost none. From the very nature of such a case we can know little or nothing about the psychological states through which he passed, except what he himself reports. His own testi- mony must convince us, if anything can. That is nothing new to my experi- Daily I place implicit faith in deceive and lead them astray. Yet out of their evidence I gather count- ' less precious truths with which I . build my world, and my soul is en- ! | abled to picture the beauty of the sky and listen to the songs of the birds. | All about me may be silence and 1 darkness, yet within me, in the spirit, | is music and brightness, and color So | flashes through all my thoughts. out of Swedenborg’s evidence from beyond earth’s frontier I construct a world that shall measure up to the high claims of my spirit when I quit this wonderful but imprisoning house of clay. gE SRY. “Fg RR .. Perhaps I may Suggest another vay of looking at Swedenborg’s as- sertions that will be helpful. Science | tells us of that strange, dark little chamber in the brain into which the sun and stars, the earth and ocean were evidently unaware of enter upon wings of light, and how from its mysterious abode the soul comes forth, and in twilight they commune together. Only He who made all things can gaze upon their unveiled glory. We could not behold their untempered splendor and live. in one small, dimly lighted chamber. Why should he speak of the “dim : mysteries” of heaven so doubtingly rot know whether he was in the body when really he apprehends so little of earth and that only with veiled sen- ses? Why cannot the soul with equal freedom go forth from its dwelling- place and, discarding the poor lenses of the body, peer through the tele- scopes of truth into the infinite reaches of immortality? At all events, this gives a key to Sweden- borg’s other-world records. He says it is the inner man who sees and per- ceives what goes on about him, and that from this interior source alone feeling and sensation have their life. But the illusion that all sense experi- ence is outside of man is so common that the mind cannot get rid of it, except by practising concentration. I have not been especially bothered | with this illusion because I am so con- stantly thrown upon my thoughts and imagination; but people prove it to me frequently when they express sur- prise that I can enjoy flowers and mu- ' sic and descriptions of lovely land- scapes. It is so unbelievably hard to make them understand the simplest facts about the potency of touch and smell, how are they going to form a valid judgment of another’s position when he not only sees and hears bod- ily, but also uses his spiritual facul- . ties to an exceptional degree. and thus widens the narrow ring which encir- cles things sensible into an almost limitless horizon? CHAPTER IV | The Bible is the record of man’s | efforts to find God and learn how to live in harmony with His laws. grip in permanent form man’s mo- mentary impressions of God and the fleeting, changing aspects of his world. From this process have arisen many of the contradictions in the lit- eral sense of the Bible, and misunder- standings of God’s nature and His purpose. The Bible tells of man’s halting beginning and gradual devel- opment, and the culminating perfec- tion of the Christ-gospel. I conceive of this book as a spiritual “Iliad” cov- ering many thousands of years, touch- ing many nations—a splendid, varie- gated story, crossed at certain points i by uninspired individual imaginings, | dark periods of materialism, and il- lumined periods when the face of God shone upon the world, and there was light on field and sky and water, and in the minds of men. Out of the chaos of human experience an indivi- dual iz now and then lifted to the peak of spiritual consciousness. As man develops, and his intelligence slowly unfolds, these individual peaks are more frequently seen; but they are never precisely alike. Each one is a light-bringer; but the light is | so infinitely varied by the medium | through which it is transmitted that | it is sometimes difficult to perceive itr : Divine source. Just as all things upon earth rep- | resent ‘and image forth all the reali- ties of another world, so the Bible is ! the Bible all new! That is why man is permitted to look | at everything only as in a glass, | ; darkly, and gaze only upon shadows , life. The- | ologians have always endeavored to } Warns one mighty representative of the whole spiritual life of humanity. The characters come and pass before us. The lawgivers, the kings, the proph- ets—through the pages they pass. Like a mountain stream, the genera- | tions pass in endless procession, now praying, now weeping, now filling the cities with the voice of rejoicing, now walking in the evil imaginings of their hearts and making unto them- i selves grave ‘mages, now falling by | the sword, wourning im eaptivity for the multitv of thelr transgressions, now bowing .eir heaas to the will of Jehovah, now pouring imprecations upon their enemies, now building and marrying, now destroying, now sing- now comforting, now crucifying their Saviour. In a book, the making