/J/
L5 Amond the Filipinos. By Gertrude BUck
^^ '/ )L. XLVI SEPTEMBER, 1916 NO. 9
lAfe andLigM
letting 90 tJje tintoortfip tfjmgji tfjat meet «£(—
pretence, toorrp, bisfcontent anb s;elf=s(eefems— anb
taking Io|»al fiolb of time, toork, pres(ent i)appt=
nes(s;, lobe, but|>, frienb£(f)ip, s(orroto anb faitfi, let
ttsi sio Ube tn all trntf) asi to be an tnsipttatton to
tiiofiie tDf|0£(e Itbets ate touc{)eb b|> ours;.
— Anna Robertson Brown
of Missions
PU BUSHED IN BOSTON
Entered at the Post Office at Boston, Mass., as Second-class Matter
C O NTENTS
Summer Conferences in the East . . . 361
Editorials 367
The Jubilee Increase Campaign . . . . 374
Among the Filipinos. By Gertrude Black . . 376
Settlement Work in an Indian City. By Mrs.
Robert A. Hume 384
When We Reached Madura 391
Board or the Pachic
Call.to the Enlisted! 395
The Oregon Rally. By Jennie L. Barbour . 395
Summer Schools on the Pacific Coast. By Mary
E. Bamford and Elizabeth S. Benton . . 398
Receipts 420
Ouz Field Correspondent.s
Rev. Lyndon S. Crateford, Irebiund; Mrs. Amy
Bridsman Cowles, Umtumbe; Miss Bertha P.
Reed, Peking 401
The Wider View 404
A Worth While Visit 408
Our Work at Home
Around the Council Table with our President . 409
Annual Meeting 412
Junior Department
Our New Sunday-school Campaign . . . 413
Our Book Table 417
Receipts 419
WitmaxC^ ^oarb of idtsisitonsi
704 Coneregational House, Boston, Mass.
President
Mrs. CHARLES H. DANIELS, Wellesley, Mass.
First Viee President
Mrs. frank GAYLORD COOK, Cambridge, Mass.
Vice Presidents
Mrs. a. a. LINCOLN, Wollaston, Mass. Mrs. E. E. STRONG, Aubumdale, Mass.
Mrs. N. G. CLARK, Boston Mrs. JAMES L. BARTON, Newton Centre, Mass.
Miss SUSAN HAYES WARD, South Berwick, Me.
Corresponding Secretary
Mrs. E. E. STRONG
Recording Secretary
Mrs. J. FREDERICK HILL, Cambridge, Mass.
Home Secretary
Miss HELEN B. CALDER, Bo»ton
Secretary of Young People's Work
Miss MARY PRESTON, Boston
Treasurer
iss SARAH LOUISE DAY, Boston
Auditor
SAMUEL F. WILKINS, Boston
Foreign Secretary
Miss KATE G. LAMSON, Boston
Editorial Secretary
Miss ALICE M. KYLE, Boston
Associate Secretary
Miss ANNE L. BUCKLEY, Boston
Assistant Treasurer
Miss S. EMMA KEITH Boston
Mrs. Henry F. Durant
Miss Carrie Borden
Miss E. Harriet Stanwood
Mrs. Henry D. Noyes "
Mrs. F. E. Clark
Mrs. S. B. Capron
Mrs. Joseph Cook
Mrs. S. B. Capen
Mrs. Charles F. Weeden
Mrs. Edward C. Moore
Mrs. Everett E. Kent
Miss S. Emma Keith
Miss Lucy W. Burr
Miss Lilian G. Bates
Mrs. E. H. Bigelow
Mrs. Emily L. McLaughlin
Directors
Mrs. Frank H. Wiggin
Miss Frances V. Emerson
Miss Clara E. Wells
Mrs. Frederick M. Turner
Mrs. Brewer Eddy
Mrs. W. L. Adam
Mrs. David O. Mears
Mrs. Willian H. Greeley
Mrs. Walter Fitch
Miss Elizabeth Merriam
Mrs. Charles A. Proctor
Miss Ethel D. Hubbard
Miss Clara P. Bodman
Mrs. L. R. Smith
Miss Lucy N. Lathrop
Mrs. Charles H. Bumham
Mrs. John W. Little
Miss Edith Woolsey
Mrs. Waldo Conant
Mrs. John F. Thompson
Mrs. Elbert A. Harvey
Mrs. S. H. Hamilton
Mrs. Edward Lincoln Smith
Mrs. Clifton H. Mix
Mrs. Hubert C. Herring
Mrs. Frank W. Steams
Mrs. George L. Richards
Mrs. James R. Jewett
Mrs. Lucius H. Thayer
Mrs. H. H. Powers
Miss Harriet E. Richards
Miss Elizabeth B. Herring
Mrs. J. H. Larrabee
:Jfonn of liequesst
In making devises and legacies, the entire corporate name of the Board should be
used as follows: —
/ give and bequeath to the Woman's Board of Missions, incorporated under the laws of
Massachusetts in i86g, the sum of
Digitized by tine Internet Arciiive
in 2009 with funding from
Boston Library Consortium IVIember Libraries
http://www.arcliive.org/details/lifelightforwoma469woma
z
o
o
tn .S
O &
O
^ e
o ^<
D en
O
o
Life and Light
Vol. XLVI. September, 1916 No. 9
Summer Conferences in the East
Our Thirteenth Year at Northfield
-^
'OME of us recall the encouraging beginning of our Summer
School for Women's Foreign Missionary Societies twelve
years ago and have watched its evolution, until now the
contrast presents problems for consideration and solution.
The registered attendance during the week July 14-21 was 1,268.
The Baptists had the largest number, followed by the Congregational-
ists, Presbyterians, Methodists, Dutch Reformed and others, bearing
eighteen different names, but with differences scarcely heard of during
the week except in the denominational rallies and camp names,
and with conspicuous unity of interest and zeal which we must name
Christian. There were more than six hundred girls in camps whose
devotion to the special plans made for them gave promise of workers
at home and abroad to take the places of those who hitherto have been
in the forefront. Of the 293 Congregationalists in attendance,
representing twenty Branches of the Woman's Board, 149 were in
Aloha Camp in charge of Miss PuUen of Norwich, Conn. The other
camps, Salaam, Westminster, Wesleyan, Eendracht, and Murray,
were also under denominational leadership.
Dr. H. C. Applegarth was the Bible teacher in the auditoriimi each
morning and the Sunday preacher, and in his lessons from the first
thirteen chapters of Acts upon "Conquering the World" treated
the sub-topics: The Objective of Christianity, the Promise of Power,
the Truth about the Truth, the Dignity of Man and Breaking the
Barriers. Seven different Bible classes gave large opportunity to
camp girls with these subjects and leaders: "The Girl and her Bible,"
Mrs. Montgomery; "Some great Facts of our Faith," Mrs. T. S.
Gladding; "Spiritual Preparedness," Miss Harriet S. Ellis; "Man-
hood of the Master," Miss Mary Ely; "The Faith of the Cross,"
362 Life and Light [September
Deaconess Goodwin; "Paul, a World Citizen," Miss Ethel Bowles;
"Kinds of Power," Mrs. S. J. Herben.
The missionary rally Sunday evening furnished glimpses of work
in Egypt, Arabia, Palestine, Africa, Persia, Burma, Korea, India,
China, Japan, Micronesia and the Philippine Islands by missionaries
past, present and future whose work represents a total of service
of five hundred years. Other evenings gave time to hear more
details by Miss Suman from the Philippines, Dr. Jefferys from China,
Miss Ward from Japan, Mrs. E. G. Hall from Africa, Professor
Bracq from France, Mrs. Woodward from Micronesia and Rev.
Ralph S. Harlow recently from Smyrna and an eyewitness of fearful
conditions in Turkey, — the last two missionaries of our own Boards.
Miss Hayashi, educated in this country and now for years a teacher
of Japanese girls in their own land, illustrated the large possibilities
resulting from such training as she has received, while Mrs. Law, who
spoke in her native Chinese interpreted by her daughter, impressed
her audience with the native power and the "great hope for China"
which her final sentence expressed in English. The interest of the
evening services was much enhanced by the large choir of girls under
the leadership of Miss Emily Sunderland. Round Top gatherings,
daily prayer service in the auditorium and Student Volunteer meetings,
made more emphatic by the presence of Mr. F. P. Turner, were full of
inspiration.
During the hour for electives Miss Peacock conducted a large study
class, Miss Prescott took up methods for junior leaders. Miss Schultz
had a normal study class on South America, Mrs. Farmer presented
foreign missions pro and con, Miss Burton and Miss Fleming had
study classes for girls when they took up Comrades in Service and
Educational Missions, while in the auditorium there was a helpful
variety in illustration by charts and many practical hints. A class
of about forty girls from Aloha Camp studied Ambassadors for Christ,
the program outlines based on the Jubilee Series of our own Board.
This class was conducted by Miss Preston and Miss Katherine
Hazeltine, who prepared the outlines. Many of the girls went home,
planning to use this material in their young women's societies.
At eleven o'clock each morning practically the whole twelve hun-
dred gathered in the auditorium for Mrs. Montgomery's lectures upon
igi6] Summer Conferences in the East 363
the text-book for next year, World Missions and World Peace,
It was a great pleasure on the opening evening to welcome the author,
Mrs. Caroline Atwater Mason, who in a most interesting address
enlarged upon what she has stated to be the twofold purpose of the
book, ' ' First, to study the Kingdom of Christ as a Kingdom of Peace
now maimed and menaced by war; second, to study Christ's conquest
of the world in the past and the outlook for it in the future." Many
have read Mrs. Mason's Little Green God, A Lily of France,
The Spell of Italy, and other books, and are sure to find no dis-
appointment in this her latest, with its wonderful adaptation to
present conditions, a real study book for those who will study, and
well worth several readings by those who may only read. Mrs.
Montgomery took up the successive chapters, and in addition to
her own valuable suggestions brought in girls from the classes to
illustrate ways in which the subject matter may be used without too
great effort and still carry its point.
The junior year for next book. Soldiers of the Prince, by Dr.
Charles E. Jefferson, was taught by Miss Nellie Prescott, who sug-
gested all sorts of resourceful helps which may be obtained from the
different Boards. Jack and Janet have led many trips around the
world this year, and the boys and girls who have gone with them —
yes, even girls — will be eager to join this company of Soldiers of the
Prince.
Healthful diversion was furnished by the girls in the several camps,
and with all the seriousness of the week's work we were impressed with
the absence of high-strained appeal and undue pressure upon sensitive
souls. Facts made their own appeal and the remembrance of them
will be a useful lesson to be passed along, and we must believe will
prove to be a little leaven in many a large lump. A funny story now
and then was a relief, and even "notices" as given by Miss Lawrence
with many a sparkling touch proved to be a recreation exercise.
A pageant may be very entertaining and ours was, but far more in
its presentation of the subject "Peace and War," as written by Mrs.
Peabody and directed by Mrs. Twitchell of Trenton. The lawn of
The Northfield, freshly green from the rains, with its near and far view
of the hills across the valley, gave the right setting for historical
events as illustrated by Napoleon, William Penn, Father Serra,
364 Life and Light [September
Christian Friedrich Schwartz, Hiram Bingham, Commodore Perry
and others, with children and angels in appropriate places. The
last scene furnished a beautiful climax in its illustration of race
friendship, when it presented our own country with its forty-nine
states led by Columbia and the Peace Angel reappeared.
We must add our word of appreciation of the wonderful work of
the committee with Mrs. Peabody as chairman, our own Miss Calder
and Mrs. Burnham and efi&cient women of other Boards, who planned
such large things and carried them through to such beautiful ful-
fillment. E. H. s.
At Silver Bay for Missionary Education
It is fourteen years since the note of Missionary Education in the
Local Church was sounded forth by a small group gathered in this
green hollow within the clasp of guardian hills, beside Lake George's
silvery waters.
To know the real significance of the Missionary Education Move-
ment to-day visit in imagination each one of the thirty classes gathered
during seven mornings, July 7-16, for the purpose of meeting the many
sided needs of 469 delegates, young men and women of various re-
ligious communions.
The normal classes discriminate and give special training to
would-be leaders of children under nine years of age; from nine to
twelve; from thirteen to sixteen, boys and girls separately; from
seventeen to twenty. Study Class leadership is in the care of Dr.
T. H. P. Sailer of Teachers' College, Columbia University, and it is
a special privilege if one is accepted to make up his strictly "limited
number."
"Kingdom Efficiency" expresses the central idea in a class which
uses as text-books. The Individual and the Social Gospel by
Shailer Mathews, and Efficiency Points by W. E. Doughty.
A large group gathers for a missionary study of the Bible; another
discusses problems of the Christian worker in a rural community;
a secretary of the Movement takes for his theme, ' ' The Principles and
Methods of Missionary Education"; others give definite attention
to Missionary Education in the Sunday school and in Young People's
igi6] Summer Conferences in the East 365
Societies; and those delegates who are concerned at home with the
woman's society meet for study of methods and the two text-books,
Old Spain in New America and World Missions and World Peace.
Classes for text-book study are numerous, and use in various ways
about fifteen different books covering the united missionary pro-
gram topic suggested for all churches, viz.. The Two Americas.
The subject of particular interest which one meets in many classes
is that of Latin America, and books in evidence are. South American
Neighbors, Mexico To-Day, Makers of South America, Advance in the
Antilles.
The "Servants of the King" groups include young people from six-
teen to nineteen, and are so named because of a study book published
a few years ago and still in use by some of these younger classes,
Servants of the King by Robert E. Speer.
For the first time Missionary Education through Dramatics was
taught and the instructor. Miss Helen L. Wilcox, also prepared and
gave in the Auditorium a representation of certain phases of life
among the Mountain Whites, entitled "Election Day."
The prayer groups which gather informally under the trees, in
the boat house or quiet corners are not tabulated but exert a distinct
influence upon the conference life.
After the recreation hours it is pleasant to gather in The Orchard
at twilight for a brief message from the returned missionary. Or,
perhaps it is the Life-Work meeting where you will choose to go,
especially if life is all before you and choices of service must be made.
This young man who rises in the Life- Work meeting is surely the
one who has been leading in many of the athletic sports. Yes,
but he is also an appointee of the American Board and will start for
his field in October. He tells us, by request, how he came to Silver
Bay in 1902, a very young man who had not cared for an education
but was already in business. He saw a vision of a stronger, more use-
ful life and began to lay plans for a college course. This was secured
with difficulty, by self-help, and the next step then appeared in the
form of a theological course. Not until later on did the missionary
service offer its challenge, but when it met him he responded gladly
as did also the young woman who is going out as his wife.
An impressive missionary message from Africa flung forth its chal-
366 Life and Light [September
lenge to young men to save the interior of that continent from further
Mohammedan invasion and conquest. Four responded, and one of
them, a young rector, wired a swift promise to his Bishop, "I will go
to Africa if you will take me."
One comes away from such a conference rejoicing, yet mourning
lest some personal contacts were perhaps neglected when they might
have enforced teaching or strengthened a dawning purpose.
M. L. D.
The Ocean Park, Maine, Conference
A Silver Bay in the small, with two or three distinct differences,
such as the setting, the personnel, and the unification of the con-
ference body which is made possible in the one place by a suitable,
convenient plant where all delegates and all activities are concen-
trated, but which is hindered at the other place by the lack of such
local facilities.
The 221 delegates at Ocean Park lived largely in twelve house-
parties. Many other people who throng to this long-time Free
Baptist resorts share the hotels, the cottages, the streets, the grove
and the Temple, to say nothing of the beach where it is difi&cult
to gather the actual conference members apart for any special purpose.
Nevertheless, under some adverse conditions, this conference is
growing and now lists as the third in size of the entire ten conducted
by the Missionary Education Movement in the United States and
Canada. It should appeal to the northern portion of New England,
as being easy of access. A Territorial Committee is working devotedly
to bring this opportunity before the churches of New England by
means of Institutes and personal efforts throughout the year. Massa-
chusetts responded with the largest quota of delegates and each state
was represented, Congregationalists following the Baptists in denomi-
national representation.
One might have gathered strong evidence as to the value of this
conference, if he could have heard the testimonies given by forty-six
persons at a farewell service. These testimonies came spontaneously
after a simple, quiet prayer service, and included the confession of
a pastor that he had failed of being a missionary leader but intended
1 9 1 6 ] Editorials 367
to reform ; a dedication of life to the foreign missionary service ; new
visions of Christ and duty; new joy, new purposes; and from many
lips the definite plan to carry to the home churches such accounts of
the conference and of methods in Missionary Education as would
influence the life of those churches. A growing missionary organism
with a fine constructive spirit at its heart, and with the hope of im-
proved features before it— this is Ocean Park.
