In
reading an account in a daily newspaper of the much needed reform that is taking place in some of the prisons, the writer's attention was arrested by the following sentence: "If you treat a man as a man.
After
Paul's notable shipwreck while on his journey to Rome, the natives of the island of Melita received him kindly, kindling a fire because of the rain and the cold.
Right
at hand, in the very place where he may find himself, and at the work on which he may be engaged, the wise Christian Scientist utilizes his understanding of Truth, progressing in proportion to his willingness to accept and rejoice in every least opportunity to prove that he has a demonstrable understanding of Christian Science.
Fred Yould, Committee on Publication for the State of Georgia,
Being the authorized representative of Christian Scientists in Georgia, I request that you kindly publish this letter, written to correct certain erroneous statements about Christian Science made by a minister of Los Angeles, and referred to in an item published in your recent issue.
Judge Clifford P. Smith, Committee on Publication for The First Church of Christ, Scientist, Boston, Massachusetts,
It is surprising that anyone intelligent enough to be a speaker at the Institute of Politics could be so ignorant or so prejudiced as to describe Christian Science practitioners as "fake healers," as was reported in your recent issue.
While
a student of Christian Science sat in a street car which ran for miles along the shore of the Pacific Ocean, her attention was attracted to the water fowl, commonly called "scooters," which are nearly always to be seen in large flocks along that stretch of sandy beach.