In endeavoring to cover briefly so vast a subject as the mission of the advertising activity of The Christian Science Monitor, may I invite your considered thought about Monitor advertising from the standpoint of the inseparability of its function and service from the mission Mary Baker Eddy gave to the whole newspaper.
We greatly appreciate the fact that many of you at considerable expenditure of time and money have left your accustomed duties and obligations at your individual homes to come to this Annual Meeting of The Mother Church, The First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston, Massachusetts, and its affiliated activities.
with contributions from Valdemar Willumsen, Alexander A. LeM. Simpson, Grace M. Estey, Francis W. Cousins
We have reason for the greatest thankfulness because of the continued friendly relationship between your Committee and the newspaper editors in Copenhagen.
Not
many years before the Christian Science textbook, "Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures" by Mary Baker Eddy, was published in 1875 the movement began in England and America for "Woman's Rights" which culminated in the granting of the suffrage and the opening of careers and professions for women on an equal footing with men.
Climbing
amidst the beauty, grandeur, and strength of the mountains typifies the innate characteristic of man to expand and rise ever higher in infinite progression.
By
radio, television, newspaper publicity, and by mail, Americans have been urged during the last several years to give money to organizations conducting campaigns against one or another of a series of widely dreaded diseases.