William K. Primrose, Assistant to the District Manager of Committees on Publication for Great Britain and Ireland,
The teachings and methods of the small religious sect known as the "Peculiar People" should not be confused in any way with those of Christian Science; and the author of the article entitled "Peculiar People" in your issue of August 23 is mistaken when he writes that that sect "seems to have merged into the larger body known as Christian Scientists.
Lyman S. Abbott, Committee on Publication for the State of Michigan,
We can quite agree with a certain clergyman in his editorial entitled "Overselling Religion," reprinted in the Traverse City Record-Eagle of February 14, when he states that "conversion belongs to every sphere of life—to art, education, to business, to romance, and not to religion alone.
For
ages the First Commandment has been glibly repeated by the tongue, yet mankind has had only a limited sense of the fullness of life and joy that comes from truly exercising this grand rule of life.
with contributions from William R. Rathvon, George Wendell Adams, Charles E. Heitman, William P. McKenzie, Nelvia E. Ritchie, Grethel L. Hahn, Ralph B. Scholfield, The Christian Science Board of Directors, George Shaw Cook, Ruth Barrett Arno, Bjarne V. Bøckmann, Myrtle Holm Smith
Held in The Mother Church Extension, June 9, 1936, at 7.