William Carson Blackburn, Committee on Publication for the State of North Carolina,
A correspondent of your good paper, writing recently under the caption "Public Pulse," has sought to associate Christian Science with a number of the philosophies and doctrines, and then to classify them all as false cults.
Miss Constance M. Frost, Committee on Publication for Queensland, Australia,
In a recent issue of your paper a correspondent refers to the Christian Science organization as "making vigorous strides," but is not so well informed when he speaks of the "wide appeal" of "personal power" in the organization.
THE
difference between the man with religion and the man without religion, might be said to be that the one walks by faith and the other by sight—that is, material sight.
TO
change his mental outlook from a concept of life as mortal and material to the true concept of Life as immortal is the task that the Christian Scientist has set out to accomplish.
TODAY
there is thrust upon the attention of mankind the spectacle of the greatest struggle for material superiority and power ever waged in this world.