. The Granite monthly, a New Hampshire magazine, devoted to literature, history, and state progress . the international committee,which was directed to calland arrange for state andprovincial conventions. Thisis the result: in 1866, no state or pro- is no question as to his health — he hasvincial committee or conventions. Now, a superb physique, travels constantly,thirty-three such committees, thirty-one works extremely hard, and has beenof which hold state or provincial con- wonderfully successful. When he be-ventions, together with a large number gan there were thirty-nine associationsof dis


. The Granite monthly, a New Hampshire magazine, devoted to literature, history, and state progress . the international committee,which was directed to calland arrange for state andprovincial conventions. Thisis the result: in 1866, no state or pro- is no question as to his health — he hasvincial committee or conventions. Now, a superb physique, travels constantly,thirty-three such committees, thirty-one works extremely hard, and has beenof which hold state or provincial con- wonderfully successful. When he be-ventions, together with a large number gan there were thirty-nine associationsof district and local conferences. in the States of Indiana, Illinois, In 1870, Mr. R. C. Morse, a graduate Michigan, Wisconsin, Iowa, Minnesota,of Yale College, and a minister of the Missouri, Kansas, Nebraska, Kentucky,Presbyterian Church, became the gen- and Tennessee. There was only oneeral secretary of the committee and secretary, and no building. Now therecontinues such to-day. Of the mis- are nearly three hundred associations,sionary work of the committee the spending more than one hundred and. BUILDING OF Y. M. C. A. AT LYNN, MASS. Young Mciis Christian Associations. 25 ten thousand dollars; twenty generalsecretaries, and five buildings. NineStates are organized, and five employ-state secretaries. The following wordsfrom a recent Kansas report soundstrangely, almost like a joke, to one whoremembers the peculiar influence ofMissouri upon the infant Kansas: Kansas owes much of her standingto-day to the fostering care and effortsof the Missouri state executive com- not only harmony prevailed, but itseemed as though each were trying toprove to the other his intenser brotherlylove. The cross truly conquered. Noone who was present can ever forgetthose scenes, or cease to bless God forwhat I truly believe was the greateststep toward the uniting again of Northand South. Mr. T. K. Cree has hadcharge of this w^ork since the begin-ning. Not only has sectional spreading


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