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 128 HISTORY OF THE PARLIAMENT. 3. As soon as the speaker turned from this to a more appropriate line of discourse, he was heard with patient atten- tion and even with applause. Christ the Saviour of the World ; by the Rev. B. Fay Mills, of Rhode Island. This paper was listened to with manifestations of the pro- foundest interest and satisfaction on the part of the assembly. At the Afternoon Session the Rev. Dr. Carlos Martyn, of Chicago, presided. Reconciliation Vital, not Vicarious ; by the Rev. Theodore F. Wright, Ph.D., of Cambridge, Mass. The Essential Oneness of Ethical Ideas Among All Men ; by the Rev. Ida C. Hultin, of Moline, 111. Music and Religion ; by Prof. Waldo S. Pratt, of Hart- ford Theological Seminary. At the close of Prof. Pratt's paper two Armenians from Turkey, the Rev. A. Marderos Ignados, of Smyrna, as repre- senting the Protestant Armenians, and Mr. Herant N. Kiret- chjian, of Constantinople, as representing the Young Men of the Orient, were introduced by the Chairman and made brief and interesting addresses. The Relation Between Religion and Conduct ; by Prof. C. H. Toy, of Harvard University. Christianity in Japan ; its Present Condition and Future Prospects ; by President Horiuchi Kozaki, of the Doshisha University. The Evening Session was presided over by the Rev. Dr. Alfred Williams Momerie, of London. The Restoration of Sinful Man through Christ; by the Rev. D. J. Kennedy, O.S.P., of Somerset, Ohio. Religion in Peking ; by Professor Isaac T. Headland, of Peking University. Read by Mr. William Pipe. The session was concluded by a brief speech from Swami Vivekananda, who said: Christians must always be ready for good criticism, and I hardly think that you will care if I make a little criticism. You Christians who are so fond of sending out missionaries to save the souls of the heathen, why do