MAZDAZNAN CENTERS UNITED STATES OF AMERICA BALTIMORE, Md., Stuart & Midwood Aves., B. Custer. BROOKLYN, N. Y., 268 Ryerson St.. Miss Anna Ryder. CHICAGO, Ill., 59 E. Van Buren St. A. Vincent, Speaker. Science Center, 2748 Hampden Court. Julia B. Kuhmsted, Kalantress. DENVER, Col., 322 W. Iowa Ave. Holcomb Doherty. KOKOMO, Ind., 414 E. Walnut St. Dr. Grace Russell, Prior. PASADENA, Calif., 368 Franklin Ave., Congregation Dearborn ROCHESTER, N. Y., 217 Alameda St. Leonettie Martindale. Instructor. Residence, 2631 - 30th St. SAN DIEGO, Calif., 1867 Union St., corner Fir. H. Nackenhorst. DOMINION OF CANADA MONTREAL, Canada, 157 King Edward Ave., Notre Dame de Grace. GREAT BRITAIN LONDON, England, Mrs. Nellie Cowee Borel, Hazelwood, Mayfield EDINBURGH, Scotland. William Angus, Esq., 9 Argyle Place. GERMANY, SWITZERLAND AND AUSTRIA LEIPZIG, Schulstrasse 1. Mazdaznan Zentrale. Dr. Rauth. .ARLMS, Stovvej 28. Viggo Nielsen. INDIA BOMBAY, Dadabhoy Sunawalla, Goalia, Malabar Hill, Tank Road. AUSTRALIA ADELAIDE, South Australia, Mr. Helmbold, care of Maars. Buring CENTRAE MAZDAZNAN SOCIETY, Los Angeles, California. Public Meeting and Classes: Sundays 11 a. m. Tuesdays and Wednesdays 8 p. m. Dr. Gilman Bealer, Editor Published monthly by the Mazdaznan Press, 1138 Manzanita St., Los Angeles, Cal., U. S. A. Copyrighted 1919 by Mazdanan Press. Entered as Second Class Matter January 14, 1916, at the Post Office at Los Angeles, Cal., under the Act of March 3, 1879. DIRECTORS: A. F. Gault, Chairman; Wm. K. Sandberg, Vice Chairman; K. Graichen, Business Manager and Treasurer; Dr. Gilman Beeler, Secretary; John Vinson, Auditor. The contents of this publication are written by the Rev. Dr. Otoman Zar-Adusht Ha'nish, except signed contributions. Regular contributors: Maria Rose Ruth Hilton, Nellie Wheelwright, Zarlivana Marvin, Dr. B. G. Kester. Address all communications and subscriptions to P. O. Box 1854, Los Angeles, Cal. Vol. 18 January, 1919. SELF-DIAGNOSIS No. 1 And still we hold with poets, scientists and even metaphysicians that, "The greatest study of man is man." We are constrained to admit that all our encounters in the world at large-be they in the home, in society, in fields of industry or in the commercial world; or be they the premise of economic or of political problems-are due to the insufficient study of man. We study rock, plant and beast. We devote a great deal of time to familiarize ourselves with the peculiarities of all the objects in nature, but how puerile are our attempts in the study of man! True, we nurse pedagogism and devise measures of education, we revise text books and change methods of teaching, but we seem to forget, |