M. L. D.
Editorials
During the weeks which have elapsed since the July-August num-
bers of Life and Light went to press there have been some amazing
developments in the situation of the American
e a ory g^g^^^j missions in Turkev. The story of the eviction
in Turkey. . . . - '
of the missionaries from Marsovan and Sivas has
been fully told in The Congregationalist of July 6 and the August
Missionary Herald. Suffice it to say here that the buildings were
seized under the pretext of "military necessity," the missionaries
forced to leave under government escort, or in the case of the Talas
missionaries became virtually prisoners in their own houses. In
Marsovan, communication with the American Embassy was not
permitted, American property was seized and sealed and even per-
sonal effects were requisitioned. All Americans were forced to
leave the city, although those of other foreign nationalities were
permitted to remain. The party which were thus forced out on May
i6 consisted of Dr. George E. White, president of Anatolia College,
Dr. Jesse K. Marden and family, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Pye and three
children, Mr. and Mrs. Dana Getchell, Miss Charlotte R. Willard,
Miss Bertha Morley and Miss Alice Tupper. This company reached
Constantinople eight days later and arrived in America, via Copen-
hagen, July 8, except Dr. White who arrived with the Sivas people,
on the nth and Miss Willard who determined to remain hoping to be
allowed to return to her school girls, whom she had once before saved,
and Mr. and Mrs. Getchell. {Note. As we go to press word has been
received that Miss Willard, Miss Gage and Mr. and Mrs. Getchell
have been granted permission to return to Marsovan.) In Sivas the
368 Life and Light [September
story was practically repeated, and Dr. Charles E. Clark and his
wife, Miss Nina E. Rice, and the two missionaries from Mardin,
Rev. A. H. Andrus and Miss Agnes Fenenga, who had been interned
at Sivas for more than six months, suffered the same indignities. Miss
Graffam apd Miss Mary Carolyn Fowle were allowed to remain. Mr.
Andrus stayed in Constantinople, hoping to get back to his invalid
wife in Mardin, and writes later, " The future is as bright as the promi-
ses of God, therefore we are well and happy." Sad tales come from
Talas, where Mr, and Mrs. Wingate, Mr. and Mrs. Irwin, Miss
Burrage, Miss Loughridge, Miss Richmond and Miss Phelps are
supposedly still under military guard.
To hear from the lips of the men and women thus driven from
their posts this story at first hand was a never-to-be-forgotten ex-
perience of the July days. One marks with wonder akin to awe the
self-restraint, the lack of bitterness, the courage and faith which
are shown by one and all. As one of them said, "But the end is not
yet."
Miss Mary W. Riggs of Harpoot, interned at Beirut for six months,
arrived in New York, July 24, after a hard journey overland to
Constantinople, thence through Germany to Copenhagen. Other
members of the Harpoot station are still in Beirut, as Mr. and Mrs.
Ernest Riggs and Mr. and Mrs. Pierce would find such a trip as
Miss Riggs describes impossible for them to undertake with their
little children.
While these and others have left their work and people in such
straits a few are setting their faces to go back to the remnants re-
maining and to undertake much needed relief. Dr. George C. Ray-
nolds, Mr. and Mrs. Yarrow and their four children, Mr. and Mrs.
Maynard and their two little ones, who sailed from New York,
July 14, reached Bergen July 28 and are probably now in Tiflis.
It is the hope that the men may get in to Van and eventually to
other stations in the territory now occupied by the Russians.
Their return will be saddened by the news of the death from typhoid
of Dr. Samuel G. Wilson, a Presbyterian missionary from Persia who
has been in charge of the relief work at Tiflis.
Some outline of events at Trebizond is given in the letter from Mr.
Crawford to be found in the Field Correspondents.
1 9 1 6 ] Editorials 369
All comment seems inadequate in the shadow of this unprecedented
situation for our missions in Turkey, but in the facing forward of
these soldiers of Christ, stay-at-home, every-day Christians may
learn many lessons.
We are thankful that thus far it has been only "war's alarms"
and that the black cloud of war which threatened the United States
in early July has apparently passed. The mission-
X^ MextJr""^ aries of the Am.erican Board are all out of Mexico.
Dr. and Mrs. John Rowland have been spending sev-
eral weeks in Eastern Massachusetts, having left El Paso in June.
Mrs. Rowland will make her headquarters for the remainder of the
summer in Danielson, Conn., while Dr. Howland is busy in New
York with the work of the Latin-America Continuation Committee.
The Wrights, Miss Long, Miss Dunning and Miss Prescott are still
in Southern California.
A large party, including the deputation of the American Board to
the Ceylon Mission, sailed August lo from Vancouver. Miss Carolyn
D. Smiley, the first Jubilee missionary, was of
Personal Mention. "^ , ,»^. -r-i- t ^ ^
this number and Miss Edith Coon, who goes to
fill the position of vice-principal in the Woman's Union College at
Madras, India, though detained till the last
moment by technicalities regarding her passport,
joined the party on the eve of sailing. Miss
Elizabeth Hanson, a trained nurse, going to the
Inuvil Hospital, Ceylon, was included in the
company. Owing to the stringency of the new
British laws regarding the admission of foreigners
to India, special permission was sought and re-
ceived by Dr. Barton for the entrance of these
missionaries and the company to sail on Sep-
, r Miss Coon
tember 9.
Miss Mary E. Kinney, formerly of Adabazar, plans to sail Sep-
tember 5 for Cairo where she will assist in the work among the Ar-
menian refugees at Port Said.
370 Life and Light [September
Miss Minnie E. Carter, of Bethel, Conn., sailed from New York,
August 15, to join the Zulu Mission. Miss Carter will probably be
designated to Inanda and has been adopted by the New Haven
Branch.
Dr. and Mrs. F. B. Bridgman, having changed their plans, now^
expect to sail together September 30, visiting Mrs. Bridgman's
relatives in Japan, on their way to Johannesburg, South Africa.
Dr. Bridgman received the degree of Doctor of Divinity from Oberlin
in June, as did Rev. W. L. Beard of Foochow.
Letters received from Mr. and Mrs. Frank Cary (Rosamond Bates,
of Cleveland, Ohio, and of Kobe) report them as happily settled in
Tokyo, Japan.
Miss Rachel Snow, of Watertown, Mass., one of the officers of
Suffolk Branch, sailed August 26 from San Francisco, for Peking,
where she will spend a year assisting in the Y. W. C. A. work. We
bespeak for Miss Snow a cordial welcome from our missionaries, to
whom she carries letters of introduction.
Wedding cards have been received from three young women in
whom the Woman's Boards have special interest. Dr. Susan B.
Tallmon of Lintsing, China, was married May 25
Announcements. ^^ Tientsin to Rev. B. F. Sargent, formerly of Cah-
fornia. For the present Mrs. Sargent will continue
her medical work at the Elizabeth Hospital, Lintsing. In Kyoto,
Japan, June 14, Miss Grace W. Learned, daughter of Dr. and Mrs.
Dwight L. Learned, became the wife of Rev. W. L. Curtis of Niigata.
On July 26 occurred at Lithia, Mass., the wedding of Miss Sarah
Capron Jones, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. J. P. Jones, to Mr. Carl W.
Dipman of Cleveland, Ohio.
The death of Dr. James F. Clarke of Sofia, Bulgaria, at the ad-
vanced age of eighty -four, occurred July 2, after some years of feeble
_^ ^ . , health. Dr. Clarke had been for fifty-seven years
The Passmg of 1 i n r
Two Veterans. ^ missionary of the American Board, and all of
that time he was connected with the mission in
European Turkey. During his later years his daughter, Miss Eliza-
beth C. Clarke, has been his devoted companion and nurse. A further
i9i6] Editorials 371
account of the life of this loyal servant of God will be found in the
September Missionary Herald. Miss Clarke was chosen as the
Present Day Worker for European Missions, and the sketch of her
life is included in the Jubilee Series.
The death in Harpoot June 27 of Mrs. Moses P. Parmelee came
after long feebleness and was to her a blessed release, although it
leaves her daughter. Dr. Ruth Parmelee, very lonely in that much
afflicted station. Mrs. Parmelee went to Turkey with her husband
in 187 1, spending their long term of service in Erzroom and Trebizond.
Mrs. Parmelee returned to Turkey with her daughter in 19 14.
The passing at Clifton Springs, N.Y., June 24, of Dr. C. C. Thayer
takes away a beloved physician who was formerly a missionary of the
American Board at Oorfa, Turkey. He was later a member of the
medical staff at the Sanitarium at Clifton Springs. He leaves an
only daughter, Miss Alice Thayer, at present at Watch Hill, R.I.
In the July-August Life and Light an emergency call for the
Girls' School at Ponasang, Foochow, was mentioned. Miss Eliza-
. ^ , beth Perkins, now in charge of the school, is assisted
A Teacher , . „ .
for Ponasang "^^ Miss Stella Cook and Miss Elizabeth Nash. Miss
Irene Dornblaser has been compelled to give up her
duties there for a time and come to this country
because of her health. With 114 pupils and a re-
adjustment of the curriculimi, additional help is
imperative and therefore the Executive Com-
mittee authorized the employment of a temporary
worker if no permanent appointee could be im-
mediately found. We are glad to say that Miss
Adelaide K. Thomson, of Springfield, Ohio, will
sail in September for a three-year term of service.
Miss Thomson is the daughter of a Presbyterian
minister, a graduate of Western College, Oxford, ,,. ^^
' ° ° ' ' Miss Thomson
Ohio, and has had three years of experience in
teaching. Her home training and her own personality promise to
make her a helper of unusual strength and adaptability.
372 Life and Light [September
Favorable comment has come to the editor regarding the July-
August issue of Life and Light. Adverse criticisms have not been
received, but we shall be glad of those also to aid in
The September .... ^
Contents. plannmg for the future.
We offer this month an enlarged magazine, re-
porting the receipts since June i, giving some account of the summer
conferences east and west, and a summary of the personal happenings
of the month in missionary circles. Mrs. Black's article "Among the
Filipinos" introduces us to a field little known, and the friends of our
two new helpers in the Capron Hall School at Madura will read with
eagerness their first letters from the field. The Council Page will
prove suggestive to program makers and auxiliary officers, and the
new plan for missions in the Sunday schools, alluded to in the para-
graph below, is set forth in the Junior Department. Mrs. Joseph
Cook has kindly consented to edit The Wider View, and begins her
work in this number.
To create in Congregational Sunday Schools some understanding
of our denominational missionary work and a spirit of loyalty for the
_ , moral and financial support of that work has for
The New Plan for . ^^ . , r^ r ,
Sunday Schools. ^ ^^ng time been a crymg need. One of the
strong arguments for the appointment of a Joint
Educational Secretary for the various interests of the denomination (as
agitated during the past few years) has been this indifference of our
Sunday schools. They have seemed half asleep or bewildered by the
number of our missionary agencies. A long step toward the reme-
dying of this condition, so far as it can be remedied by the Boards,
is now being taken. This fall all the foreign interests of the denomina-
tion join in one great Sunday School Campaign for "Kingdom Build-
ing the World Around." The unified educational program and the
appeal for loyalty to "Congregational foreign missions," instead of
to one Board as over against another, is sure to mean quick response
from the Schools once they have caught the idea. On page 407 the
plans are discussed in detail. All leaders are urged to make them-
selves familiar with this new movement and to do what they can to
interest pastors and superintendents.
I9i6]
Editorials
373
A Warning Note.
When the June figures were made up, we hoped the large loss in
gifts for regular work from the Branches would be redeemed in July,
but July materially increased instead of diminish-
ing the total loss. We cannot but hope that this
is only a temporary condition which will be left behind before the
end of the year. Yet it gives a warning which we cannot ignore and
we must all work and pray with the greatest earnestness if we are to
have the full amount to carry our next year's worK. We must not
open our Jubilee year by cutting down our appropriations for the
field.
THE FINANCIAL STATEMENT OF THE WOMAN'S BOARD
Receipts from June 1-30, 1916
For Regular Work
For
Buildings
For Special
Objects
lSTSIs : TOTAL
t
Branches
Other
Sources
TOTAL
1915.
1916.
«10,998.30
8,795.57
$3,152.34
1,045.00
$14,150.64
9,840.57
$3,017.40
3,325.18
$373.10
135.62
$900.00 $18,441.14
50.00 13,351.37
Gain.
Loss..
$2,202.73
$2,107.34
$4,310.07
$307.78
1 $237.48
1
$850.00 \ $5,089.77
Receipts from July 1-31, 19 16
For Regular Work
For
Buildings
For Special
Objects
Frorn
Legacies
Branches
Other
Sources
TOTAL
TOTAL
1915.
1916.
$6,284.90
5.720.72 j
$880.00
595.00
$7,164.90
6,315.72
$688.08
2,400.58
$20.00
98.00
$1,250.00
583.91
$9,122.98
9,-398.21
Gain.
Loss..
$564.18
$285.00
$849.18
$1,712.50
$78.00
$666.09
$275.23
Total
Receipts
FROM October i8, 1915, to July 31, 191
6
1915.
$89,650.52
$11,867.49
$101,518.01
$31,126.55
.$2,084.33
$16,100.65
$150,829.54
1916.
87.364.07
5,760.90
93,124.97
41,103.03
1,655.94
16,562.51
152,446.45
Gain .
$9,976.48
$461.86
$1,616.91
Loss..
$2,286.45
$6,106.59
$8,393.04
$428.39
374 Life and Light [September
The Jubilee Increase Campaign
With the beginning of September the various companies of program
makers and auxiliary ofl&cers will "get busy" planning for this event-
ful year in the history of the Woman's Board of Missions, its Jubilee
Year. Already the Nearing the Jubilee portfolio is in the hands of
hundreds of women and they are making wise preparation for the
carrying out of this program into which so much thought was put by
the Committee of Publications during the spring months. If you
have not secured one of these portfolios, write to your Branch secretary
of literature or some officer appointed to have charge of this material
through whom they are to be obtained. Some enterprising societies
have already held their Jubilee Increase meeting, taking advantage
of the presence in their home town of summer visitors who were
interested to help. But for most auxiliaries September or October
will prove to be the more auspicious month. Some will use the pro-
gram in connection with a Thank Offering meeting in November, the
facts therein presented emphasizing the reasons for thanksgiving
which we as American Christian women pre-eminently have in this
year of our Lord.
Following this Nearing the Jubilee program many are getting ready
to use the Jubilee Series. Please note the difference, as there seems
to be some confusion in the minds of those applying for this material.
The preliminary program is called Nearing the Jubilee and is to be
obtained from your Branch secretary and not from the Board Rooms,
except in unusual circumstances, — such as your not knowing the name
of your Branch secretary of literature! Does that ever happen?
Ask Miss Hartshorn. This portfolio with all its predigested ma-
terial is free, — one copy for every society which will hold a meeting
to promote the Jubilee Increase Campaig^n.
The Jubilee Series on the other hand costs fifty cents for the set,
and consists of twelve little leaflets, six Pioneers and six Present Day
Workers, a beautiful booklet giving several Life Stories of Native
Helpers, edited by Miss Buckley but prepared in several mission fields,
and a set of Program Outlines, Ambassadors for Christ, specially
adapted for use in junior as well as senior auxiliaries. These leaflets
are five cents each, if bought separately, except the Life Stories which
igie] Editorials 375
is ten cents. This is illustrated with pictures of the women who have
been such strong right hands to the missionaries, the frontispiece
showing the portrait of Dr. Karmarkar, the well-known Indian
physician of Bombay. See cover page for further details. Send your
orders immediately if you have not already done so, as we foresee
a very great demand for this biographical material, showing the
work of the Woman's Board during its nearly fifty years of life.
These Jubilee Programs have been well received at the Summer Schools
and Missionary Conferences. If you are to study World Missions
and World Peace in your program meetings, be sure to take up the
Ambassadors for Christ studies in a Lenten Study Class in 1917, or
a reading circle in connection with your auxiliary work.
Deep interest has been felt concerning the character of the man
appointed to succeed Mr. Morgenthau, Mr. Abram I. Elkus, who
has lately sailed for his new post. At a dinner
The New Ambassador • • v- v -at t^ i a ^
^ given m his honor in JNew York, August 10,
to Turkey. ° ...
there were present representatives of the
Syrian College, Beirut, Robert College and the American College for
Girls, Constantinople, Euphrates and Harpoot Colleges. Dr. John R.
Mott, Rabbi Wise, Drs. J. L. Barton and W. E. Strong were among
the guests, also former Ambassador Morgenthau. Mr. Elkus, who
is a Jewish lawyer, realizes that he is going to a difficult situation
and faces it with a spirit of earnestness and with high ideals. Besides
his legal activities he belongs to educational and philanthropic circles
in New York and in his speech he declared his sympathy with our
Christian educational work in Turkey. Like Mr. Morgenthau he
is fully aware of his responsibility for guarding the lives and enter-
prises of our missionaries.
As we go to press in early August it is not possible to give program
details for the Annual Meeting, November 8-10. It is hoped that
, ,, . one session will be devoted to Unoccupied Fields,
Annual Meeting .
at Northampton, presented by Dr. C. H. Patton of the American
Board, that there will be a special session under the
care of the Junior Committee, probably in the new chapel at Smith
College, and that we shall have with us an unusual group of mis-
sionaries. Further details in the October Life and Light.
376 Life and Light [September
Among the Filipinos
By Gertrude Black
Rev. Robert F. and Mrs. Black are missionaries of the American Board
station at Davao, Mindanao. Mrs. Black, who was Gertrude Granger of
Robinson, Illinois, is a trained kindergartner. Mr. Black is a graduate of
Union Seminary and joined the mission in 1902, and Mrs. Black a year later.
