IN OKLAHOMA cm (pointing to\the Episcopalian) has only 5,000 people in his diocese: I have 505000." Where- upon the Episcopalian, not the least offended, remarked to me, " That's true/' On the whole the Oklahomans seem to be suffering from no lack of good advice in the spiritual department though there seems to be some indisposition to follow it. For myself the chief spiritual comfort I got in the City came from the view that met me as I looked out of the windows of my habitation on the 32nd floor of the Sky Line Club. It was the view of an illimitable expanse of level earth, illimitable in all directions, which seemed, in that translucent air, to be the floor of an infinite ocean of light, resting upon it as the waters of the sea rest upon their bed. No *' magic casement " ever opened on a vision more divine. It was a vision into the Light Kingdom of Immensity, unfathomable and serene, as though one were gazing into the eyes of the Living God, And now for a " survey" of things more terrestrial—the Recreation Survey of Oklahoma City, by Mr, L. H. Weir, expert surveyor sent down into these parts by the National Recreation Association to map out the land, to exhort, encourage and, if need be, rebuke; a closely typewritten document of 80 pages, replete with sound wisdom, technical advice and well-digested statistics, devoid of the pictorial features which render the Californian report so