The
English Colonial Office has recently received a report form one of its naval commanders of a visit paid to Pitcairn Island, where the descendants of the mutineers of the government ship Bounty are still residing.
Brief
reference is made in nearly all schoolbooks to the Bay of Fundy and its remarkable tides, but in none is justice done to the most remarkable manifestation of its kind in the world.
In
view of the increased prosperity which has come to communities where the lectures provided for by the By-laws in our Church Manual have been made available, it seems advisable again to call attention to the great importance of this branch of Christian Science work.
with contributions from J. M. Buckley, T. Roosevelt
It
is an anomalous condition of affairs that nineteen out of twenty of the population of this great republic do not know how to pronounce the name of its President.
In
the harbor at Tromsöe, Norway, lay the America, a vessel fitted for an expedition to the North Pole, with a crew of wide-awake, earnest young men aboard.
Naturally
the advanced Christian Scientist knows that the healing of disease is incidental, but the hungering hordes of suffering humanity are still seeking a sign, some reason for a hope beginning to dawn anew for them.
In talking with a friend on the subject of Christian Science, a subject that we had often discussed before, my friend remarked, "I would give a great deal to possess a religion that I was so perfectly satisfied with and sure of, as you are with Christian Science.
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