This is their second furlough which they are spending at Janesville, Wisconsin.
^^^^HE Philippine Islands! What does this name suggest to
■ ^ you? Do you think of Manila, "The Pearl of the Orient"
^^^^/ as it is called? Beautiful indeed is this capital city of the
archipelago and wonderful are the changes which have been made
there since the American occupation. The low places have been
filled in to make building sites for many fine government buildings,
for Y. M. C. A. buildings, for schools and dormitories and churches.
The moat which ran around the fine old Spanish walls, which enclosed
the ancient city of Manila, has been transformed into lovely sunken
gardens, where little children of many nationalties come to play in
the cool of the afternoon. Automobiles are as numerous there as
in any large American city, and one can take delightful jaunts into
the surrounding country, for the splendid roads lead out and out for
miles.
Perhaps some of you think of Cebu, that venerable city, which
Magellan visited on his memorable trip around the world. Here
later he met his death at the hands of the treacherous native chief.
Or it may be that you have heard of Jolo, which for centuries was
the stronghold of the Moro warriors. From this place they swept
down upon the towns of the Northern islands, killing the men, loot-
ing and pillaging, and carrying women and children away into slav-
ery. Jolo is a perfect gem of a city, with its red tiled roofs peeping
out from behind the lovely flame-trees; with its high old walls and
its quaint old watch tower and lighthouse. A beautiful commingling
of the old and the new it is. And here the United States Govern-
ment is teaching the doughty Moro lessons in law and order; in
justice and fair play for all.
All of these places are interesting; but to us, as Congregationalists,
igi6] Among the Filipinos 377
there is one place that should be of paramount interest. That place
is Mindanao, the great Southern island of the group. Look at your
map and find it. Mindanao! The very treasure-house of the
Philippine Islands, is ours to occupy in the name of the Lord. Min-
danao! A field as large as the state of Ohio, and with a population
of 600,000 souls, half of whom are civilized and half Moros and wild
men, is ours to care for.
When the Philippine Government sought fertile river-valleys,
where rice enough for the entire population of the archipelago could
be raised, where did it go? To Mindanao. Where are the finest
virgin forests of hardwoods? On Mindanao. When the Bureau of
Science wishes a rare specimen of bird or plant or orchid or butterfly,
where does it send? To Mindanao. Mindanao hemp and cocoanuts
and rubber have taken first place at agricultural exhibitions. Min-
dana,o beef is the finest raised in the Islands. Its mineral wealth is
untouched. Of what importance is all this to us? Hundreds of
Filipinos go down to Mindanao each year, to take up land, and thou-
sands will go down in the coming years to develop the industries of
this wonderful country and to take up homesteads. When they do,
we Congregationalists become directly responsible for the welfare of
their souls, for they are then in Congregational territory.
To the fertile coast lands of Northern Mindanao, from earliest
times, went the hardy Filipinos from the nearby Islands of Cebu,
Negros and Leyte. Menaced by the Moro and the wild man, these
settlers staid and were followed by others. Spain built strong forts to
protect the small colonies. Jesuit priests went in as missionaries and
built small churches. Trade was encouraged with the wild man and
the Moro. When the American Government assumed control of the
islands a succession of goodly towns stretched from Dapitan on the
northwest to Surigao on the northeast of the Island and half-way
down the east coast to Caraga.
To-day these towns are fast growing into cities of importance and
wealth. Many of the Filipinos have beautiful homes. In one town
we counted seventeen pianos. The poor man, under the benign pro-
tection of the American Government, is finding a place for himself
and his family. His children are drinking in American ideals in the
splendid public schools.
378
Life and Light
[September
You will see the primary and
secondary schools in nearly all of
these towns. In the provincial
capitals you will find high schools
and well-equipped industrial
schools. In the latter young men
are taught simple mechanics and
the making of fine rattan and hard-
wood furniture. In Surigao and
Cagayan the young women of the
Domestic Science classes are taught
to care for a model five room Fili-
pino house. They are taught ma-
chine sewing, hand sewing and fine
embroidery. In the model Fili-
pino kitchen, they are taught to
cook good nourishing food for their
families. They learn how to pre-
pare food for the growing baby;
what to cook when one is ill; how
to use to advantage all Filipino
fruits and vegetables. Good mis-
sionary work as far as it goes! But think what it would mean to
these girls, many of them far from home, to be gathered into clean,
sweet dormitories, where every day would begin and end with songs
of praise and simple earnest prayers. Here the soul could be devel-
oped, as well as mind and body, and the joy of serving others could
be learned.
Last year Rev. Frank C. Laubach, the American Board's latest
evangelical missionary to the Philippine Islands, visited some of these
north coast towns on his way to Cagayan, where he was to open up
a new station. At each place he was met with earnest pleadings to
remain. A town of six hundred newly baptized converts begged for a
pastor, who would strengthen them in the faith. Everywhere the
people have broken away from the old Romish faith. Those who were
one time followers of Archbishop Aglipay, the founder of the independ-
ent Filipino church, discontented with the uneducated clergy, are
President of the C. E. Society, Davao
igie] Among the Filipinos 379
turning to the Evangelical Church for spiritual help. ' ' Send us men,"
is the cry of the whole north coast. And men we must send them.
Men who will prayerfully, patiently, lovingly wean these new converts
away from the old lives of sin and ignorance, and teach them to be
"strong in the Lord." And with these young men should go forth
young women of Christian character and training. Theirs would be
the task of reaching the women and children, and of establishing
Christian homes. And just here we come face to face with one of our
great needs. A Training School where Bible women, pastor's wives
and Sunday school workers can be trained for the service. Too often
we have seen the work of fine young men hampered and even spoiled
by their untrained wives.
The day of small beginnings has long passed. A tremendous work
has opened up and we must prepare carefully and prayerfully for its
development. Let us not turn back from the glorious task of
winning Northern Mindanao for Christ.
But what of Davao, the Board's first and oldest mission station on
Mindanao? What has been accomplished there in the thirteen
years since its establishment? Why was work started in that isolated
corner of the island, rather than on the north coast where wonderful
opportunities invited? After a year spent in touring Mindanao and
a careful study of the whole situation the Board's first missionary to
the island, Rev. Robert F. Black, decided that from no one center
could the work of evangelization be carried on. On the north and
east coasts lived most of the civilized Filipinos of Mindanao. On the
west coast and around the south coast to Cotabato lived the warlike
Moro. From Cotabato to Davao was the wild man's country. Each
of these great districts had problems distinctively its own. Work
with the wild men, who had no written language, would be very dif-
ferent from that among the progressive, civilized Filipinos, while
work with the Moro would be chiefly industrial and educational at
first. Zamboanga on the extreme southwest of the island, in the
heart of the Moro country, was a most inviting field. It was the
capital of the Moro Province, and had good primary and industrial
schools started. A small Peniel mission had already started work
among the civilized Filipinos, and their work is continued to-day by
missionaries of the Christian and Missionary Alliance. A few years
ago the Episcopal mission under Bishop Brent built a church for the
380 Life and Light [September
Americans and later started a work among the Mohammedans at
Zamboanga and at Jolo. Mr. Black, believing that other missionaries
would soon be sent out to occupy the north coast, decided to begin
work in the neediest field of all, — the wild man's country. Here
paganism reigned supreme. Here, outside of the few small coast
towns, were no schools, no churches, no uplifting influences. Here
men were bowing down to idols and worshiping Diwata, the spirit god
of the hills and trees. Here men were making human sacrifices to
propitiate an angry god who sent the drought, the locust, the famine
and the awful plague. {See frontispiece.)
Davao, the Provincial capital, was in the very heart of this new
great country. Within a radius of one hundred and fifty miles were
thirteen distinct tribes of wild men, each with its own dialect and
tribal customs. Here the wild man came to pay his yearly poll tax
and to trade. To Davao Mr. Black went and opened up the first
Congregational missioft on the island. Many friends have asked
how we began the work in Davao. You can imagine that the first
year was a difficult one. There was a new language and a native
dialect to acquire and no one to teach us. There was opposition and
suspicion to overcome. There was no building available for a church,
so the meetings had to be held in our home. "How barbarous!"
said the Filipino. "Yours must be a poor mission indeed, not to
have a church."
The real opening came in a most unexpected manner. A poor little
slave girl, abused past endurance, ran away from her owners and
appealed to the Governor. He took her away and asked us to take
her into our family to raise. We consented to do this, and thus it
came to pass that Carlota, a forlorn ragged little child, entered into
a new life of joy. "A little child shall lead them," says the Bible,
and surely Carlota was the means used of God for bringing many
into a knowledge of better things. Of course she went to school.
Her pretty, simple American dresses attracted attention. For over
a week the child came home late from school. Upon being questioned,
she told how the women had stopped her to take patterns of her
clothes. She was told to say to the women that I would show them
how to make the dresses and underclothes. Many an entire morning
after that was spent in cutting out little garments. Often, as the
women left they would ask for cuttings from our garden.
I9i6]
Among the Filipinos
381
ii' ^
Christian Family at Davao
Carlota, her husband, and baby in the foreground
The unfriendly attitude began to change. Soon we were exchang-
ing greetings in the streets. Carlota's doll and picture books; her
swing and sand pile were very popular with the children. At Christ-
mas time nearly half the town came to see the Christmas tree. A
change was coming over the meetings too. Often as many as fifteen
gathered with us at the hour of service. Then our little son came, —
and with his coming the barriers fell away completely. Every one
was interested in him and loved him. The women learned much that
year about bathing and feeding and caring for the baby. And I
learned what kindly hearts those women had.
In the beginning of the sixth year a great impetus was given to the
work by the coming of Dr. and Mrs. Charles T. Sibley. The good
doctor began his work immediately of ministering to the sick. Pa-
tients were brought from afar and laid under his house. As soon as
possible a small dispensary-hospital was put up. Long before it was
finished every bed was full. Here men of many creeds and national-
ities were received and tenderly nursed back to health and strength.
Later a number of bright young men were trained to help care for
382
Life and Light
[September
the sick and to do the hospital work. Every morning a long line of
patients appeared at the dispensary hour. Thousands of cases have
been treated each year. The people of the town were quick to avail
themselves of the doctor's skill. Everywhere the doctor's sympa-
thetic, cheerful manner won for him and for the Avork lasting friends.
A gift of a splendid launch made it possible for the doctor to visit
places about the bay and to bring in many patients, some of them
wild men, who needed hospital care. Last year an addition was
built which doubled the capacity of the hospital. Many improve-
ments were made which will add greatly to the comfort of the patients.
Miss Mathewson, an American nurse, joined the medical mission in
1910. Shortly after her coming Dr. Sibley and his family left for a
much needed rest. Miss Mathew^son showed considerable ~ ability
and won the admiration of all by the way she managed the hospital
in his absence.
When Dr. Sibley went home on furlough the Governor of the Moro
Province allowed the army doctors in Davao to care for all Mission
Hospital patients and to take charge of the dispensary hour. Since
Miss Mathewson's marriage a bright little Filipino nurse, Miss Asido,
A Patient on the Way to Dr. Sibley
I9i6]
Among the Filipinos
383
has been assisting in the hospital. Dr. Sibley and his family have
come home to stay and Dr. Lucius Case has taken his place. A new
American nurse is soon to go out to assist in the hospital.
In the beautiful little church, built in 191 1, a good work is going
on for Davao and the surrounding towns. We have had a daily
kindergarten for a year and a half in the Sunday school room. On
Saturday afternoons the children gather on the church lawn for games
and the "story hour." Such jolly times they have and how they
clamor for "just one more story."
"story Hour" at Davao. The Kindergarten Children
About the bay are seven outstations which are visited once a month
by the workers. In three of these places are schools for the pagan
children. Two of these are in Bagobo villages and one is fifty miles
down the bay, among the Kalagans. The teachers of these mission
schools are bright Christian young men. Nearly two hundred little
wild children gather daily in these schools. Here they are taught the
four R's, with the emphasis on Religious Instruction. You should
hear them sing the gospel songs! They have learned to repeat in
English scores of Bible verses, the Lord's prayer, the twenty-third
384 Life and Light [September
Psalm, the commandments and the beatitudes. These they trans-
late readily into their native dialect. Twenty-nine of these boys and
girls have received baptism and others are preparing. Through the
children and the teachers we are gaining the confidence of the older
people. Tongkaling, the old chief of the Bagobos, is a warm friend
of the missionaries. They have been entertained in his home, and
he with thirty of his followers took supper with us one night and slept
in the dormitory. Other younger chiefs are very friendly and would
like to have schools for their children. We hope to have one for each
wild tribe within a few years. They cost us two hundred dollars
each per year; We are working to find support for these schools.
We are earnestly praying that the Woman's Boards may hear the
call of the thousands of little wild children on Mindanao who have
never heard of the loving Savior who said "Suffer the little children
to come unto Me."
Settlement Work in an Indian City
By Mrs. Robert A. Hume, Ahmednagar
I.
CHRISTIAN work has been done in Ahmednagar among
settlements of the depressed classes or low-castes for many
years. When thirty years ago we opened a girls' school in
one of these settlements of depressed classes, a blind man was em-
ployed to gather daily the girls for school. Once, near the close
of school, he stood up and said, ''I would like to say a few words."
Standing before me in a solemn and impressive way, he said that the
people of that particular settlement were determined not to become
Christians; that for fifty years Christian truth had been preached
here but with very small results, and this school would not influence
the people as we hoped. We did not dispute him, but simply deter-
mined to develop the school, give the girls Christian teaching and leave
results to the future.
Progress has been slow, but some things have resulted which have
rewarded us for the time, thought and money spent in that place.
For example, one girl who came to school in "nature's garb" on the
day of its opening, finished her primary course in that school and
I9i6]
Settlement W^ork in an Indian City
385
was sent to the Bombay High School and was matriculated from it.
Later she took a kindergarten course and is now one of the effective
Christian teachers in that same Bombay school. I could multiply
examples and tell of the girls from that school who have married
Christian teachers and preachers and gone out with them to distant
places in the Marathi country.
This is all encouraging, but still for years conditions in that settle-
Some 'Women Converts from the Mangs
ment have been very unsatisfactory. I could mention good reasons
for such conditions. One is utter carelessness in regard to the
marriage relation. Another is their pride in their caste position.
These particular people have the privilege of being the settlers of
caste matters and disputes. The power and influence they have,
on account of this right, is dearer to them than anything.
For years Bible women have worked in that settlement regularly.
Lately there have been 35 women in the class who, year in and year
out, five days in the week, have been faithfully visited and taught.
Prayer is often made that those women may become Christ's. Twice
every year I go to examine such women on what they are taught,
and although I feel convinced that work among them has been faith-
386 Life and Light [September
fully done, yet a complaining spirit has continued among them
which is wholly wrong and which has puzzled me. They have con-
tracted a habit of discontent through the desire for material and
worldly gifts rather than spiritual. On account of this habit, I
have found it hard and discouraging to visit them, and the times when
I have gone to examine them I confess that I have had to fortify
myself with prayer to get courage even to meet them. But when
examining them last October and again in April of this year, I was
gratified to find a different spirit among them and came away both
times comforted and satisfied that the leaven was working. Suddenly
this year four married women, two of them quite young, came forward
for baptism and admission to the church. This was a surprise and
joy. Again later one whole family came out and was baptized and
taken into the church. So the leaven is working and we shall have
more results. I hope every family there will become Christ's.
In India the men are usually the first to take the initial step
toward Christianity. The women cling to the old way. Now, after
these many years of teaching, the women in this quarter are slowly
responding and renouncing the old religion. We hope that this
beginning of real results will end in the forming of a new church for
that section of Ahmednagar. Accompanying this is a snapshot of
the four women converts who lately entered into covenant with the
church.
In the northwest section of Ahmednagar city there are two other
settlements of the lowest of the low castes called Mangs. Because
we had fewer Christian women workers, for two years the women in
these settlements have not been regularly taught by Bible women.
But from January of this year, I have employed two more Bible
women and have assigned to them the teaching of the women in these
Mang settlements. Formerly when we had regular work among
them, we discovered that they studied with the desire of some defi-
nite material reward, and that proved a hindrance to spiritual work.
Once these women openly used to say, "What will you give us if we
study?" and because we did not promise clothes or doles of grain
such as were given in the famine times, they did not care to have the
Bible women come to teach them. So the work was mostly stopped
both because of lack of workers and because of the mercenary spirit
igi6] Settlement ^Vo^k in an Indian City 387
of the women. This year when we started the work again, I warned
the Bible women to look out for the mercenary spirit and to try to
help those especially who wished to learn about God and Christ.
So far the work among these Mang women has been attended with
only moderate results. In early April I went to meet those women
and to examine them to see what had been done. I found that
tw^enty women had been taught, some of them creditably. I praised
them as much as I could. I told them that knowing about God and
Christ must help them to live as Christ wished us to live and would
result in makin-g them happier. I had no more said all this than a
middle-aged woman stood up with the intention of speaking. She
had apparently come only to listen to what was said and done.
When she began to speak, the whole company became quite still.
