PROF. EDMUND J. JAMES, PH. D. LABOR REFORM PROF. L. T. TOWNSEND, D. D. EDUCATION SUPPRESSION OF VICE WITH THE COÖPERATION OF EMINENT SPECIALISTS IN Via Lucis, Via Crucis VOL. I.-JANUARY-JUNE.—1888 BOSTON OUR DAY PUBLISHING COMPANY 28 BEACON STREET Copyright, 1888, BY OUR DAY PUBLISHING COMPANY. All rights reserved. The Riverside Press, Cambridge: INDEX. BARTLETT, Pres. S. C. Letter on Inspiration, 456. Letter on Inspiration, 464. BENNER, Prof. EDWARD. Mormon Conspiracies, 173. ARTICLES. Message on Surplus Revenue, 95. Helps and Hindrances in the Sup- Unitarian Missions in Japan, 79. Prof. Drummond in America, 80. Free Speech on Public Grounds, 171. Prayers at Harvard and Yale, 260. Volcano Crests, 511. Constitutional Prohibition and High See "Boston Monday Lectures." National Sabbath Reform, 336. CURTISS, Prof. S. I. Letter on Inspiration, 472. FIELD, DAVID DUDLEY. Arbitration as a Remedy for War, FISHER, Prof. G. P. Letter on Inspiration, 452. GORDON, Dr. A. Ĵ. First Principles of Protection, 265. Boston Hymn: For Outdoor Preach- British Peace Delegation, 355. Federal Aid to Education, 356. LARCOM, LUCY. MAGOUN, Ex-Pres. G. F. Courts of Conciliation in Iowa, 443. MCNIECE, Rev. Dr. R. G. Shall Utah be made a Mormon SUPREME COURT, Decision on Prohibi- TOWNSEND, Prof. L. T. The Jesuit and the Public School, UTAH COMMISSIONERS' REPORT for Woman as Preacher, 21, 286. The Prospective Platform of the Internal Revenue Tax, 257. The National Prohibition Conven- Decoration Day Speech, 505. WRIGHT, Prof. G. F. Letter on Inspiration, 468. OUR DAY: A RECORD AND REVIEW OF CURRENT REFORM. VOL. I.-JANUARY, 1888.- No. 1. PROSPECTUS. 1. OUR DAY is designed to be a Monthly Record and Review of Current Reform. It will be conducted and owned by a syndicate of specialists in the discussion of leading reformatory movements, and will be independent of partisan, denominational, or political control. 2. As a Record, OUR DAY will form a comprehensive register of Criticism, Progress, and Reform, secular and religious, national and international. Its publication of documents of permanent value, and of impartial illustrations of expert opinion, is intended to be very full. It will present in outline a history of leading events, indicating the fact or the need of improvement in the fields of Politics, Industry, Education, Philanthropy, and Religion. 3. As a Review, OUR DAY will express the opinions of its editors, and will endeavor to represent advanced thought in the chief departments of Criticism and Progress. 4. The Boston Monday Lectures, delivered in February and March, each year, with their Preludes on Current Events, will be published regularly in OUR DAY. These Lectures and Preludes, which for several seasons have had a circulation of a million copies at home and abroad, will discuss, as they have done for the last twelve years, whatever is at once new, true, and strategic in the relations of Religion to Science, Philosophy, and Current Reform. |