Arthur G. Lothgren, Committee on Publication for the Province of British Columbia, Canada,
At the annual meeting of the American Neurological Association, as reported in your columns of June 21, a doctor made two references to Christian Science which require correction and explanation, in order that the readers of your esteemed paper may not be misinformed by his remarks.
Ralph B. Textor, as Committee on Publication for the State of Ohio,
Your allegation editorially in the Democrat of June 16, that The Christian Science Monitor distorts prohibition news, is quite without point, especially in view of a recent series of articles in that paper on the subject.
"Sure
reward of righteousness" is an inspiring marginal heading on page 203 of the Christian Science textbook, "Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures" by Mary Baker Eddy.
A little
girl who had attended the Christian Science Sunday School came to her mother and said, "I am not feeling very well, so I must go to my room and do my work.
Throughout
all her works the Discoverer and Founder of Christian Science, Mary Baker Eddy, makes it abundantly clear that students of Christian Science should do all things well.
One
day several years ago, when confronted by a baffling and disturbing problem, the writer turned to The Christian Science Monitor and read a narrative, the lesson of which proved most helpful.
In
a poem written several years ago, entitled "The Land of Beginning Again," a writer expressed a great longing for time to be blotted out and a fresh beginning to be made, this new beginning to be on the basis of present wisdom gained from experience, with no unhappy past to be remembered.