She said, ' * Most of the women here would be glad to study, if you
would only give them clothes every year." I said, "Bai, clothes w^ear
out, but what we get by knowing about our Father and Christ clothes
us with something that can never wear out. We wish you all to want
that kind of garment. That is why we come here, to help you to
get the best garments." There was a general acceptance of what I
said, so we sang some Indian metre hymns and after a prayer they
joined me in the saying of the Lord's Prayer. For this time they
were quieted, but the mercenary spirit may show itself again, or as
in the previous case above described, Christian truth may conquer.
Our poet. Rev. Narayan Waman Tilak, has done a great service
to the Christian Church of Western India by the devotional hymns
which he has written. They take hold of one and are set to tunes
which are not only fitting but peculiarly pleasing. He has arranged
a Christmas Sacred Concert which tells the story of the Christ Child.
It is fascinating from beginning to end; the hymns speak to the heart
of the hearers.
■ Last December some of the Ahmednagar Bible women were taught
to render this sacred concert especially for the benefit of Hindu
women. A singing master trained them for it. Mr. Tilak's wife,
Lakamibai, was asked to lead. She is most effective on such occasions.
The concert was rendered twice, once in the Woman's Hospital, when
the former Hindu patients assembled for their annual Christmas
gathering. Another time it was given before the Brahman Women's
388
Life and Light
[September
Club in the city. The hospital was crowded, and on both occasions
the women attending were enthusiastic over it. Indians love to
hear stories in song, accompanied by Indian instruments. By
custom women are not allowed the use of most Indian musical instru-
ments. We had the baby organ, the cymbals, castanets, and the
Indian drum, which beats time, played by a boy. Miss Emily
Bissell is our expert in playing Indian music, and she kindly came
to Ahmednagar to play the organ at the concerts. We intend that
our Bible women shall more and more do such service.
A campaign is being organized for the deepening of spiritual life
in Western India. After much thought, prayer and conference, we
have started prayer and Bible study circles among the Christian
women in Ahmednagar. The circles are led by other Christian
women as well as by Bible women. The plan is that those living
as neighbors shall get together for prayer and Bible study. It was
proposed that these circles meet daily, morning or evening as con-
venient. The plan received a hearty response from the Christian
women. Thirty-six circles have been formed. The object is to en-
thuse our Christian women. The plan has succeeded so well in South
India that we pray for a like success in Ahmednagar and vicinity.
Missionaries of the Marathi Mission at Annual Meeting
Dr. Ballantine, Mr. and Mrs. Rose, Mr. and Mrs. L. H. Gates, Mr. Felt, Mrs. L. S. Gates,
Mrs. H. P. Bruce, in foreground. Others in the picture are Dr. R. A. Hume, Mr. Alden Clark, Mr.
and Mrs. Picken, Dr. L. S. Gates, Mrs. R. A. Hume, Miss Gordon, Dr. Proctor, Dr. Ruth Hume,
Miss Wheeler, Mrs. Sibley, Miss Nugent, and Mr. Churchill.
I9i6]
Settlement Work in an Indian City
389
One of Our Helpers — Mrs. Ushabai Modak
11.
" What an attractive woman ! Who is she?" This is what strang-
ers ask when they see Mrs. Ushabai Modak at Ahmednagar. She
is simple and dignified, and carries with her the air of a woman of
unusual character and ability which singles her out from other women
as one by herself.
Twenty-six years ago Mr. Shahurao R. Modak/ a rising Christian
lawyer of Ahmednagar, met her in the family of missionaries of
another mission whom he was visiting.
He fell in love and asked her to marry him.
She was then not twenty years old. The
missionaries had brought up this Indian
girl as one of their own children. She
dressed like a European and was called
Ruth, but when she accepted Shahurao
Modak he named her Usha, which means
the dawn. At the time of their marriage
she adopted the Indian dress. Shahurao
and Ushabai built up a beautiful Christian
home, and from the beginning of her life in
Ahmednagar she has had a remarkable
influence in the community and the city.
Six sons and one daughter were born to them. It is a rare family.
While still practising law, Shahurao was called to be the pastor of the
First Church in Ahmednagar. As a pastor's wife, Ushabai did fine
service.
About two years ago Shahurao died. At that time only the
eldest son was in a position to help support the large family. The
Mission then asked Ushabai to take up work among the women of
the city. A New England lady of means offered to support her. I
have let her write briefly her own story of a year's work.
Ushabai Modak writes: Over a dozen Bible women are working in
Ahmednagar in different localities. Some work for the ignorant
women, and the others for the middle classes. But I am especially
Mrs. Modak
390 Life and Light [September
interested in the high caste, i. e., Brahman women. I try to reach
their souls mainly in two ways. The first is by taking lead in a
social class started by Miss Harris, and the second by house to house
visitation.
In the above class, sewing, reading, writing and singing are taught
by a number of voluntary teachers. Special effort is here made
to interest the Brahman women socially, and by degrees to lead them
to Christ.
For three days in a week I teach in this class, and two days I devote
to visiting the women who attend this class. I regularly visit ten
families, and am especially interested in four of them. One of the
striking incidents among these families is this. A small child was
sick. The mother and aunt were extremely sad. All earthly meas-
ures were adopted with failure. I went there and began to pray to
my Lord. These two women closed their eyes and the mother was
kneehng with me before the Lord. It is really very unusual in an
orthodox family like this to see a Brahman woman join in a Christian
prayer. I then explained to these women after prayer that praying
is not worshiping, but it is making our will like the will of the Lord
Jesus.
The head of another family, an earnest Brahman as he is, often
expresses his great desire to me that I should try to make the women
in his family learn the Bible and especially the Lord's Prayer.
Such and similar other things encourage me a great deal, but it is
extremely hard to present the Gospel to the Brahman women. If it
were not for these orthodox women, hundreds of Brahmans would
have accepted Christ publicly as their Saviour long ere this.
Many a time while daily trying to present the Lord Jesus to our
non-Christian women, we sadly find our own selves at a distance
from Him. It is therefore necessary that we Christian workers should
always bear in mind that while trying to bring others to the Master,
we should not ourselves be cast out. For this very reason we have
several regularly conducted prayer meetings and Bible classes, etc.,
for our spiritual uplifting. I especially take part in a few of them,
viz., the mothers' meeting, the weekly prayer meeting, the National
Missionary Society of India, Ahmednagar Branch, and the Dorcas
Society. I teach a class every Sunday in our Sunday School. I
igie] When We Reached Madura 391
enjoy the privilege of helping the management of the Girls' High
School here in their School-Committee. I am a member of the
Standing Committee of the "Church of the Lamb" and the Station
Conference of the Ahmednagar leaders. I am thankful to my Lord
for helping me in my daily work, and earnestly pray that I may be
enabled to be more useful to my neighbors, and do all I can in the
remaining days of my life.
When We Reached Madura
Miss Mabel L. Chase, of Boulder, Col., and Miss Katie 'Wilcox, of Chester, Conn., who
reached Madura December 11, 1915, write very graphically of their first \A?eeks in their new
home. We quote from both letters in the accompanying article.
XFEAR I have waited too long to give you very vividly my
first impression of Madura. Miss Wilcox and I were in-
deed fortunate in reaching our destination at the most
delightful time of the year on the Plains. We were in a state of
excited expectancy long before our train pulled into Madura, and we
have often laughed since over the fact that we took some low kilns
or ovens near the railroad track for houses of the natives. Nearly
all of the Madura and Pasumalai circle of missionaries were at the
station. It was good to find ourselves surrounded by that group
of Americans, and their jolly, cordial greetings at once relieved us ©f
any feeling of being strangers among them. Some one said to me
as we passed to our waiting bandy, "This is the time when your heart
will sink at your first glimpse of the Madura streets," but it did not
a bit. On the contrary, I was interested and charmed by the lively
panorama with all its movement and vivid color. In fact, I think
that for the first few weeks the picturesque aspect of things appealed
to me so strongly that I almost failed to get a sense of the dirt, misery
and degradation that make one's heart ache as she looks about her
with more thoughtful eyes. In spite of my enjoyment of the street
scenes, however, I could not fail to feel the happy contrast when we
turned out to the highway through the gates of Capron Hall Com-
pound and caught a glimpse of the white walls of school and bungalow
gleaming through the foliage. I do not believe, however, that either
of us paid much attention to compound or buildings that afternoon.
392 Life and Light [September
Our eyes were all for the girls lined up along the driveway from the
gates to the steps of the bungalow. Two of the older girls stepped
forward to decorate us with yellow garlands while the others sang their
song of greeting to " Miss Chaise and Miss Kettie." (They had a hard
time with Miss Wilcox' name at first, so adopted her first name.)
Such a welcome !
We arrived just a few days before the closing of school for the
Christmas holidays and the departure of Miss Powers for America,
so that events moved rapidly during our first weeks. I confess that
I had a decidedly "snowed under" feeling the first morning I sat in
morning prayers and looked across those rows and rows of shining
black heads. Their smihng faces and bright eyes were decidedly at-
tractive, but they all looked alike to me and I wondered rather hope-
lessly if I could ever get into really personal touch with any of them.
It did not take long acquaintance however to convince me of their
decidedly individual characteristics, and I soon knew all of my high
school girls by name. I do not believe I have accompHshed much
these first three months either in the teaching line or in any other
way, further than to feel my way and get my bearings. The teaching
standards, or rather the standards of school work, are so different from
those at home that it takes some time for mere adjustment. Miss
Powers had done splendid work in the English-speaking section of
the Christian Endeavor society, which includes the high school girls,
the upper secondary and some of the training school girls. She
aroused nearly all of the girls, I think, to a sense of their need of a
deeper personal religious life, as well as to a sense of obligation to
communicate this life to others. The girls had been stirred by Mr.
Eddy's meetings and the other meetings of the Evangelistic Cam-
paign and had a very sincere desire to help in the "follow up" work.
Miss Powers had taken groups of the high school girls with her
to Arappalayam, a village about a mile from our Compound, for street
preaching and work with the village women. Miss Wilcox and I
went with them to the village once or twice after we came, but several
men of the village seemed determined to make trouble for the girls
and stirred up such a general feeling of hostility toward them that it
seemed best to discontinue that sort of work. Miss Swift addressed
the C. E. society at their last meeting before vacation on their part
igie] When We Reached Madura 393
of the evangelistic work, and many of the girls agreed to teach certain
Bible lessons and lyrics, arranged in the form of a series, to individual
Hindu or Christian women in their own villages during vacation.
I am hoping that when school reopens we can plan things so that
the girls can do some work among the children living around the Com-
pound and also that they can do a good deal of visiting with some of
the older teachers among the women of the North Gate congregation
which holds its services in Capron Hall. Many of these women are
no older than many of our girls. They do coohe work and work in
the mills and probably most of them do not read. Their ideas of
Christianity cannot be anything but hazy. I think perhaps the girls
can do something in teaching the younger ones to read their Testa-
ments and in telling Bible stories to the older ones. It is difficult
for a newxomer, I think, to realize how different the background of
these girls' lives is from our own. The girls certainly do not lack
in a sense of fun, but they do lack initiative in planning and carrying
out wholesome amusements and occupations for themselves.
Miss Wilcox writes : —
Miss Chase and I made our first acquaintance with our girls while
helping them to trim the great Christmas tree which stood in the
middle of the large Assembly Hall. Our Christmas exercises came
in the afternoon. I shall never forget those exercises. Little Christ-
mas songs that as children we had known at home were unexpected
when they came from the lips of these strange httle children. One
who has witnessed a scene like that can never forget the expectant
eyes and eager faces of those httle ones in the face of a few very
simple little gifts which kind people at home made it possible for
them to have. My first Christmas in India will always be in my
memory. Only one who comes newly to the East at Christmas time
can ever fully realize what this time meant to us. The lowly Indian
homes, the cow and the goats living in close proximity to the people,
the Eastern atmosphere, the shepherds grazing their sheep on the
brown hillsides — put a meaning into that Christmas story of ours that
time can never take away. It was a beautiful and long to be remem-
bered day even if we were to omit the elephant ride to which we were
treated in the afternoon.
394 Life and Light [September
Our first days were just brimful of new experiences. In the first
place we had our first ride in a bullock bandy. I am not a good
sailor and I confess I could easily have dreamed that I was once more
tossing on the briny deep before the twelve miles were accompHshed.
Then came the village people to pay their respects at the missionary
bungalow. They came by the hundreds, they came with bands,
they sang songs, they talked, they stayed long or short, but always
they brought yellow wreaths with which to decorate us and limes to
wish us prosperity and health. After our return from Aruppukottai
our Christmas holidays were over and we began teaching. This was
very different from any school days I. had ever known in America,
but I certainly did not enjoy it any less. From those days until
the Kodaikanal season, life gets busier and busier. Real teaching
is only a part of the story. Two hours every day I studied Tamil.
I do like Tamil so much. I long to be able to talk to these people in
their own language. I am happier than the day is long, and I some-
times wonder if any other people in the homeland are missing one of
the richest, happiest lives that any occupation or any place in the world
has to offer.
Hospital Asks for Extra Gifts
An appeal for aid for the sick everywhere at this world crisis touches
American hearts, and we do not hesitate to make known the needs of
our Hospital for Women in Madura, India, which is sadly embar-
rassed by the difficulty of securing supplies under war conditions.
Ordinary financial resources have proved utterly inadequate this
year. Miss Heath, missionary nurse, writes that "drugs cost more
than twice what we expected and in some cases we have to pay more
for duty than for the drug itself." She goes on to say that the cash
comes in driblets — two rupees here for sewing up a girl's ear, five
rupees there for an outcall from Dr. Parker, eight annas perhaps as
a thank-offering from a grateful patient. "Some mornings when
an urgent call comes for money we have had to say, 'Come again
in the evening,' when we may have acquired enough fees to meet it.
For over two months we have been going on like this and the strain
is great."
Board of the Pacific
President, Mrs. R. B. Cherington Editor, Mrs. F. R. Wagner
Headquarters, 417 Market Street, San Francisco
Call to the Enlisted!
P acific Coast Branches
R ecruit in San Francisco.
E ncamp at First Congregational Church,
P ost and Mason's Corner !
A nnual Meeting of the W. B. M. P.
Rally September 6, 1916!
E very Woman Wanted !
The Oregon Rally
By Jennie L. Barbour
There was a time when the women of Oregon held their yearly mis-
sionary meeting in conjunction with the annual Conference of the
churches, being allotted a short time during one of the sessions of that
body. But like the roses of Portland and the hospitality of its women,
their missionary zeal could not be repressed by limited confines and
they determined to hold a separate missionary rally each year to
which an entire day should be devoted. With unflagging enthusiasm
every June the members of the home and foreign missionary societies
of Oregon have come together in the interest of their cause, and this
year marked the twenty-first anniversary of their organization.
Several months ago a cordial invitation was sent to the directors of
the Woman's Board of Missions for the Pacific to hold their semi-
annual meeting with the Oregon Rally in Portland. The invitation
was heartily welcomed and gladly accepted by the Board; and to
the privileged delegates who were sent to represent the W. B. M. P.
it proved an open sesame to the hearts and homes of the women of
Oregon who generously shared time and interest on the program and
continued their thoughtful attentions after the meetings in disclosing
the wonders and beauties of the state to their enthusiastic and admir-
ing California guests.
Two days were devoted to the meetings. On Tuesday, the 27th,
(395)
396 Life and Light [September
the regular annual meetings of the Oregon Branch of the W. B. M. P.
and the Oregon Woman's Home Missionary Union were held. The
following day was devoted to the semi-annual meeting of the
W. B. M. P., Mrs. F. F. Barbour, the Recording Secretary of the
Board presiding. After the usual reports, Mrs. Theodore S. Holway
of Samakov, a returned missionary, gave an address full of thrilling
interest on the work in Bulgaria, beginning with a historical sketch
of the Bulgarians, tracing their fortunes through a thousand years of
Christianity, and the checkered career of political strife and war
which has beset this high-spirited, patriotic little nation, also giving
richly of her interesting experiences in her years of work among them.
A life sketch of Miss Bertha Allen, of Pasadena, Calif., who has
accepted a call to the missionary field as superintendent of kinder-
garten work in Foochow, China, and a statement of her belief, was
read by Mrs. W. K. Royal.
Miss Allen's statement is so clear, so sweet, and shows such a beau-
tiful spirit, we wish it might be printed in full. This was followed
by an Intercessory Service led by Mrs. Luther R. Dyott, when earnest
prayers went up for this young girl, who has offered her life on the
foreign field, and sails in September to be at the head of the Foochow
Union Kindergarten.
A most interesting letter was read from Miss L. I. Mead by Miss
Brewer. It told the story of her work among the girls, illustrating
strongly the power of prayer. The noon hour was most happily
spent, and a delightful luncheon served by the ladies of the Sunnyside
church. About one hundred and twenty-five sat down to the tables,
after which many greetings were exchanged, and it was with great
pride we discovered there were five ladies from Beaverton. Good
for Beaverton — there must be real missionary spirit there !
THANK-OrrERINGS
This subject was presented by Miss Henrietta Brewer, and a dis-
cussion followed. The Board of the Pacific hopes to have this matter
taken up seriously by all its Branches, and the presentation at this
meeting was to find out how the Oregon Branch felt about it. By
Miss Brewer's weU-chosen and convincing words, and the remarks
which followed, it was evident that many present felt it was a personal
i9i6] The Oregon Rally 397
matter, and that the Branch did not have to vote in regard to it.
