Cut
into the stone below the cornice of a beautiful public building, situated in one of our large cities, is the inscription, "Obedience To Law Is Liberty.
Watching
a group of airplanes, a student of Christian Science found herself analyzing these fleet birds of the air; and as she puzzled over what they might represent, it became evident to her that uplifted thought, soaring above the earth-bound forms of limited transportation, was the nucleus of the invention that to-day thrills the world and is so rapidly helping to eliminate time and distance.
William K. Kitchen, Committee on Publication for the State of New Jersey,
The purpose of this letter, which I ask you kindly to publish, is to correct the erroneous reference to Christian Science in a sermon published in the columns of the News, dated November 1, in which the following statement is reported to have been made: "We may try to rock conscience to sleep or dope it with such nonsense as Christian Science when the thought of sin gets to be too troublesome; but down in our hearts we know that we are sinners; we know that our hands have not been clean, nor our hearts pure; we know that we have lifted up our souls unto vanity.
Orwell Bradley Towne, Committee on Publication for the State of New York,
The report of the sermon at the Brick Presbyterian Church, published in your issue of July 14, gives a wrong impression regarding Christian Science which I would appreciate space to correct.