The following article, headlined a "Strange Cure," is from the Cincinnati Commercial Gazette of March 2, 1896:
"To the average educated and uneducated mind alike, there is a species of repugnance toward accepting a statement that this or that person was cured of a malignant ill without the assistance of the man of orthodox medicine. Christian Science has not obtained such widespread recognition that any great attention has been given it, especially in Cincinnati. Many scoff at it, few believe in it, and the statement that a woman living within three squares of the business district, has been in the past three weeks practically rescued from the cold grip of death, and is now well, will doubtless be received with a species of incredulity; but such seems to be absolutely a fixed fact.
"The woman in question is Mrs. Glenn White, a sister of Messrs. J. Franklin and Harry Jones.