WiUing and grateful hearts believed in, and desired to give thank-
offerings. One lady started her thank-offering box that very
afternoon, because of what she had heard and enjoyed at the semi-
annual meeting !
A beautiful Httle pageant was given in national costume, cleverly
illustrating the great work being done by the missionaries, and the
gratitude and appreciation of those benefited by their unselfish ser-
vice. Japan was represented by Miss Adele Dyott, China by Miss
Murdock, India by Miss Lillian Sabin, a Turkish mother by Mrs.
Cressman, and an Armenian mother by Mrs. W. C. Day of California.
This pageant was written by Miss Brewer, who has recently visited
all these Missions. After hearing these grateful words from our
foreign friends, it was pleasant to hear the Treasurer, Mrs. W. W.
Ferrier, give the figures which make all this work possible. Surely
every one who listened, must have wished to give more this year if
possible. A dollar seems to go so far and do so much in foreign lands.
Our Rosary
Sometimes figures weary people ; so to make her reports more con-
crete, Mrs. Ferrier held up a beautiful Rosary, which she had made.
The first four beads were real Turkish ones, the gift of Mr. Fred
Goodsell. They represented our four missionaries in Turkey- — Miss
Allen, Miss JiUson, Miss Parsons and Miss Rice, the first three being
for Brousa, because that was the first work the Board of the Pacific
undertook.
The Doshisha was prominent as a large white carved ivory bead.
For our new missionary in Japan, a young lady just learning the
language, was a clear amber bead, indicative of clear-eyed, whole-
souled Madehne Waterhouse.
A real Indian bead from the famous Scudder family spoke for
India, and on either side of that were small bright green beads, rep-
resenting the twin babies of Dr. Rose Beals of Wai. What sermons
those babies have preached, as Dr. Beals has allowed the Indian
mothers to watch her bathe them ! The women gaze in astonishment
at the white bath-tub, the clean, fresh towels, the pure soap and the
powder, all of which show what love does for babies in Christian homes.
398 Life and Light [September
A large gold bead shone out as the beautiful new Elizabeth Memo-
rial Hospital at Lintsing, China, over which our beloved Dr. Tallmon-
Sargent presides. Mrs. Ferrier called it the golden gift of daughters
here in America in memory of their beloved mother. And last came
a blue bead for dear Bertha Allen, who is true blue, and will soon be
our representative in Foochow.
Since womenkind have ever loved beads, this beautiful Rosary
caught the eye and ear of every listener. We wish every woman in
our western missionary societies had a similar Rosary to hang in her
own room, and that every morning, as she sends her song of praise to
her Heavenly Father for daily blessings, a prayer might go up for
these splendid women doing our work so far away.
The Message from Lintsing
Mrs. V. C. Eastman gave the missionary address of the afternoon.
She had just arrived with her family from Lintsing, for their first
furlough. She told of the home life of the missionary's wife, of the
calls at any hour from Chinese women, sometimes ten or twenty at
a time, of the questions they ask, and their interest in everything,
up-stairs and down. Often patience must become a virtue, but the
untimely interruptions are forgotten when during the call, the psycho-
logical moment comes for the missionary to tell why she is in China,
and then seeds are sown that sometime will surely bring a harvest.
The meeting was brought to a close by Rev. W. C. Day of Cali-
fornia, and the delegates of the Board are full of gratitude for the
gracious Oregon hospitality.
Summer Schools on the Pacific Coast
Mount Hermon Federate School of Missions
By Mary E. Bamford
Fine meetings were those of the Mount Hermon Federate School
of Missions, held at beautiful Mount Hermon, Santa Cruz mountains,
California, July 17-22. The two text-books used were World
Missions and World Peace, and Old Spain in New America.
The latter was rendered extremely interesting by the fact that our
teacher, Mrs. Hallie Linn Hill of New York City, had recently made
i9i6] Summer Schools on the Pacific Coast 399
a trip to Peru, Bolivia, Cuba, and Porto Rico, besides attending the
Latin Congress at Panama. An interdenominational rally was held
on Wednesday afternoon, with messages given by missionaries and
officers of different denominations — one from Siam, two from Africa,
one representing the American Bible Society in China, one a worker
among the Mexicans of Los Angeles, etc. Mrs. N. E. Gallaway of
the Christian Board, chairman of the interdenominational com-
mittee, presided at the daily sessions of the School. Miss Mabel
Be Vier, resident teacher at the Methodist Deaconess Training
School in San Francisco conducted the Young People's hour, and also
had on several days a Children's Hour in which she told stories to
the children. Over 170 registered in the School of Missions besides
a great many who attended especially in the evenings to see the
stereopticon views. A magnificent lectiu-e with wonderful views
was given on Thursday evening by Mrs. Hallie Linn Hill, the views
being on places in her South American and Cuban trip. Some of
the slides were pictures not often seen, being made from photographs
especially taken for Mrs. Hill on the trip. Mrs. Hill says that the
life of an Indian in Bolivia and Peru is nothing. In one large gold
mine between Peru and Bolivia eighteen Indians were killed by the
overseer in three months. The only way that such murders are known
to the mine-overseer is that the Indians do not appear at the next
pay-day. Similar cruelty is shown in bringing Indians from great
heights, 12,000 feet perhaps, to the sea-level and drilling them for
the Peruvian army. Such Indians often die of hemorrhage or of
tuberculosis, the pressure of the atmosphere being such a change.
But the Peruvian army must be recruited, and Peruvian gentle-
men will not fight. Indian boys and girls are virtually slaves.
At Asilomar
By Elizabeth S. Benton
The Third Missionary Education Movement Conference at Asilo-
mar, Calif., marked a high standard of achievement, in the number
of registrations, the quality of the faculty and the enthusiasm and
consecration of the students.
Heaven blessed us with fine weather, and the blue of the great
400 Life and Light [September
Pacific Ocean, the whiteness of the sand dunes relieved by the dark
green of pines, combined with the spiritual charm of the place dedi-
cated to high ideals, made an atmosphere most wonderfully impressive.
Congregationahsts had the second largest delegation and were well
represented on the program. Dr. and Mrs. Tracy of Marsovan
brought us the benediction of their presence and message; the
Conference, as one great family, sat at their feet and worshiped.
Rev. A. C. Wright of Chihuahua brought late news from Mexico,
and Dr. H. H. Kelsey, American Board Secretary for the Pacific
Coast, preached the Sunday morning sermon and led study classes
in Fred B. Fisher's book, Hoiv to Win. Young Luther Guhck,
pursuing his graduate studies at Columbia University, came west
to teach classes at Asilomar and Seabeck, Wash., using his father's
book, America and the Orient, soon to be published.
The text-books studied dealt largely with the South American need
and the opportunity for Christian work, also Latin America and the
Immigration question; the Normal classes being conducted by Rev.
Morris W. Ehnes of the M. E. M., New York City, and Mrs. Paul
Raymond of San Francisco.
The best methods of introducing missions into the graded instruc-
tion of the Sunday school were discussed in classes led by trained
workers.
Open Parliaments at ii o'clock proved very helpful, bringing forth
many valuable suggestions, while the afternoons found many activi-
ties in progress, tennis, baseball, basket ball, surf bathing and motor
trips to Del Monte and Carmel and other points of interest.
The Story Hour around the great fireplace at seven o'clock each
evening, were occasions especially noteworthy. Here the missionaries
gave us glimpses into their life work on the foreign field and at home,
it being our good fortune to have twenty of these rare folk with us
all the ten days of the Conference. At the close all would stand
facing the west, singing an evening hymn, while through the great
windows could be seen the sun slowly dropping into the sea.
At the closing meeting on Sunday night, when six young people
stood up and told of their determination to dedicate their lives to
service on the foreign field, it seemed but a natural result of those
wonderful days of spiritual uplift and fellowship in the Gospel.
Our Field Correspondents
Rev, Lyndon S. Crawford writes from Trebizond, Russia :—
In less than ten months from those dark days (June 26-July 4,
1915) when we saw 6,000 Armenians driven forth from our city, we
saw another pathetic sight. This time it was the Turks fleeing!
Between forty and fifty thousand were leaving our city and leaving
their homes and their shops and their goods behind them. Hardly
more than 10,000 Armenians were expelled last June from the villages
of this province. An awful number we thought then and we shall
never cease to mourn for them all! But those numbers multiplied
over and over again would hardly count the Turkish refugees from
near and distant villages and towns. The road over the bluff and
winding along the seashore for miles, as we see it from our home, was
black with frightened people hurrying along, the women old and
young with their kneading troughs, beds and babies bound to their
backs; other little barefooted tots were running along beside them.
Older boys and girls were driving sheep or pulling along the unwilling
weary cattle and horses. Some of these of the older ones died in our
city, more of them and of the little ones must have died further on
their way. So little provision could they take for the way, that a
small proportion will ever reach the coveted lands vacated by Ar-
menians to the west and southwest from here.
They who started last were the most fortunate. It is just one
month ago to-day that the Russian army marched into, and with no
sign of opposition, took possession of our city and established a reign
of peace in our midst.
Imagine the relief of those poor Turkish refugees at the time, at
the kind treatment they received. The Russian officials, as they
overtook them, bade them return in peace, without fear, to reoccupy
their homes and their fields and their filbert groves.
Then there was another company, who scattered flowers under the
feet of the incoming conquerors. They were Armenian boys and girls
who had been hidden all those months by kind-hearted Greeks and
other friends, who at great danger to themselves had risked the wrath
of the former rulers and saved these innocent children alive.
(401)
402 Life and Light [September
The next day, and the following days, Armenians began to come in
from the further villages and from the woods and the caves and
dens of the mountains, men, women and children, over five hundred
in all, to whom God had sent modern "Obadiahs," in the shape of
some kind-hearted Turks and some Greek men, but mostly Greek
women, who during the storms of the winter had secretly come to
the city to get help and then to bake and carry bread to the hiding
places in the woods, week by week for all these ten months. No!
not for all the ten months have they come. Many of these villagers
had shared their own winter stores with the Armenians and did not
seek from others until their own stock was exhausted.
Easter Sunday in our church and in the other churches of the city
was made glad by the presence of those who had come in during the
week. The Easter story was read in Russian and in the various
tongues which have been familiar in our city hitherto.
Mrs. Amy Bridgman Cowles writes from Umzumbe, South Africa : —
The Umzumbe school is such a bright, happy, prosperous one!
It is a splendid nucleus for a big splendid school. Miss Tebbatt
by her own overflowing and abounding good nature has imparted to
the school that same good nature. It is a pleasure to work with
girls who are so happy and willing. If only we can build the school
up spiritually, it seems to me our school will be almost ideal, and
it means a lot to this whole community to have such a school here.
The girls and I had such a lovely Christian Endeavor meeting to-
gether last evening. The girls are dear. To-day the whole school
has gone down to the sea for a two days' holiday. How you would
have enjoyed seeing the whole troop start off this morning for their
twelve-mile walk, to the sea. They were all laden, some with kero-
sene tins of cooked hominy on their heads ; others had sacks of oranges.
Then there were 300 ears of boiled corn and loaves of bread and tea
and bits of pork, — a grand feast, all easily poised on those heads.
There were bundles of blankets too, for they will all sleep on the beach
to-night with the sand for beds. Miss Tebbatt and the native teach-
ers are with the girls, so it will be all right and heaps of fun.
It is all intensely interesting and every day is full. Moreover we
have had thirteen European visitors here since we came four months
i9i6] Our Field Correspondents 403
ago, besides various English callers, so we are not as isolated as we
used to be here in my father's day.
We have organized our station women into a "Mother-craft
League" and they are holding four prayer meetings in various parts
of the station instead of one as formerly. Then the people are
responding to our appeal to them to fix up this dilapidated church
in preparation especially for the native annual meeting which comes
here July 12th. The people are pledging two sacks of corn to a fam-
ily (4 bushels to a sack almost). A trader will buy this corn for'
$1.25 a sack, — a gift of $2.50 from each family, and there are eighty
families. It really means a great deal for the people to do this. They
are poor, impoverished, since tick fever carried off their cattle.
Miss Bertha P. Reed writes from Peking: —
Miss Paxson, of the Y. W. C. A., has been here holding a series of
meetings, and several days of her time were given to the girls of the
college and academy. The meetings there were attended by the
non -Christian girls from the city who come as day pupils, as well as
by those who live in the school, and the teachers hoped for help es-
pecially among the former. The talks each day were strong and
tender, and the appeals had the searching quality that Miss Paxson
is so able to give them. The girls were deeply impressed and the
feeling was noticeably more earnest from day to day.
By the end of the meetings, sixteen of these outside girls had risen
to take a stand for Christ. One of them had, during this time,
changed her attitude from one of bitter opposition to glad and peace-
ful surrender, and all of them were truly filled with joy in the new
faith and love. Some of them must meet real persecution in their
homes, but still they are happy in their choice.
After this meetings were held for the younger girls in the interme-
diate department of the day school. A large part of these girls are
from outside families. It was beautiful and wonderful to see how
they responded to the clear, simple, earnest talks, and to watch them
as they stood to say that they also wanted to follow Christ. Many
were questioned carefully to see if they understood what they were
doing, and their answers were very clear. Altogether fifty-five of
these rose to take a definite stand for Christ. Many of them must
404 Life and Light [September
also meet opposition, while others will be allowed to do as they please,
but all were strong in their resolution. Since then they have kept up
their Bible classes and prayer meetings and are really trying to carry
out this new purpose in their lives. It is a great joy to see their
earnestness, knowing its promise for all their lives and knowing too
what new teaching it is carrying into their homes.
Miss Paxson has had much experience this past year in leading such
meetings in girls' schools throughout China, very many of them in
government schools. Many students have been led to Bible study
and to confession of Christ. In many places there have been remark-
able experiences, as the workers have seen the great change made in
the pupils, and the wonderful strength of purpose as those new dis-
ciples openly stood for Christ in face of strong opposition in their
homes. These students' meetings have truly been greatly blessed
of God and we are very thankful that we could have a share of the
help and blessing in our schools in Peking.
The Wider View
The following items are chiefly colled from the " Missionary Review of the
World."
The twenty-fifth graduation ceremony of North Japan College was
marked by the presence of government ofi&cials who hold the school
in high esteem. The new school year opens with 530 students.
The death of President Yuan Shih Kai, with rumors of poison,
suicide and nervous breakdown, has removed one of the strong men
of China, but has taken a cause of discord out of Chinese politics.
His successor, President Li, is not a professing Christian, but he is
very friendly toward Christianity and has given generously to the
support of the Y. M. C. A. and other Christian enterprises. He
promises to enforce the laws of the Republic, guaranteeing liberty
and justice to all.
The changes in China since the days of the Boxer riots are in
nothing more conspicuous than in the personnel of the Chinese army.
i9i6] The Wider View 405
Many of the soldiers are Christians, due to the influence of the
Chinese Y. M. C. A.
Robert Speer says, "The processes of national education to which
Japan whole-heartedly committed herself a generation and more
ago have wrought upon the nation with penetrating far-extended in-
fluence.
"They have made a nation of readers. At the ricksha stands the
coolies read together while they wait. Messenger boys have their
books in their pockets to read as they push their carts along the
roads. It is claimed that more books are published and sold in
Japan now each year than in Germany. The irresponsible yellow
press finds in all this mass of common men who are now able to read
a field where fire can run as over a prairie. Everywhere through
Japanese life great changes are taking place. There is a steady gain
of Christianity and an altered attitude of the nation toward it.
Christianity can secure a hearing anywhere, in churches or schools or
public halls, or even in Buddhist monasteries."
Dr. Zwemer thinks that "what we need to-day in missions is
less comparative religion and more positive religion. It is possible
to dwell upon the tolerable things in Hinduism and the noble things
in Islam, even as one sifts out grains of gold from tons of earth, to the
exclusion of the social evils, the spiritual darkness and the spiritual
death which dominate these systems. Men have opinions instead of
convictions; they join Erasmus in his study rather than Luther
nailing his theses to the door of the cathedral."
As a result of the meetings conducted through China in 1914 over
20,000 students from non-Christian schools and colleges expressed
their willingness to become "investigators" of Christianity. Twelve
thousand have been enrolled in Bible classes. A large proportion of
those who promised ' ' to investigate Christianity with open mind and
honest heart" have since joined the Bible classes. Bible training
schools have been held in various sections of the country. The secret
of the rapid growth and assimilation by the churches of the new
movement is due largely to the emphasis which has been placed on
the study of the Bible.
406 Life and Light [September
From our missionary, Mrs. Chauncey Goodrich of China, we have the fol-
lowing :
"The recent big opium burning in Peking was the second of its
kind. The authorities prepared a large furnace or grate in the open
place west of the Temple of Heaven and east of the Temple of Agri-
culture, where the opium, pipes and other accessories were burned.
The authorities extended a cordial invitation to all interested to
attend this burning. They printed a list of the cases which had come
before the court during the past few months. The amount of opium
burned was over 6,000 ounces, together with pipes and other things.
