A student
of Christian Science who for some time had been endeavoring to see and to prove the unreality of a disease she seemed to be manifesting, found herself, though grateful for some progress, suddenly yielding to discouragement and apathy.
Teachers
in Christian Science Sunday Schools may feel at times overwhelmed by a sense of the magnitude of the work and their apparently slight ability to cope with it.
Perhaps
one is entertaining a material concept of himself believing himself poor, discouraged, perchance sick and forsaken, and seeming to exist in a world that has for him little light or outlook.
Subscribers to the Christian Science Sentinel will be glad to know that on October 1 a series of fifty-one articles on "The Holy Land—Then and Now" will commence in The Christian Science Monitor.
John Laughton, Committee on Publication for the Province of Quebec, Canada,
In your issue of November 9, in "The Raconteur" column, Mary Baker Eddy and Christian Science were incorrectly associated with Mesmer and his theories.
A young
woman who had been accustomed to leading a very busy life, during which period she had come in contact with varied and interesting types of people, found herself faced with a quiet period.