of which has continued from generation to genera- tion, inconsistencies and confusion are inevitable. Yet it is the most impor- ' tant record of the gropings of the human spirit that mankind possesses. Swedenborg set himself the task of separating the dross from the gold, the Word of God from the words of men. He had a genius for interpret- ing the sacred symbolism of the Bible, similar to the genius of Joseph when he revealed the meaning of Pha- raoh’s dreams in the land of his cap- tivity. The theologians of his time darkened counsel with many words without knowledge. While they were helpless before the curtains of the Shrine, Swedenborg drew them aside with subtle insight, and revealed the Holy of Holies in all its glory. The Church had departed from the simple, direct, and inspiring story of how the Lord came upon earth clothed in visibility and dwelt as a man among men. For the marvelous reality, the clergy substituted fantas- ies that entangled them in metaphys- ical webs from which they could not extricate themselves. The beautiful truth of the Divine Humanity became distorted, dissociated, dissected be-’ ' yond recognition, and our Lord Him- "self was 1 _.. m deadly dialectics. Swedenborg throught ®egether the scattered ¢ 1d brokem parts, gave them normal shape and meaning, and thus established a “new communion | with God in Christ.” Swedenborg was not a destroyer, but a divinely in- spired interpreter. He was a phophet | sent by God. His own message pro- claims it more convincingly than any saying of his followers could. There is no escaping his virile per. sonality. As we read it, we are filled with recognition and delight. not make a new Bible, but he made One who receives him gains a great spiritual possession. The first and last thought of Swe- aenborg throughout his writings ie to show that in the Bible, rightly read and interpreted, is to be found the truest and noblest conception of God possible. Most human minds are so constituted that there is in them a secret chamber where theological sub- jects are stored, and its centre is the idea of God. If this idea is false and cruel, all things which follow it by logical sequence partake of these qualities. For the highest is also the inmost, and it is the very essence of every belief and thought and institu- tion derived from it. This essence, like a soul, forms everything it enters into an image of itself; and as it descends to the planes of daily life, it lays hold of the truths in the mind and infects them with its cruelty and error. Such was the idea of God in ancient Indie, —shere a highly intel- lectual class attempted to dictate the way of living on the principle that. to be like God, one must eruch out all human affeciivn and duties and rela- tions; and the moment one became ut- terly passionless, without thought or interest in anything external, one was godlike—absorbed in the Infinite, and ready for another world. This was an extreme case; but it illustrates the kind of beliefs that are hostile to hu- manity. By that I mean beliefs which set up fictitious excellences, encourage devotional feeling, and ceremonies which do not have for an object the good of mankind, and which are made substitutes for a righteous, useful Such beliefs darken all morality and make it an instrument of a su- preme being worshipped indeed with i adulation, but in truth repulsive to the good and the wise. There is another spiritual danger against which Swedenborg often his readers—vagueness of though about God. He says many times that humble folk think more wisely with all their blunders and su- perstitions about God, the soul and immortality, than many who heve great knowledge, but who look into creation and into their own minds and find them empty of divine truth. How thrillingly significant the words of Jeremiah come back to behold the groping disbeliever: “Thus saith the Lord, let not the wise man glory in his wisdom; neither let the mighty man glory in his might; let not the rich man glory in his riches; but let him that glorieth glory in this, that he understandeth and knoweth me, that I am the Lord, who executeth loving-kindness, judgment, and right- eousness in the earth, for in thesr things I delight, saith the Lord.” A wandering idea of an invisible God, Swedenborg declares, “is not de- termined t “ing; for this reason it ceases ar” j-..ones The idea of God as a smiit, when a spirit is be- lieved to be .