It will be remembered that the first great burning was held here last
November, when over 10,000 ounces of opium were consumed. Some
two hundred cases of opium offenses have been before the court since
that time and the Peking authorities are taking vigorous measures to
stamp out this vice.
''It gave me pleasure to be among the speakers on this memorable
occasion."
The Church is not only sending the Gospel to foreigners, but the
Lord is sending foreigners to the Gospel. There are nearly 35,000,000
people of foreign birth and native-born children of foreign and mixed
parentage in America.
John R. Mott is abroad inspecting the vast work which the Y. M.
C. A. is conducting for the millions of men under arms and in prison
camps.
In the munition centers the Y. M. C. A. has erected cheery
tents, which serve as canteens, test-rooms, Gospel centers, and in some
cases has included sleeping accommodations,
"But if Christ-force finds itself played out in Europe, is there no
place on earth to form the scene of its future workings? Yes, there
is, for Jesus Christ has come to India, and as we celebrate the birth
of Christ with the distant spectacle of a Europe "red in tooth and
claw' lowering before our eyes, a sense of ownness is borne in upon
our soul at the contemplation of Jesus, the Son of God. We feel
to-day as never we felt before that He has come to stay with us."
— Editorial in native Indian paper
igie] The Wider View 407
In European and Siberian Russia, chiefly the latter, there are
to-day concentrated in scores of prison camps over one million Teu-
tonic soldiers. The International Committee of Young Men's Chris-
tian Associations have been granted the unique privilege of entering
all of these camps and of organizing practical Christian work on their
behalf.
Everywhere in the Holy Land one sees motor cars, aeroplanes,
machine guns, buffaloes and oxen-drawn cars, laden with munitions,
going through the lanes and along the fields once trodden by the
apostles and the patriarchs, while the construction of military roads
through the desert, over the mountains of Judea, in the outskirts
of Jericho does not cease by night or day. Turkish troops drill daily
on the Hill of Golgotha and the Mount of Olives.
Russian Prisoners.
At present there are in Germany and Austria about two and a half
millions of Russian prisoners of war. In Russia these men could
not be reached by the messengers of the gospel, but now men of many
races and tribes have been wonderfully brought together from all
parts of Russia and are ready for the message.
What a twentieth century Pentecost may be in store for the Chris-
tian Church, if these hordes of prisoners of war can be reached.
They are unusually open to approach, for they are away from their
homes with scarcely anything to do, with little, if any, Hterature,
deprived of alcoholic beverages and filled with longings for something
better than they know. Surely no better mission field could be
imagined than the hearts of these millions of Russian prisoners of
war. Such an opportunity may never occur again. It is a great
challenge to the Christian Church.
— The Missionary Review.
About one third the population of North America is Christian. To
make it wholly Christian each one should reach and gain two others.
The average foreign missionary has about 70,000 people to reach.
What a contrast! It should be a great stimulus to our endeavors
to increase the force on the foieign field. — Home Department.
408 Life and Light [September
A Worth While Visit
An example of what Christianity is doing was recently brought
to the attention of the better class of people in a distant village in
the Mogalai in the following way: Some men wanted to go to Sholapur
for medical treatment, but as they were not acquainted there, they
offered to pay the expenses of the Christian preacher if he would
accompany them. They had to stay in Sholapur several days for
treatment, and the preacher improved the opportunity to take them
to see the Christian institutions. They were interested in the schools,
workshops, kindergarten, church, etc. They observed and remarked
on the neat and orderly appearance everywhere. They did not find
the grounds and buildings littered with pieces of waste paper, rags
and cast-off things. The houses of the Christians they found tidy
and ornamented with pictures, and family life seemed cheerful. In the
boarding schools they saw the orderly and systematic way things
were done. The way meals were prepared and served was a revela-
tion to them. They said, "In our house there are fifteen persons,
and each one comes and eats when he is hungry, and the work of
cooking is going on all the time, and the house is in disorder the whole
day long. But here are eighty girls who sit down all at once, eat,
have their dishes cleaned and put away in neat order inside of an
hour, and they are off to school. A wonderful thing." They saw
and recognized a woman who came from a low caste in their own
village, who was teaching in one of the schools, and were surprised.
When they saw that she was teaching girls from Hindu families of
castes much higher than she originally came from they were still
more surprised. The quiet, orderly service in church and the music
appealed to them.
They went home and reported what they had seen. They said:
"We have not regarded Christians as worthy of very much attention,
but you go to Sholapur and see." The report spread in that and in
surrounding villages. The head man and a company of town people
in "another village have offered to pay the railway fare of the preacher
if he will take them to Sholapur to see what the Christians are doing.
"Ye are our epistle, known and read of all men." — Marathi Mission
Report (Sholapur Station).
Prayer
at Noontide
Encircling
the Earth
AROUND THE COUNCIL TABLE WITH OUR PRESIDENT
The Art of Program-Making
{Concluded)
[Special session of the Program Committee, in preparation for an annual
Branch meeting. First session in the July-August number.]
Mrs. B. (chairman). We are fortunate indeed to have so beautiful
a day for our final Program Committee meeting and to have all five
members present. Doubtless each is ready to report upon her allotted
feature. Logically I suppose we should hear first from Mrs. C. who
was to outhne a program with special reference to a "hot sauce" on
the reports. Mrs. C?
Mrs. C. {with some confusion, while all smilingly await her re-
sponse). The more I thought about an outhne the more I inclined
to gather everything around a central topic. This is my fijrst attempt,
you know, and so to try out the result I submitted it to several dif-
ferent sorts of people, just to see if a program on these lines would
attract them. With their approval I venture —
Miss A. {an old worker delighted with her friend's originality).
Now, Jane, you may as weU tell what they said as you told it to me.
I will, myself!
There was Miss Belle Sturdeyvant, you all know her, secretary now
of the Woman's Club. Goodness knows we've asked her enough
times to come to our Branch meetings. She lifted a critical eye-brow,
made one or two dashes with her pen, and then condescended, "Excel-
lent! ReaUy quite drawing! I'd rather like to see how it comes out."
You know Amanda Bliss is so tied up to housework and "brother"
and plants that she has no use for public meetings except church.
But this idea happened to be in her line, so to speak, and I guess she'll
go over to Blanktown with us if we do carry it out.
Then it was Gladys Porter, wasn't it, Jane, who promised you she
(■109)
410 Life and Light [September
would distribute some such programs among the girls and get a bunch
to go? Well, excuse me for interrupting. Go on.
Mrs. C. (reads outline as follows and explains her thought).
GENERAL TOPIC*
A Perennial Task in Fresh Bloom
Our Branch Garden at Home
Our Branch Garden Afar
Garden Growth by Figures
Forget-Me-Nots and Marigolds
An Exponent of Plant Food
Adjournment at 11.45, followed by three group conferences, to be held
half an hour, one for treasurers, the second for Junior workers, the third
for other officers. During this period the girls who have come as guests
are taken for an automobile drive, it being announced on the printed
program, as are the conferences.
Afternoon Session
An Honored Guest in Our Garden Paths,
Miss , Secretary W. B. M.
Study for the Home Gardeners,
Mrs. , using World Missions and World 'Peace
Girls' Chorus
A Victorious Struggle with Weeds in an African Flower Bed
(if <we should hawe the missionary from Africa. Or she might be
from China)
Mrs. C. continues: Let me explain this a little. Two large charts
should be prepared beforehand with care and skill and should be well
hung, the one to show an old-fashioned garden, in which each auxil-
iary is represented by a cultivated flower-bed; each unorganized
church in the Branch area by a bed full of weeds, neglected. All
are well marked to make clear our field at home. The second chart
should similarly represent the mission stations where we have pledged
work, the beds being laid out with regard to geographical locations.
Dashes of color can be made to give the charts a suggestive effect.
*Only one of a score of timely topics about which a program could gather its
various features.
i9i6] The Art of Program-Making 411
The Home Secretary will use the former of these as she makes clear
where our garden plots are, telling features of the year's work, etc.,
under the first topic, Our Branch Garden at Home. The Foreign
Secretary will use the second chart with the next topic.
Of course you see where the treasurer comes in.
The little children, the girls, the young women are our Forget-Me-
• Nots and Marigolds, and the Junior Secretary can do as she will with
the idea.
By the Exponent I mean the woman who will take samples of our
good leaflets, books, all helps for seniors and juniors, and wall make
them live before us with a quick resume of this, a quotation from
that, a description of the other thing, finally calling attention to the
table (in a conspicuous and convenient place with room around its
three sides for even the stout woman to walk!) where all this plant-
food may be found at the noon-hour and after four o'clock for a while.
The conference suggestion and the four parts of the afternoon
session need no explanation. I have purposely omitted any plans
for the devotional part of the meeting, because I think Mrs. B. can
so much better arrange it.
Miss E. has conferred with me about music to fit my plan, and she
can report as to that.
{Mrs. B. and all the others express approval of the plan as pre-
sented, ask some questions, discuss details and Miss E. is called upon.)
Miss E. Do you not think it would be sweet for Alpha Barker
to play McDowell's Wild Rose, without announcement, right after
the talk about Forget-Me-Nots and Marigolds? The girls all love
that and Alpha does it wonderfully on her violin.
Then could we not select a simple favorite for a chorus by the girls
and give it out in each church for a few girls to review and be ready
to sing in the afternoon? Perhaps it would help us to get two or
three girls from each of those churches where we never have secured
one to come to a Branch meeting. I would have a simple, tender
hymn, for instance: "We've a Story to Tell to the Nations," Mission-
ary Hymnal, ipsige g6. It would be effective if the. different verses
were given as solo or duet, all joining in the chorus.
Miss D. {a faithful traditionalist). We've always had an address
of welcome and a collection. Indeed it seems to me these flower-
beds, lovely as they are, are scanty in some of the essentials.
412 Life and Light [September
Mrs. C. I didn't even try to give those details — ^just the main
outline. But I did make it brief so that the business matters would
have room.
Miss A. The only part I crave, friends, in a Branch meeting
program is the Address of Welcome — so named. I crave it so as
to pour out my soul's warm hospitality in three sentences, one for
Gladness; one for Town Attractions (a short one); one for Hope!
(laughter) .
Mrs. B. As to the prayer service we always need in some form
at our meetings, a thought came to me from the Ocean Park confer-
ence where I took my daughter last summer. It is this. At the close
of the session, preferably in the afternoon, when all hearts are warmed
and eager, let some one, I should say our President, as a continuous
part of her management of the meeting, call for heads to be bowed
in silent prayer. In the hush, she names, one by one, with shght
pauses, objects of prayer, suggested by the day, then calls for sentence
petitions by many, she closing the meeting with her own.
Of course I want our President to manage this as she prefers, but
certainly that was an impressive service as we had it each morning in
the conference.
Miss A. and Miss D. having reported upon the missionary and the
text-book leader, the chairman closed the program meeting with her
favorite kind of ensemble prayer service. M. l. d.
Forty-ninth Annual Meeting of the Woman's Board of Missions
The annual meeting of the Women's Board of Missions will be
held, by invitation of the Hampshire County Branch, with the two
Congregational churches of Northampton, Mass., November 8-10,
1916. The places where the different sessions will be held wiU be
announced later. All regularly accredited delegates from Branches
at a distance and all women missionaries of the American Board and
the Woman's Board will be entitled to entertainment, from Tuesday
night until Friday noon. Applications should be sent before Octo-
ber I to Mrs. T. J. Hammond, 222 Ehn Street, Northampton, Mass.
{not Miss Clara P. Bodman as stated in the July-August Lipe and
Light.) Mrs. Hammond will also be glad to advise those who desire
to provide entertainment for themselves as to hotels and boarding
houses. There will be no reduction of railroad fares.
Junior Department
Our New Sunday-school Campaign — Ten Questions
Answered
1. Who is Behind It ? The Congregational foreign missionary
agents — that is, the American Board and the Woman's Boards for
the East, Interior and Pacific — are responsible for its inception.
Every Branch and auxiliary ofi&cer and member must be "behind"
it, with intelligent effort to make it effective locally, if the campaign
is to succeed.
2. What is Its Object? To challenge Congregational Sunday
schools to more active interest in and loyal support of the whole
great Congregational program for "Kingdom Building" throughout
the world; to fire the imaginations of our boys and girls with the
meaning of foreign missionary work so that not only the Sunday
school of to-day but also the church of to-morrow shall be awake to
its obligation and its opportunity. The plans propose to correlate
all the efforts made in this general direction by Boards and individu-
als so that by unity they may gain in force and results.
3. When was It Started ? It was conceived during the Council
meetings in New Haven last October. The details now presented
are the fruit of office work in months since. It should start in the
churches not later than September ist.
4. At what Definite Points do the American Board and our
Woman's Board in the East change their Previous Policy toward
the Sunday Schools in entering upon this Campaign?
A. The W. B. M. no longer applies itself either educationally
or in its appeal for gifts to the primary and junior depart-
ments, and the A. B. C. F. M. to the older grades. This
division line is wiped out. Both Boards are now interested
in and responsible for missionary training for every grade
from the babies to the grandfathers.
B. The two Boards no longer send out separate circulars and
prepare separate educational material. One circular and
one set of material (bearing the names of both Boards)
contain a unified and comprehensive scheme of missionary
(413)
414 Life and Light [September
education for the entire school. Both Boards use this
circular and recommend this set of material.
C. Instead of two appeals for gifts — one sent by the W. B. M.
to the lower departments and one by the A. B. C. F. M. to
the upper — there is one appeal only, made to the entire
school as a unit, and in the name of foreign missions rather
than of either Board. The request is made that when this
gift is sent in it be divided equally between the general and
the women's work, one half being sent to the American Board
treasury and one half to the W. B. M. treasury (through the
Branch if possible). This half-and-half division is a radical
change.
5. What Advantages will the Local W. B. M. Worker find in this?
A. She will have better educational material to use, or to re-
commend for some one else's use.
B. As representing both Boards and the entire range of Con-
gregational foreign missionary interests, she will more
easily get the ear and the active co-operation of her pastor;
because she will be recommending a unified educational
scheme, taking into account the entire school and worked
out from the point oj view oj the school rather than oj the Boards,
she will more easily get the attention of the efficient super-
intendent.
C. She will have the sense of support and the thrill of enthusi-
asm which come from being a part of a nation-wide cam-
paign for a single great objective.
6. What is the Educational Plan for this First Year of the New
Campaign? It aims to concentrate the attention of schools
upon the thought of "building the Kingdom of Christ" throughout
the world; to do this by use of certain graded material either in
brief programs from department platforms or for supplementary study
ia the classes, by linking the Christmas thought of giving to the need
of giving "substance, service and self" for this world-wide Kingdom,
and (if desired) by use of additional methods such as missionary
reading contests, the salute to the church -flag, a missionary bulletin
board, etc. The material (set costing 25 cents) is as follows:
19 16] The Art of Program-Making 415
A . Graded stories
Senior and Intermediate: Kingdom Patriots, 4 biographical
sketches.
Junior: Without the Iron Cross, 6 stories of heroism on the
part of Christians of other lands.
Primary and Beginners: Harold Copping's picture, "The
Hope of the World" (sepia 18" x 12") and They Love
Him Too, 6 stories about the foreign children in this
picture.
B. How to Use this ^^ Kingdom Building" Material, for the
superintendent or missionary committee.
C. Christmas Concert Program.
D. Individual Offering Envelopes.
7. For What are Gifts Asked? Four lines of investment, one
in Africa, one in India, one in China and one in Turkey, are offered,
and schools are asked to choose one or more. The money, both
the half sent to the Woman's Board and the half sent the American
Board, will be used in the line or lines indicated by the school, and
report letters will be sent quarterly to keep donors in touch with
developments in their chosen field. (Money given to the W. B. M.
under this plan will count on the "Sunday School Work" item on
Branch Pledged Work lists and on church apportionment.)
S. How Does this New Recommendation of a Half-and-Half Division
(between the two Boards) of the Total Sunday-school Gift for
Foreign Missions Relate to Habits of Giving Hitherto in Force?
When money has previously been designated for some special
work on the field, this designation need not be changed unless de-
sired. On the other hand, many schools will probably of them-
selves prefer to join in this new investment plan. Where a
school has been giving entirely or disproportionately to one Board, it
is hoped that the plan of a half-and-half division may now be substi-
tuted. In many cases the fresh interest engendered by the campaign
will so increase gifts that such a division, while bringing more to
one Board, will not lessen the usual gift to the other; in a few cases
this principle may mean the lessening of the gift to one Board, in
order that both may share. The aim- is for an eqtial division so far as
416 Life and Light [September
may he possible, and springs from the fact that the Boards are sharing
equally in the preparation, printing and advertising of the material.
g. When should the Campaign be Started in the Schools ?
Planning should be done at once; the program or class work should
be started by the last Sunday in September, if possible. The cam-
paign comes to a close (for this year) with Christmas, and the winter
and spring months are thus left free for home missionary interests.
If you can not start until later, don't give it up altogether. Use
part of the plans. They are adaptable.
10. What Can YOU Do?
A. Get these points clearly in mind, send for the descriptive
circular (free) for further details, and talk over the whole
matter with your pastor and Sunday-school superintendent.
