Are you sure?
This bookmark will be removed from all folders and any saved notes will be permanently removed.
The Lectures
The lecture at the Hyperion Theatre given under the auspices of First Church of Christ, Scientist, New Haven, Conn., December 1, was a great success. The audience numbered sixteen or eighteen hundred persons, and was one of the largest ever assembled in New Haven to attend a lecture of any kind. This was the first lecture given in this city on the subject of Christian Science.
The daily papers of the following day published favorable notices of the lecture, and the Journal and Courier published in full the manuscript which was submitted to them, giving a nice notice of the same, and we learned afterward that there was a very large call for these papers and that they were freely distributed.
The audience was largely composed of the most intelligent people of the city.
Enjoy 1 free Sentinel article or audio program each month, including content from 1898 to today.
December 28, 1899 issue
View Issue-
Items of Interest
with contributions from William McKinley
-
The Lectures
with contributions from Lewis T. Perry, George R. Christie, Edward P. Bates, William C. Baker, C. S. Patton, Chauncey G. Sweet, John H. Wheeler
-
Among the Churches
with contributions from John D. Carle
-
The Sentinel
with contributions from W. F. Stiles
-
A Card
Mary Baker Eddy
-
The New Century
Editor
-
The True Spirit
Editor
-
From Business Men
Robert M. Orr
-
Opinion of a Capitalist
J. E. Knapp
-
A General Passenger Agent
H. C. Orr
-
The True and the False
with contributions from Whittier
-
God's Man
BY KATHLEEN.
-
Experience of a Railway Man
BY B. S. JOSSELYN.
-
Symmetry
BY O. F. H.
-
Christian Science, the Christ-Truth
BY WILLIAM BRADFORD DICKSON.
-
What is it to Obey?
BY RHODA PARKER.
-
The Lord's Prayer
BY ELLEN L. CLARK.
-
Broken Arm Healed by Christian Science
Charles Rockwell
-
What Christian Science has Done for Me
Charles F. Meek
-
Many Blessings Received
Ed. G. Gyger
-
A Profitable Hour
J. U. Higinbotham
-
From the Religious Press
with contributions from Louis Albert Banks