The Forward Company of London, which was granted exclusive rights for a term of thirty years from 1897 to control navigation on the San Juan River, by a concession of the Nicaraguan Congress, has filed a protest with the British Government against the acceptance of the Hay-Pauncefote treaty.
To
photograph and map out the entire heavens—to search, with the camera the profoundest depths of space—to bring to light all the heavenly bodies far beyond the vision of the most powerful telescope—to tabulate and catalogue millions of stars—is the stupendous task which the International Astrographic Congress set itself to perform when it convened in Paris, April 16, 1887.
Editor the Church Messenger:—The October issue of your paper, containing an article severely criticising Christian Science and Christian Scientists, has come to my notice.
with contributions from C. A. Buskirk, Robert L. Ziller
On Sunday afternoon, December 23, an intelligent audience listened attentively for fully an hour and a half to a lecture on Christian Science delivered by Judge William G.
with contributions from E. L. W., M. Fannie Whitney
Once more through these columns, which herald glad tidings from field to field, the Christian Scientists in Evanston desire to refer to their new church building.
Naturalists say that, when examined minutely with a microscope, it will be found that no creature or object in nature is positively ugly, that there is a certain harmony or symmetry of parts that renders the whole agreeable rather than the reverse.
He
does not say,As day by dayPasseth without result,There is no bud in bush,There is no rose in bud;Rather, his faith prevailsAnd he applies himselfTo do his part,Which, if well done,He knows will bringIn time, the rose;Though how it grows,Or where such beautyFound reposeBefore unfolding unto him, He cannot say —Unless he knoweth God.
Throughout
the ages philosopher and poet have searched for Truth, the Real, and only as they have touched the Principle of Being has Truth been revealed.
We
are accustomed to refer to Science and Health as not only the Christian Science text-book, but the book covering all there is to be said on the subject.
While my entrance into the understanding of Christian Science was not through physical healing, I yet belonged to that large class who suffer from the many ills to which mortal flesh is heir, and to whom the changes of weather and the succession of the seasons bring, with dreary regularity, a train of ailments, fears, and miseries.
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