The ministerial correspondents whose names are attached to the letter in the issue of December 12 should rejoice that there are Christians in your city who are sufficiently sincere in the practice of their religion to hold a service in their home on the Sabbath, even though the church edifices were closed on account of fear of an alleged epidemic.
The subject of work and working hours is occupying so large a place now in the world's regard that every one is obliged, willy-nilly, to pay some attention to the matter.
In his recent letter a correspondent hopes that he is correct in crediting Christian Science with the working out of the problem of good health naturally and not miraculously.
The
writer often recalls with what enthusiasm and self-assurance, as a very new student of Christian Science, she first heard and responded to the words of an older student, "In Christian Science we learn not to ignore error, but to resist it.
"I was in my ship [aeroplane] just ready to take off when the official photographic ship taxied out on the field and sent word to me that some official close-up photographs were to be taken in the air and requested that my ship be the model.