Get the plans, in whole or in part, worked out in your church.
If you need ammunition on the subject of putting missions
into the Sunday-school, borrow The Sunday School Teacher
and the Program of Jesus by Trull and Stowell from the
W. B. M. loan library, or buy it (50 cents). You'll be able
to put it to good use.
B. If you have influence in district or state Sunday-school
gatherings, in church association meetings, in Christian
Endeavor conventions, see that the campaign is boomed
before, after, or during one of the sessions. Call to it the
attention of friends in other centers who are Sunday-school
workers. Stop and realize how such trifling service on your
part may multiply itself many fold through years to come.
C. Make a point of advertising it all you can through your
Branch — start with the four or five churches which are
neighbors of yours. Call up their auxiliary presidents or
- their pastors or in some other way bring influence to bear
on them. Don't leave this sort of work to your one Junior
Secretary !
11. Will You Do These Things? Your turn to answer.
Our Book Table
The Why and How of Missions in the Sunday School. Published by
Revell Co. Pp. 127. Price 50 cents.
This book is written by WiUiam A. Brown, Missionary Superin-
tendent International Sunday-school Association. Marion Law-
rance in the Foreword tells us that Dr. Brown and his wife were
missionaries for some years in the Philippine Islands. Their hearts
are there still and they would be there too if it were possible.
Dr. Lawrance asserts that "Missions, in the best sense, are not a
department of church work; missions constitute the sum total of
the Church's responsibility." A strategic point made by Dr. Law-
rance in favor of giving the study of Missions a larger place in the
Sunday-school instruction is that "a very large proportion of the
missionaries got their vision in their youth. One generation of boys
and girls trained up in the Sunday-school with an adequate knowl-
edge of the great onward movements of the church throughout the
world would see to it that every available field was fully manned
and that there was money enough to carry on the work as it should
be carried on. Dr. Brown gives suggestive hints as to methods of
working. A chapter is devoted to Missionary Programs and another
to a Missionary Library and he lays strong stress on Prayer.
This- book is one of a series in relation to Sunday-school work
called "How to Conduct" series and edited by Marion Lawrance.
Modern Movements among Moslems. Mohammed or Christ. Two
stately volumes have just been issued by theRevell Press dealing
with Islam.
"Mohammed or Christ" is by the great authority on this subject —
Dr. Zwemer. Bishop Stileman gives a few words of Introduction.
He refers to the fact that as far back as 1890, when he was a C. M. S.
missionary in Turkish Arabia, Dr. Zwemer was travelling round the
Arabian Coast with a view to establishing stations of the American
Arabian Mission, of which for the next twenty years he was one of
the pioneers.
The opening chapter has the striking title, "The Tale of Three
(417)
418 Life and Light [September
Cities" and deals with Mecca, Constantinople and Cairo. Mecca
is the religious center, Constantinople the political center and Cairo
the literary center.
Cairo has more than sixty daily newspapers, thirty-nine of which
are published in Arabic.
Christian influences are also strong in this city and it is to be the
seat of the future Christian university for the Nile Valley.
Dr. Zwemer closes this chapter with this strategic summary:
"Mecca represents Islam as the excluder, behind closed doors, defying
the entrance of the Christ; Constantinople, Islam as the intruder into
the domains of the King; Cairo reminds us that in Africa Islam is
the great rival faith, and that here must be brought to a finish the
struggle for a continent."
A chapter full of interest and information is called "The Stumbling-
block of the Cross."
He believes that the Armenian massacres were largely instigated
by a fanatical hatred of the Cross.
In the "Modern Movements among Moslems" Dr. S. G. Wilson,
for thirty-two years resident in Persia, gives an important study of
the many modern movements which mark the progress and propa-
ganda of the Islam of to-day.
It is a book for reference" rather than for reading, unless one is
making a special study of Mohammedanism. One chapter is given
to "Mahdist Movements," with special reference to Bahaism.
In 1908 Abdul Baha, after years of imprisonment, was freed by
the Turkish revolution and made missionary journeys to Europe and
America. It so chanced that he was on the same steamer with Rev.
Dr. and Mrs. F. E. Clark as they were returning from one of their
world-wide trips.
This aged leader of a new religion was received in the United States
as an honored guest, and pulpits and platforms were open to him.
But his lack of voice and vitality better fitted him for personal inter-
views than for the public platform, and his stay of eight months here
showed no special results.
G. H. C.
19 I 6]
Receipts
419
Woman's Board of Missions
Receipts June 1-30, 1916
Miss Sarah Louise Day, Treasurer
Western Maine Branch. — Miss Annie F.
Bailey, Treas., 132 Chadwick St.,
Portland. Auburn, High St. Ch.,
Ellen Merrill M.B., 6.51; Brunswick, ,
Aux., 82.10; Freeport, Aux., 10;
Otisfield, Aux., Mrs. Eliza S. Green-
leaf, 50; Portland, High St. Ch.,
Aux., 46.35, West Ch. Aux., 7, Willis-
ton Ch., C. E. Soc, 12; Westbrook,
Gov. Dau., 5, 218 96
NEW HAMPSHIRE
New IJampshire Branch. — Mrs. W. L.
Fickett, Treas., 120 North State St.,
Concord. Int. Sarah W. Kendall
Fund, 337.50; Durham, Aux., 28.50;
Farmington, Aux., 20; Goshen, Ch.,
1.26; Hanover, Ch. of Christ, 139;
Plaistow and North Haverhill, Ch.,
9.90; Ravroond, Ch., 2; Tilton, Aux.,
31, Ladies' Cir., 5, Outlook Club, 5, 579 16
Vermont Branch. — Miss May E. Manley,
Treas., Box 13, Pittsford. Burlington,
Mrs. G. B. Catlin, 1 00
MASSACHUSETTS
Friend, 1,000; Friend, 500; Friend, 100;
Friend, 5, 1,605 00
Andover and Wohurn Branch. — Mrs.
Henry A. Smith, Treas., 12 Belmont
St., Lowell. OS. at Semi-Ann. Meet.,
28.62; Friend, 15; Andover, Abbott
Academy, 100; LoweU, High St. Ch.,
Aux., 25, Kirk St. Ch., 28.95, Trini-
tarian Ch., S.S., Jr. Dept., 6; Maiden,
First Ch., Aux., 263.34; Medford,
Mystic Ch., C. E. Soc, 20, Jr. Com-
rades, 6; Melrose Highlands, Miss
Basford, 25, Woman's League, 100;
North Andover, Aux., 32; South
Medford, Marion St. Ch., Woman's
League, 10; West Medford, Woman's
League, 102.25, Jr. Miss. Travel Club,
5; Winchester, Second Ch., 10; Wo-
bum. Friend, 2, Aux., 54.60, Jr. C. E.
Soc.,1.25,NorthCh.,Jr. C. E. Soc.,5, 840 01
Barnstable Association. — Miss Carrie E.
Mitchell, Treas., South Dennis. Har-
wich, First Ch., 9.41; Orleans, Ch.,
Miss Amelia Snow, 35, 44 41
Berkshire Branch. — Miss Mabel A. Rice,
Treas., 118 Bradford St., Pittsfield.
Int. M. P. Hulbert Fund, 25; Two
Friends in Berkshire, 250; Adams,
Aux., 70; Canaan, N.Y. Aux., 22;
Dalton, Friend, 250, Aux., 446.10,
In-as-much Cir. King's Dau., 15,
Delta Phi CI., 5, Penny Gatherers,
5.30; Hinsdale, First Ch., Aux., 15.02,
Mountain Rill M. C, 25; Housatonic,
Mrs. Ramsdell, in mem. of Mrs. E. J.
Giddings, 25, Aux., 14.64, Jr. C. E.
Finding Out Club, 15, C.R., 12; Inter-
laken, Aux., 16.55; Lanesboro, Ch.,
1.80, Aux., 25 cts.; Lenox, Aux., 43,
S. S., 5; New Boston, Aux., 1.50;
North Adams, Aux., 8; Otis, Aux.,
3.10; Pittsfield, First Ch., Aux.,
516.73, Memorial Soc, 102, S. S.,
Prim. Dept., 10, M. B., 25, C. R., 8,
Pilgrim Memorial Ch., Pilgrim Dau.,
15, Prim. Dept. S. S., 5, C. R., 3, C. E.
Soc, 5, Jr. C. E. Soc, 1, Philathea
CI., 5, South Ch., Aux., 66.53, Jr. Soc,
5, C. R., 1; Richmond, Aux., 36.25;
Sheffield, Aux., 25, Jr. C. E. Soc, 5,
Willing Workers, 2; Stockbridge,
Aux., 10, Jr. C. E. Soc, 1.50; West
Stockbridge, Aux., 15; Williamstown,
Aux., 8.50, C. R., 2; Windsor, Mrs.
J. F. Leslie, 1, Ladies Aid, 2. Less
expenses 95.72, 2,055 05
Boston. — Jr. C. E. Conference, 3 00
Essex North Branch. — Mrs. Leonard H.
Noyes, Treas., 15 Columbus Ave.,
Haverhill. HaverhiU, Centre Ch.,
28.50, Mary Lyon Club, 10.75; Merri-
mac. First Ch., 8.89; Newburyport,
Belleville Ch., C. E. Soc, In mem. of
Mrs. Charlotte E. Hale, 5, Central
Ch., Delta Alpha, 7, Jr. C. E. Soc, 9;
West Newbury, Second Ch., Jr. C. E.
Soc, 5.37, 74 51
Franklin Cojinty Branch. — Miss J. Kate
Oakman, Treas., 473 Main St., Green-
field. Buckland, Aux., 3; Conway,
Aux., 13, Jr. C. E. Soc, 2.65; Deer-
field, Aux., 1; Deerfield, South, Aux.,
3, Jr. C. E. Soc, 4; Gill, Jr. C. E. Soc,
5.50; Greenfield, Second Ch., Aux., 8;
Northfield, Aux., 47, Evening Aux., 7,
Boys and Girls Soc, 11.50, Prim. S. S.,
11.30; Shelburne, Aux., 2.50; Whately,
Aux., 9.75, 129 20
Middlesex Branch. — Mrs. Frederick L.
Claflin, Treas., 15 Park St., Marlboro.
Framingham, Plymouth Ch., Aux.,
127.10; Holliston, Off. at Semi-Ann.
Meet., 13.01, Aux., 133; Lincoln, Aux.,
25; Marlboro, Aux., 66.51; Milford,
Benev. Soc, 3; Natick, Stitch and
Story Club, 10, Jr. Soc, 5; North-
boro, Lvman Assoc, 10; Wellesley,
Wellesley College, Y. W. C. A., 300, 692 62
Norfolk and Pilgrim Branch. — Mrs.
Mark McCuUy, Treas., 115 Warren
Ave., Mattapan. Braintree, South,
Guild, 4.32; Brockton, First Ch.,
Aux., 15; Cohasset, Aux., 2.30; Hoi-
420
Life and Light
[September
brook, Aux., 20; Quincv, Bethany
Ch., Miss. Study CI., 18, Jr. C. E.
Soc, 10; Rockland, Aux., 11.43;
Stoughton, Aux., 5; Weymouth,
South, Union Ch., Clark M. B., 12;
Wollaston, Jr. C. E. Soc, 5, 103 05
North Middlesex Branch. — Miss Julia S.
Conant, Littleton Common. Box-
borough, Boys S. S. CI., 1; Lunen-
burg, Woman's Miss. Study. CL, 7.96;
North Leominster, Aux., 10; Shirley,
Aux., 30; South Acton, 10; Westford,
Aux., 45, 103 96
Old Colony Branch. — Mrs. Howard
Lothrop, Treas., 3320 North Main St.,
Fall River. Fall River, Aux., 100,
C. R., 12; Middleboro, Aux., 18;
New Bedford, Trinitarian Ch., Miss.
Guild, 45, 175 00
Scituate. — Estate of Miss Mary F.
Periy, 10 00
Springfield Branch.- — Mrs. Mary H.
Mitchell, Treas., 1078 Worthington
St., Springfield. Brimfield, Aux. (to
const. L. M. Mrs. Lowell Wilcox), 25;
Springfield, Faith Ch., S. S., 10, First
Ch., Woman's Assoc, (to const. L. M.'s,
Mrs. Mary D. Chapman, Miss Ruth
A. Rockwell, Mrs. J. B. Shaw, Mrs.
Edwin R. Spaulding), 100, Opportu-
nity Seekers, 80, Jr. C. E. Soc, 5,
Hope Ch., Aux., 291, I-oyal Workers,
10, King's Heralds, 6, S. S., 18, North
Ch., Aux. (to const. L. M.'s, Mrs.
Sheldon F. AUen, Mrs. James P.
Clark, Mrs. Laura Flagg, Miss Lilla
M. Harmon, Mrs. C. Edward Newell,
Mrs. Paul J. Norton, Mrs. Abbie W.
Stewart, Mrs. Luke S. Stowe), 200,
Girls' Home League, (to const. L. M.
Miss Elizabeth Edwards, 25; West-
field, First Ch., Aux., 249, 1,019 00
Sujfolk Branch. — Miss Margaret D.
Adams, 1908 Beacon St., Brookline.
AUston, Jr. C. E. Soc, 10; Arlington
Heights, Aux., 10; Aubumdale, Jr.
C. E. Soc, 25, S. S., Prim. Dept.,_ 5;
Belmont, Payson Park Ch., Ladies'
Aid Soc, 13.50; ' Boston, Central Ch.,
Miss. Study Cir., 5, Old South Ch.,
Women's Bible CL, In mem. of Miss
A: R. Ricker, 10; Boston, East, Baker
Ch., C. E. Soc, 1.50, Jr. C. E. Soc, 2,
Maverick Ch., Children's Ch.,. 3;
Boston, South, Phillips Ch., Y. L. M.
S., 95; Brookline, Harvard Ch., S. S.,
Prim. Dept., 10; Leyden Ch., Beacon
Lights, 4.50; Cambridge, First Ch.,
C. R., 16.07, North Ch., 99, Pilgrim
Ch.,28, C. R., 6.46, Prospect St. Ch.,
C. E. Soc, 10, Bearers of Glad Tidings,
5, C. R., 18.01; Chelsea, Central Ch.,
C. R., 5.50, First Ch., S. S., Prim.
Dept., 20.30, Jr. Dept., 12.50; Ded-
ham. First Ch., Aux., Easter Off.,
43.45, S. S., 6.05; Dorchester, Pilgrim
Ch., Woman's Soc. (Len. Off., 17), 29,
Allbright Cir., Len. Off., 25, Romsey
Ch., Always Faithful Cir., 10, Second
Ch., S. S., 20, Village Ch. (add'l Len.
Off., 1), 16; Foxboro, Cheerful Work-
ers, 30; [Franklin, Mary Warfield
Miss. Soc, 21; Jamaica Plain, Boyl-
ston Ch., Woman's Miss. Soc. (25 of
wh. to const. L. M. Mrs. D. B. Mac- .
Lane), 35, C. R., 13.35; Medfield,
Aux. 16.51; Newton, Eliot Ch.,
Helpers, 4; Newton Centre, First Ch.,
Sunshine Soc, 50, C. R. 21.30, S. S..
Prim. Dept., 10; Newton Highlands,
Jr. C. E. Soc, 10; Newtonville, Cen-
tral Ch., Woman's Assoc, 125, We
Are Seven Club, 77; Roxbury, Eliot
Ch., Eliot Alliance, 25, Imm. Wakut
Ave Ch., Y. L. F. M. S., 29; Rox-
bury, West, Woman's Union, 158.59;
SomervUle, Prospect Hill Ch., Jr. C.
E. Soc, 7; Waltham, First Ch., W. F.
M. S., 25, 1,222 59
Worcester Branch. — Miss Sara T. South-
wick, Treas., 144 Pleasant St.,
Worcester. Friend, 5; Friend, 1.55;
Ashburnham, Ailx., 10; Baldwins-
ville, Ch., 15; Blackstone, Jr. C. E.
Soc, 5.50; Clinton, Aux., 5.52, Pro
Christo Bible CI., 11, Jr. C. E. Soc, 5;
East Douglas, Jr. C. E. Soc, 5;
Pisherville, C. R. and Jr. Dept., S.S.,
12; Leicester, The Gleaners, 15;
Leominster, Aux., 50; Northbridge,
Rockdale, Aux., 71.62, C. E. Soc, 4;
North Brookfield, Woman's Union, 30;
Ware, Aux., 7.22; Warren, Aux., 65
els.; Webster, C. E. Soc, 5; West-
boro, Aux., 7.75; Whitinsville, Aux.,
Len. Off., 87.35, Extra-Cent-A-Day-
Band, 13.82; Winchendon, Aux., 29,
Worthley M.B., 2; Worcester, Lake
View Ch., Jr. C. E. Soc, 6, Old South
Ch., Woman's Assoc, 129.83, CI. 24,
S. S., 10, Piedmont Ch., Jr. C. E. Soc,
5, Plymouth Ch., Woman's Assoc, 25,
S. S., Jr. Dept., 5, Little Light Bearers,
11.38, Tatnuck Ch., Woman's Assoc,
15, Union Ch., Woman's Assoc.
