The
cost of living is generally taken to mean the amount that has to be paid or given in exchange for the things believed to be necessary to sustain human life—namely, food, clothing, and shelter.
Albert E. Lombard, Committee on Publication for Southern California,
Christian Science cannot properly be classified under "the modern Babel of misbeliefs," as mistakenly implied by a reader's letter in your issue of November 1; nor does it bear any similarity to the other systems with which it was grouped by your correspondent.
When
one is found worthy to be appointed a teacher in a Christian Science Sunday School, he finds himself on the threshold of a glorious opportunity, one in which are to be found innumerable blessings for both teacher and pupil.