Editorials

The following extract from a private letter recently received by a Scientist here from a Scientist in London, will be read with much interest:—
We were in error in saying, in the Weekly of November 17, that the old Robert Collyer church edifice at Dearborn Avenue and Walton Place, Chicago, had been purchased by Christian Scientists.
"I do not want this class to be an affair of money at all.
The historic church located at Dearborn Avenue and Walton Place on the North Side, Chicago, has been purchased by Christian Scientists, and will be occupied by the Second Church of Christ, Scientist, of Chicago.
Colonel Ingersoll, in his recent lecture in Boston on the subject of Superstition, among many other brilliant things, said: "Superstition is to believe without evidence, to explain one mystery with another, to disregard the real relation between cause and effect, to believe that matter was created by mind, to trust in miracles, charms, and dreams.
At a recent medical convention held at New York City, Dr.

The following letter is published for reasons which are...

The following letter is published for reasons which are obvious.
About two years since there was organized in Chicago a movement for the comparative study of religions and religious sects, under the general head of The University Association and World's Congress Extension.
In a small town in central Colorado, where Christian Science services have been held for some time past, Mr.

CONSUMPTION CURED

I am the only one left of a family of ten children, having followed five sisters, four brothers, and my father to the grave; all swept away with consumption.
The following epitome of the remarks of the Rev.
1.