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A good many people will have read the remarks lately...
Philadelphia (Pa.) Inquirer
A good many people will have read the remarks lately made on the microbe question by Dr. Alvah H. Doty, health officer of the port of New York, with a sense of lively satisfaction and some feeling of relief. Their tenor was that the maleficent influence and activity of the omnipresent microbe as an agent for the destruction of health and life had been absurdly exaggerated, and that if people would think less and worry less upon this subject it would be a great deal better for them.
Dr. Doty expressed the opinion, and it is an opinion in which many will agree with him, that a large part of the agitation over microbes which has gone on within the past few years is to the last degree irrational and absurd. people have gone microbe crazy. They have read without clearly understanding the medical dissertations about the extent to which diseases of all kinds are occasioned by these microscopical organisms which get into our systems and become perniciously active there, and many of them live under a constant apprehension lest their own system be invaded by these invisible enemies at some time when they are momentarily off their guard.
The trouble is that it is so difficult, yes, virtually impossible, to maintain a sufficiently vigilant and effective outlook for these innumerable and omnipresent invaders of the human frame. Nothing that we touch, taste, or handle is immune from their presence, so we are told; and there is never any telling how soon or at what moment any one of us may fall a victim to their destructive operations. Such is the prevalent idea for which the little knowledge declared by Alexander Pope to be a dangerous thing must be held responsible, and it is the gratifying feature of Dr. Doty's deliverance that it tends to dissipate what has become a sort of national obsession. He says that there is a whole lot of humbug about this microbe business, and that the people who lie awake nights shivering lest a microbe should catch them are very foolish. How often have we been told that there was danger in handling a dirty banknote because so many billions of deleterious germs are likely to be distributed over its surface. Probably not many have been deterred by this warning from handling all the banknotes that came their way; and yet it is satisfactory to be assured that they may be handled, microbes and all, without the slightest risk.
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October 28, 1911 issue
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UTTERING TRUTH
BLANCHE HERSEY HOGUE
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UNITY.
A. B. FICHTER
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"PATIENCE"
ERNESTINE HADKINSON
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THE IMPRINT OF THE PRESENT
J. PARKER NAUGLE
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"BE STILL, AND KNOW"
FLORENCE STRATTON WEAVER
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CHEMICALIZATION
GEORGE H. KINTER
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In a recent article entitled "Material Things: Are they...
Charles D. Reynolds
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The following is an extract, from an envelope forwarded...
Oscar E. Drummond
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A late issue quotes three reasons given by the Rev. A. F....
George Shaw Cook
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SUBSTANCE AND SHADOW
Archibald McLellan
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THE VITAL MESSAGE
Annie M. Knott
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HINDRANCES MADE HELPFUL
John B. Willis
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AMONG THE CHURCHES
with contributions from Mary B. G. Eddy
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THE LECTURES
with contributions from Courtland C. Manning, Frances E. Cady, W. Willard Rooks , Henry Kister
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I am very grateful for Christian Science. I know this...
Edda K. Iliff
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In the hope of doing good to some poor sufferer, I send...
Elwin F. Doner
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After six years' study of Christian Science, and an...
Ethel M. Whittier
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For eight years before I knew anything of Christian...
Meta Pahl Morlang
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I have long felt a desire to express through the Sentinel...
D. E. Armitage
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Having received much help and encouragement from...
Anna J. Nicholas
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For many years I read the Lesson-Sermons from a sense...
Laura E. Mell
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In the spring of 1909 I had a very bad fall and injured...
Clara J. Lewis
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Having enjoyed the blessings of Christian Science for...
Minnie H. Walker
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I can no longer withhold an expression of gratitude for...
George S. Campbell
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SYMBOL AND REALITY
DAVID F. GARTON
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FROM OUR EXCHANGES
with contributions from G. Silvester Horne, Robert L. Kelley, Francis W. Gibbs