Albert E. Lombard, Committee on Publication for Southern California,
From the editorial in the Register of June 26, an inference might be mistakenly drawn that ninety-five per cent of the cases cured by Christian Science would "get well anyway.
Ralph W. Still, Committe on Publication for the State of Texas,
Through your courtesy and fairness, the principal object of my letter's appearing in your colums March 7 has been attained, namely, to make plain to your readers that Mary Baker Eddy, the Discoverer and Founder of Christian Science, was never a mesmerist, and never taught mesmerism, as could be inferred from your statement of January 10.
Law
is a word having such different meanings that a different word for each of them would be convenient as well as conducive to comprehension and clear expression.
When
suffering from certain diseases or conditions labeled incurable by material systems, many have accepted the verdict that, for them, recovery is an impossibility.
To insure that complete lecture notices be printed in the Sentinel, detailed information should reach the Editorial Department regarding lectures in the United States and Canada, at least four weeks before the date of the lecture; in Great Britain and Ireland, at least five weeks before; in other European countries, at least eight weeks before.
Grace Frazer Weisenbeck
with contributions from Henry E. Weisenbeck
When I first heard of Christian Science I was confined in a sanitarium where I was under treatment for a severe nervous breakdown, the result of years of ill health and a major operation.
It was with a longing to lead a little child into the most helpful practical religion of which I had ever known that I first began attending regularly the Christian Science church.
About twelve years ago I walked from the office of one of the best surgeons in the city of Portland, Oregon, condemned by him and one of his colleagues to a choice of lifelong invalidism or submission to a surgeon's knife.
with contributions from P. W. Wilson, Lyman P. Powell, William K. Primrose, W. B. Millard, F. W. Norwood, James Jeans, Francis Younghusband, B. Brooks Shake
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with contributions from P. W. Wilson, Lyman P. Powell, William K. Primrose, W. B. Millard, F. W. Norwood, James Jeans, Francis Younghusband, B. Brooks Shake