Lecture at Nashua, N. H.

Correspondence

The City Hall was filled Thursday evening, October 29, by a large and attentive audience made up of the members of First Church of Christ, Scientist, of Nashua, and their friends, who listened to a fine lecture by Edward H. Hammond, C.S.D., of Baltimore, Md., on Christian Science. The local branch of the Christian Science faith, under whose auspices the lecture was given, meets in Phillips Block, and since its organization here has grown steadily in members. He was introduced by the Rev. Irving C. Tomlinson of Concord.—Nashua Daily Telegraph.

The introductory words of the Rev. Irving C. Tomlinson were as follows:—

Ladies and Gentlemen:—With fitting ceremony, there was dedicated in your thriving city not long since, an important memorial tablet on the site of the former home of John Lovewell, one of the founders of this city. A brave woman, Hannah Dustin, as you will remember, in the early colonial days was captured by the Indians and taken into the wilderness in the neighborhood of Concord, N. H. Through her own valor she escaped from captivity and made ther way into civilization. The first home that welcomed her after her escape from the dusky savages was that of the hardy pioneer, John Lovewell.

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The Brotherhood of Man
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