In the Christian Science Bible Lesson

IN connection with the agitation in New York and Pennsylvania against the freedom to apply the principles and methods of Christian Science, and the efforts to secure legislation against that school, a letter from the attorney-general of Colorado to the New York Tribune is of considerable interest.
THE closing days of the nineteenth century are the days of women's achievement, but in all the remarkable record of the end-of-the-century woman there is perphaps no name that just now stands out more prominently than that of the quiet woman of Concord, N.
THE following is from the writings of Colonel Ingersoll.
BORN in Dresden, N.
THE death of Col.
"THE Age of Electricity is only just dawning," said Assistant Commissioner of Patents Greeley recently, "and one advance in this direction which we are about to witness is the conversion of the steam railroads of this country into electric railroads—a change that would have been accomplished already to a large extent, but for the immense amount of money invested in locomotives and the first enormous expense of installing an electric plant.

Grateful for the Lesson Sermons

Having a sense of great gratitude for "The Lesson Sermons," published in the Sentinel, I feel it is but just to acknowledge it.

For What it is Worth

Some years since the writer had a dear friend, who was the wife of a doctor.

An Allegory

Mortal man may be likened to a ship sailing on the sea of his beliefs, manned and officered by the personal senses, with self as the captain, and steering into the harbor of Christian Science, in which port all mortal-mind ships must anchor sooner or later.
The day of miracles is not ended—in India at least.
The kissing bug is a myth.
"I would shed my last drop of blood for Christian Science," said M.