Carey E. Morgan An excellent likeness of Carey E. Morgan, A. M., appears on the first page of this issue. Mr. Morgan is one of the most brilliant members of the middle generations of ministers. Indiana claims him as her son, and Butler College is happy to number him among her alumni. Like many of our well known ministers he stepped from the schoolroom to the pulpit. C. E. Morgan began his ministry in 1886, in the churches of Arcadia and Atlanta, Ind. After serving his apprenticeship in these churches he accepted the pastorate at Wabash, Ind. Where he labored most successfully for seven years, when he accepted a call to Minneapolis, Minn. During his stay of nearly six years in the "Flour City," he succeeded in gaining for the church a position and recognition it had not previously enjoyed. He took his place in the front ranks of the most excellent ministry of the Northern metropolis. The plea of the Disciples is practically unknown in the great Northwest. Mr. Morgan's work and influence was of in incalculable value to our cause, not only in the "Twin Cities," but also throughout the "Gopher State." While in Minneapolis he was a member of the faculty and one of the officers of the Northwestern Christian College, situated in Excelsior, an hour's ride from the city. He labored with others heroically to put this institution upon a firm foundation, but the building was entirely destroyed by fire some three years ago and has never been rebuilt. In the summer of '99 Mr. Morgan received a call from the Seventh Street Church in historic Richmond, Va. This is one of the strongest and best congregations in the entire brotherhood. He began his pastorate here under most suspicious circumstances last September. Carey E. Morgan is one of the most friendly, congenial and versatile men one will meet. It is not too much to forecast for him many years of profitable service in the Master's vineyard. He is an honor to the brotherhood and makes friends for the Christ, his church and for himself wherever he goes. The subject of this sketch is still a young man, being on the sunnyside of forty. Percy Leach. The Christian Evangelist P 686. May 31, 1900 Located by Dennis Nicklaus, Typed by Lyman Morrison 1996.