-s ether or wind, is an empty idea; “ut the idea of God as | Man is a just idea; for God is Divine Love and Divine Wisdom, with every quality belonging to them, and the subject of these is man, ard not ether sr wind.” Again we read: “If anyone thinks of the Divine itself without the idea of Divine Man, he thinks vaguely, a —— EE ——————— — ————————————— ————————— and a vague idea is no idea at all; or he conceives an idea of the Divine from the visible universe without a boundary, or which ends in obscurity, which idea makes one with the idea of the worshippers of Nature; it also falls into Natuie, and becomes ne idea.” When the three-fold nature of the human being, spirit, intellect, and body, is rightly understood, it will be found that all forms he perceives pass | into imagination, and his soul endows them with life and meaning. Man and the universe are pictured in the Divine Mind. God created man in His own Image and Likeness, and in his turn man sends forth into his mind and body the world thought-forms stamped with his whole individuality. It is known how the artist sees beau- tiful pictures in his mind before he paints them. Similarly, the spirit projects ideas into thought-images, or symbols; that is the universal and the only true language. If one could convey his joy or faith or his mental picture of a sunrise to another in vis- ible form, how much more satisfac- tory that would be than the many words and phrases of ordinary lan- guage! I have cried when I touched and embossed Chinese symbol which represents happiness, and no amount of description would have produced such an effect upon me. It was a picture of a man with his mouth close to a rice field. How forcibly it brought home the fact that the Chi- nese are utterly dependent upon the rice they grow, and that when their fields are fiooded, and the crops des- troyed, starvation for millions of hu- man beings is inevitable. Many ideas crowded into one symbol gain a power which words tend to neutralize. The French say that “words are employed to conceal ideas.” Ruskin has an elo- quent passage in “Sesame and Lilies.” where he specks of words as masks which draw the mind away from rea issues to external things. Now the Bible is largely written in this universal language. Of course Christians knew this before Sweden- borg’s day. They were familiar with the “dark sayings” and “parables”; but to them as to most of us a great many chapters, and the “Apocalypse” especially, were utterly unintelligible. | “Verily, thou art a God that hidest thyself, O God of Israel, the Saviour,” describes exactly the hidden truths of the Word. Israel did not know Him, except in the cloud and the pillar of | fire and through the rod of His | Power. He did | yo seen as Man upon earth, He was When He caused Himself to called an ally of the prince of devils! Even His own disciples mistook His purpose, and disputed among them- selves as to who should be greatest i in His Kingdom. They misinterpret- ed his Work of Love as a plan of conquest and personal glory. all His ways there is a covering! His very revelation is veiled in clouds. The Word which professes to show Him to us, clothes Him in the limi- | tations of finite human nature, and { we gain the most contradictory im- | pressions of His attributes. He is in- finite and eternal, and yet our human passions and ignorance 2°: ascribed “I am not angry, you provoke your- selves unto anger.” and yet He pours earth. He is presented as a God who “doth not repent,” and He does re- pent. He gives to each man according to his own works, and yet He visits the sins of the fathers upon the chil- dren. There is a long series of such apparent contradictions, and it is nat- ural that many p.ople cannot see any order underlying such a chaos of ir- reconcilable ideas. If we believe in a God at all worthy of love, we can- not think of Him as angry, capric- ious, or changcable. It seems as though these conceptions must have been part of the barbarism of the times when the Bible was written. Swedenborg develops a philosophy sf Divine revelation which is reason- able. He points out that, as in sci- ence, every revelation of new ideas from God must be suited to the states and the capacities of those who receive them. He undertakes to show that the literal statement of the Scriptures is an adaptation of Divine Truth to the minds of people who are very simple or sensuous or perverse. Ee demonstrates that there is a spir- itual sense within the literal, suited to the higher intelligence of the an- gels who also read God’s Truth and think with us, :lhough they are in- visible. In this superior sense is the fullness of Divine Truth. What would a rriend care about what 1 said to him if he took my words literally? Would I not appear to him insane if he thought I meant to say that the sun rises and sets, or the earth is flat, or that I do not live in the dark? It is the meaning my friend listens to, not the words or the appearance” which they convey. That process is very similar to the one Swedenborg employs in finding out the deeper meanings of the Word. God appears small and undivine if a dull, perhaps bad man reads that He is angry with the wicked every day; but a man of sense and heart sees that it is only an appearance, and that we put off on Him our own an- ger with each other and the punish- ment we have brought upon ourselves. There is also the anger ot the just which subsides i.. a moment, and is understood as love that chasteneth. But God is incapable even of stern- ness and He tells His people this over and over again. As we penetrate into His Divine Word, putting aside one covering after another, we find a Word truer and truer to His nature. He did not create man and then be- tray and reject him from Eden. He does not teach laws and break them and impute guilt to His creature. He