Our Church Fund calls for the largest and widest liberality from the students and friends of Christian Science. Some of them are nobly responding to this call, and among them we mention especially Mrs. J. T. Colman, of Knoxville, In., from whom Mrs. Crosse, on the 10th ult., received one hundred dollars in gold; and this is only a repetition of previous acts of liberality, not out of any superfluous abundance.
A week later, the same lady sent fifty dollars more.
The difficulty in defining the word life arises from the different conceptions of what Life really is. One conception may be called the Metaphysical, and another, the Physiological. . . . It seems to me that the Metaphysical view, which arises from our own consciousness, should be considered as important as the physiological.