Over | to Him. He says, “Fury is not in me,” | the fierceness of His wrath upon the | | warns, but does not cast anyone into | hell or forsake him. It is man who | constrains Him to express command- i ments in language that can be appre- hended. and acted upon. Swinburne was unconsciously feeling His Pres =nce when he wrote these lines: O my sons, too dutiful Toward gods not of me, : Was I not enough beautiful? } Was it hard to be gree? {| Yor behold, I am with you, amr in you and of" you; | Took forth now and see. { | i i { | | i | i Who ever realizes the abuse that i is piled up to the heavens daily and i hurled upon this more than beautiful,. all-enduring Deity! He does not: i really hide Himself; but the deter-- . mined evil speech of selfishness hides: | Him, I have said all this because we need’ to have a very clear, unclouded idea i of God’s nature if we are to read the . symbols of His Word connectedly. { According to this theory, the spiritual ‘ sense deals with the soul exclusively —its needs and trials, its changes and renewals, not of times, places, and | persons. When we read of mountains, rivers, lambs and doves, thunders and . lightnings, golden cities and precious. stones and trees of life with healing leaves, we may know they are exact symbols of the spiritual principles that lie back of them. Affections and ideas are signified, and their uses to the soul are similar to the uses of their natural representatives to the . body. This rule of interpretation was employed by Swedenborg for twenty- seven years, and he did not have to change or correct one Scriptural statement given in his first published work. He gives the same spiritual equivalent for the same natural ob- ! ject throughout the Bible, and the" meanings fit wherever they are ap- plied. I know, I have tried this key, and it fits. This is what Sweden- borg calls the law of correspondences | —analogies between the forms of na- : ture and those of spirit. The Bible | may be called the Poem of the World , as well as God’s finite utterance te an. (Continued next week.) | COMMUTING SERVICE FROM PITTSBURGH TO WASHINGTON Aerial boundaries of cities are be . ing expanded but Pittsburgh is abou {to attempt a new record—commut | ing service between western Penn 'sylvania and the nation’s capital. “I'm sorry, Congressman, but have an engagement for luncheon i | Pittsburgh in three hours and I’ ‘have to hurry,” one member of th | national house may say to anothe and dash off to make the appoint | ment. Colonel Harry C. Fry, backe | of the new project, believes that fiv | to seven round trips a day can b made by a place between Pittsburg and Washington. Captain Jack Morris inaugurate ! the trial service with a Stinson- De Bettis field at Pitts Ww. ! troiter plane. { burgh, and Hoover field | ton, were the two tern lished. Between these, |the rugged Allegheny ‘known to fliers as one © | treacherous stretches of flying cow (try in the world. | ‘Nevertheless, the Pittsburgh bac] ers of the plan believe a reguli commuting service can be establis! ed on a permanent basis, despite ti Alleghenies. A national solon ms live in Pittsburgh, if he desires fiy back and forth to his desk | Washington. Bent on adding the final touche Colonel Fry said that a barber wou be carried in the plane, so that tl late commuters would be able to g a shave during the trip, and that manicurist also may be added to tl serivce of the aerial express. A number of men prominent Washington and western Pennsylv nia, have been invited to try the ne¢ service in its experimental stag United States Senator David Reed, of Pennsylvania, has been as ed to make a trip, as have other nc ables. Radio station KDKA has offer installation of broadcasting servi in the plane, so that the busy flie between there and Washington m keep in constant touch with their « fices, if they need communicati more frequently than two hours, t estimated flying time. DOG LAUNDRY IN BEAUTY PARLC “Here's your dog back from t laundry all nice and clean!” M. J. O'Rourke runs a beauty pi lor and laundry in New York for ci and dogs—even a few canaries i commodated once in a while. It’s the dogs though who furn most of the business. There are many stylish owners stylish canines who not only send their pets for a bath once a we but also have them come in once month or so for a manicure. Trimming and polishing the n¢ or dog's feet keeps O'Row and his assistants busy in one p of the beauty parlor. Cats also get manicured. Me women bring in their kittens to hi their claws dulled so that they c not scratch so easily. Sometir canaries get manicured “but that infrequent. “It’s the dogs that need most tention,” said O'Rourke. ‘And re: they like it. You'd be surprised the results that come from thorot bathing and cleaning. “Steam baths are popular with bow-wows. Many of them don’t th so much of the manicure sciss however. You've got to watch and often muzzle the dogs when f is done. “Some of them don’t like to beautified at all. They resent it, “But most of them get used t and become peevish if their owz forget to bring them around 3 and then.” —Subscribe: for the Watchman.