(Easter Th. Off., 30), 65, Aphorizo
Club, 15, S. S., Prim. Dept., 3.33, L689 52
Total, 8,766 92
Worcester. — Harriet Wheeler Damon, by
Frank H. Wiggin, Trustee, add'l., 50 00
RHODE ISLAND.
Rhode Island Branch. — Miss Grace P.
Chapin, Treas., 150 Meeting _ St.,
Providence. Friend, 450; Bristol,
The Misses Wardwell, 50; Central
Falls, Prim. Dept. S. S., 5; Chepa-
chet, Prim. Dept. S. S., 2; Darling-
ton, Mrs. Raton's S. S. CI., 5; Kings-
ton, Friend, 17.42, Aux., 28.13, C. E.
Soc, 5.42; Pawtucket, Park Place
Ch., Qui Vive CI., 3, Pawtucket Ch.,
Mrs. F. W. Stark, 5; Peace Dale,
Aux., 100; Providence, Free Evangeli-
cal Ch., Women's Guild, 50, Plymouth
Ch., C. R., 10, 730 97
1916]
Receipts
421
CONNECTICUT.
Eastern Connecticul Branch. — Miss Anna
C. Learned, Treas., 255 Hempstead
St., New London. Brooklyn, Con-
stant Workers M. C, 5; Chaplin,
Aux. (prev. contri. const. L. M.
Mrs. Frank W. Landon); Colchester,
C. E. Soc, 5; Nonvich, Broadway Ch.,
C. R., 2, Sunshine Cir., 5; First Ch.,
Lathrop Memorial Aux. (prev. contri.
const. L. M's Mrs. John Browning,
Miss Ruth Lathrop Potter); Plain-
lield, Aux., 5.50; Scotland, Aux., 15;
Thompson Aux., 11.75; Wauregan,
Aux., 20, 69 25
Hartford Branch. — Mrs. Sidney W.
Clark, Treas., 40 Willard St., Hart-
ford. Bristol. Aux., 18; Buckingham,
Aux., 18.25; Burnside, Aux., 8: En-
field, S. S., Prim. Dept., 10; Glaston-
biu-y, Jr. C. E. Soc, 25; Hartford,
Asylum Hill Ch., Aux., 151, Girls'
M. C, 25.75, First Ch., Aux., Mrs.
Capen, 25, Immanuel Ch. Aux., 8.50,
South Ch., Aux., 5; Windsor Ave. Ch.,
5; Mansfield, Second Ch., W. M. S. of
Storrs, 13; New Britain, South Ch.,
Aux., 14.10, C. R., 16; Plainville,
S. S., 5; South Windsor, Aux., 15;
Suffield, Aux., 21; Vernon Center,
Aux., 7; West Hartford, Aux., 87, 477 60
New Haven Branch.— MisR Edith Wool-
sey, Treas., 250 Church St., New
Haven, Int. Sarah J. Hume Fund, 100;
Friend, 300; Friend, 200; Friend,
100; Friend, 100; Friend, 25; Friend,
25; Barkhamstead, Aux., 10; Bran-
ford, Aux., 5; Bridgeport, Park St.
Ch., Fullerton Mem. Cir., Sarah E.
Hubbard Mem., 150; Chester, Mrs.
Theresa J. Day, 25; Clinton, Aux,
(25 of wh. to const. L. M. Miss Cath-
erine Gillette), 30; Cornwall, Friend,
6; Cromwell, Aux., 20.80; Guilford,
Aux., 1.65; Ivorvton, Aux., 27;
Middlefield, Friend's, 4.80; Middle
Haddam, Aux., 2.25; Middletown,
First Ch., Aux., 34; New Hartford,
Aux., 5; New Haven, Friend, 5.35,
Center Ch., Friend, 15, Friend, 10,
Aux., 1.53, Ch. of the Redeemer, Aux.,
25, Dwight Place Ch., Aux., 120, Grand
Ave. Ch., Evening Cir., 4.65, United
Ch., Montgomery Aux., 3, Welcome
Hall, Lend A Hand Aux., 10.50;
North Greenwich, Aux., 13.56; Red-
ding, Miss Miriam M. Smith, 2.50;
Shelton, Aux., 25, Miss. Guild, 5;
Sound Beach, Aux., 10; South Nor-
walk, Aux., 10.38; Southport, Aux.,
6.50; Torrington, First Ch., Aux.,
2.50; Watertown, Aux., 20; West-
port, Aux., 4; Westville, Aux., 25.62;
Whitneyville, Aux. (with prev. contri.
to const. L. M's. Miss Lillian A. Chat-
terton, Miss Hattie I. Stevens), 8, Y.
L. M. C, 2; Winsted, Second Ch., 34
cts.; Woodbridge, Aux. (prev. contri.
const. L. M. Mrs. Arthur Thomas), 1,500 93
Total,
2,047.78
NEW YORK.
New York State Branch. — Mrs. F. M.
Turner, Treas., 646 St. Mark's Ave.,
Brooklyn. Riverhead, Sound Avenue
Ch., S. S., 19 55
PHILADELPHIA BRANCH.
Philadelphia Branch. — Miss Martha N.
Hooper, Treas., 1475 Columbia Road,
Washington, D. C. D. C, Washing-
ton, First Ch., Miss. Club, 218; Fla.,
Daytona, Young People's Soc, 15,
C. E. Soc, 5; Ga., Atlanta, Central
Ch., 4; Md., Baltimore, Associate
Ch., W. M. S., 118; N.J., Miss
Ward's Friend, 5; East Orange,
Trinity Ch., Aux., 110.75; Glen
Ridge, Delta Alpha S. S. CL, 10;
Passaic, Aux., 25; Plainfield, Aux.,
49.10; Y. W. M. S., 30; Upper
Montclair, Aux., 25; Westfield, Aux.,
45; Pa., Corry, Aux., 15; Lansford,
Aiix., 25, Sunbeams, 1; McKeesport,
Rhea Soc, 6.70; Meadville, Aux.,
5; Milroy, King's Dau., 10; Phila-
delphia, Central Ch., Aux., 58; Snyder
Ave. Ch., Aux., 1; Pittsburgh, Puritan
Ch., Aux., 5; Scranton, Plymouth
Ch., Aux., 40, Dau. of Gov., 15, Puri-
tan Ch., Aux., 1, Welsh Ch., Aux.,
21; Smithfield, Aux., 6, 869 55
GEORGIA.
Atlanta. — Ch. of Christ in Atlanta
University, 25 00
CALIEORNIA.
Fresno. — Mrs. Kohar Kaprielian, 2 00
AFRICA.
Durban. — Miss S. May Cook, 5 00
Inanda. — Inanda Seminary, Miss. Soc,
15.15, Alumnae, 20.33,
Total,
Donations,
Buildings,
Specials,
Legacies,
$13,351 37
Total from Oct. 18, 1915, to June 30, 1916.
Donations, $86,809 25
Buildings, 38,702 45
Specials, 1,557 94
Legacies, 15,978 60
$143,048 24
golden ANNIVERSARY GIFT.
Previously reported.
Receipts of the month.
$153,857 29
3,325 18
$157,182 47
422
Life and Light
[September
Receipts July 1-31, 1916
Miss Sarah Louise Day, Treasurer
Friend,
25 00
Western Maine Branch. — Miss Annie F.
Bailey, Treas., 132 Chadwick St.,
Portland. Alfred, Miss. Union, 15;
Brunswick, Aux., 3; Gorham, Aux., 16;
Minot Center, 25; Portland, Wood-
fords Ch., Aux., 29.15, S. S., 1.86, Girls'
Guild, 4; Westbrook, Ch., 10.06, Aux.,
10.32, Jr. Girls' Guild, 18; Woolwich,
M. B. and C. R., 2.50, 134 89
NEW HAMPSHIRE
New Hampshire Branch. — Mrs. W. L.
Fickett, Treas., 120 North State St.,
Concord. Int. Sarah W. Kendall
Fund, 265.97; Atkinson, Aux., 20;
Boscawen, S. S., 2; Claiemont, Aux.,
7; Keene, Court St., Ch., Aux. (with
piev. contri. to const. L. M's, Miss
Lena Gookin, Mrs. Jennie S. Pike),
20.03; Milton, First Ch., 1.81;
Nashua, Miss. Outlook Soc. (to const.
L. M. Mrs. Julia B. Spalding), 25;
Nelson, C. E. Soc, 1, 342 81
Vermont Branch. — Miss May E. Manley,
Treas., Box 13, Pittsford. Int. Har-
riet Newell Thompson Fund, 22.50;
Miss Emma E. Drew, 5; Friend, 25;
Barre, Ch., 10.56; Bellows Falls, Jr.
Travel Club, 13.50; Bennington, Sun-
shine Cir., 3; Berkshire, East, Jr.
C. E. Soc, 5; Brattleboro, Children's
Fair, 57.25; Burlington, College St.
Ch., C. R., 2; Chester, Jr. C. E. Soc,
5; Charleston, West, Aux., 11.63;
Corinth, East, S. S., Birthday Box,
10; Dorset, C. I. C, 1; Franklin Co.
Assoc, 2; Hartford, Aux., 15.64; Is-
land Pond, Jr. C. E. Soc, 1; Jeflferson-
ville, Aux., 5; Marshfield, Aux., 4;
C. E. Soc, 3, S. S., 1; Milton, Jr.
M. B., 3; Montgomery Center, Aux.,
2; Pittsford, Aux., 26.25; Rochester,
Aux., 17.75; Royalton, South,
W. M. S., 8.35; St. Johnsbury, North
Ch., S. S., 40, South Ch., Aux., 8.55,
Search Light Club, 42, C. R., 4.50;
Sheldon, Worth While Club, 6.25;
Springfield, Ever Onward Club, 15;
Wallingford, Aux., 8; Westford Aux.
(Th.Off.9), 11.50; Wilmington, Aux.,
6; Williston, Aux., 3; Woodstock, Aux.,
20, 425 23
MASSACHUSETTS
Friend, 500 00
Andover and Woburn Branch. — Mrs.
Henry A. Smith, Treas., 12 Belmont
St., Lowell. Wakefield, Mary Farn-
ham BUss Soc, 45; W^est Medford,
Kindergarten, 1; Winchester, Second
Ch., Jr., Miss. Soc, 24, 70 00
Berkshire Branch. — Miss Mabel A. Rice,
Treas., 118 Bradford St., Pittsfield.
Housatonic, Aux., in mem. of Mrs.
Giddings, . 6 00
Boston.— Miss Elizabeth M. Garritt, 25 00
Essex North Branch. — Mrs. Leonard H.
Noyes, Treas., 15 Columbus Ave.,
Haverhill. Merrimac, First Ch., 7.24;
Newburyport, Mr. James White Hale,
500, 507 24
Essex South Branch. — Miss Daisy Ray-
mond, Treas., 120 Balch St., Beverly.
OS. at Jr. Rally, 1.35; Beverly, Dane
St., Ch., Jr., C. E. Soc, 5, C. R., 13.44,
Second Ch., Woman's Union, Len.
Off., 5.10, Jr. C. E. Soc, 1.25, Prim.
S. S. 4; Washington St. Ch., Aux.,
Len. Off., 14, Jr. S. S. 8, Prim.
S. S., 2.50, Jr. C. E. Soc, 2.50; Dan-
vers. First Ch., Rice M. C, 26 cts.,
Piim. S. S., 3.01, Maple St. Ch., Aux.,
Len. Off., 16.75, S. S., 10, Jr. C. E.
Soc, 8; Essex, Dau. of Cov., 19, Sun-
shine Band, 2.35, Prim. S. S., and C.R.
5; Gloucester, Trinity Ch., Aux. (Len.
Off., 45.25), 63.97; HamOton, C. R.,
1.58; Lynn, Central Ch., Aux., 5,
Blue Birds, 3, First Ch., Jr. C. E. Soc,
5, C. R., 9; Lynnfield Center, Sunshine
Band, 2; Manchester, C. R., 11.75;
Middleton, Willing Workers, 2.25;
Salem, Crombie St. Ch., C. R., 3,
South Ch., Sunshine Workers, 2, Tab-
ernacle Ch., Dau. of Cov., 25, Pro
Christo Club, 15, Light Bearers, 15,
Jr. S. S., 5, Prim. S. S., 10; Saugus,
Cliftondale Ch., Aux., 5.35, Jr. C. E.
Soc, 15; Swampscott, First Ch., Jr.
C. E. Soc, 5; Wenham, Ch., 12, 3-37 41
Framingham. — Mrs. E. H. Bigelow, 5 00
Hampshire County Branch. — Miss Har-
riet J. Kneeland, Treas., 8 Paradise
Road, Northampton. Enfield, Aux.,
32.20, Mrs. H. M. Smith, 150, Miss
Marion Smith, 150; Goshen, C. E.
Soc, 3; Granbv, Light Bearers, 6,
Sarah Nash Dickinson, M. C, 15;
Hatfield, Aux., 3.25; Northampton,
Edwards Ch.,Aux., 10.10; Worthing-
ton, Aux., 10, 379 55
Middlesex Branch.— Mis. Frederick L.
Claflin, Treas., 15 Park St., Marlboro.
Framingham, Grace Ch., Aux., 83.10;
Natick, Aux., Miss Florence Bigelow,
25; West Medway, Aux., 5, 113 10
Norfolk and Pilgrim Branch. — Mrs. Mark
McCully, Treas., 115 Warren Ave.,
Mattapan. Braintree, Aux., 6; Co-
hasset. Miss Louise C. Tower, 2;
Hanson, Aux., 1, Friends, 1; Marsh-
field, Aux. (Th. Off., 9), 11; Quincy,
Bethany Ch., 23.20; Whitman Ch.,
23.30, 67 50
North Middlesex Branch. — Miss Julia S.
Conant, Treas., Littleton Common.
Fitchburg, RoUstone Ch., Aux., 10;
Harvard, WilUng Workers, 5; Little-
ton, C. R., 1.85; North Leominster,
Ch., 11; Pepperell, Aux., 40; Wal-
thanj,. Miss Ruby E. Viets, 15, 82 85
Old Colonv Branch. — Mrs. Howard Loth-
rop, Treas., 3320 North Main St., Fall
I9i6]
Receipts
423
River. Attleboro, South, Aux., 5;
Fairbaven, First Ch., S. S., 4.50; Fall
River, W. F. M. S., 335, 344 50
Springfield Branch. — Mrs. Mary H.
Mitchell, Treas., 1078 Worthington St.,
Springfield. Int. Permanent Fund,
47.50; Feeding Hills, C. R., 7.25;
Holyoke, Second Ch., Aux., 50, The
Airinsha, 10; Palmer, Second Ch.,
15.75; Springfield, Mrs. Mary H.
Mitchell, 25, Friend, 10, Emmanuel
Ch., Aux., 20, Memorial Ch., Woman's
Guild, 55, Jr. Guild, 5, S. S., 25, Olivet
Ch., Aux., 23.60; Three Rivers, Union
Ch., Jr. C. E. Soc, 5; Westfield, Sec-
ond Ch., Aux., 60, 359 10
Suffolk Branch. — Miss Margaret D.
Adams, Treas. ,1908 Beacon St., Brook-
line. Friend, 100; Boston, Old South
Ch., Friend, 75; Boston, East, Baker
Ch., Aux., 7.58; Brighton, Aux., 75;
Brookline, Mrs. N. B. Comstock, 10;
Leyden Ch., Aux., 5, Pro Christo, 21;
Cambridge, First Ch., Aux., 179.69,
JNorth Ch., Aux., SO, Wood Memorial
Ch., 8.25; Dorchester, Pilgrim Ch.,
S. S., Kinder. Dept., 11, Second Ch.,
Aux., 63.13, Jr. C. E. Soc, 5; Everett,
First Ch., Woman's Union, 97; Ja-
maica Plain, Boylston Ch., 10, Aux.,
7.98; Mansfield, Woman's Union,
(Len. Off., 7.50), 18.25; Newton High-
lands, Woman's Ch. Aid and Miss.
Soc, 24.97; Newton West, Second
Ch., Woman's Guild, 105.50, C. R.,
20.77; Norwood, C. R., 5; Roslindale,
Jr., C. E. Soc, 10; Ro.xbury, Eliot
Ch., Aux., 27.50, Highland Ch., Aux.,
83.50, Imm.-Walnut Ave. Ch., For.
Dept., 24; Somen'ille, Highland Ch.,
Women Workers, 20, Prospect Hill
Ch., Woman's Union, Len. Off., 12.26;
Walpole, Miss. Union, 61.60; Wal-
tham, First Ch., C. R., 18.70; Water-
town, Friend, 12; Waverley, First Ch.,
15, 1,214 68
Worcester County Branch. — Miss Sara T.
Southwick, Treas., 144 Pleasant St.,
Worcester. Athol, King's Messen-
gers, 10; Holden, Aux.(to const. L. M.
Mrs. George E. Gary), 25; Oxford, -
S. S., Home Dept., 2; Petersham, Miss
Elizabeth B. Dawes, 100; Shrews-
bury, Friend, 50; Ware, Aux. (75 of
wh. to const. L. M's, Marian Ander-
son, Lois Lyon, Gladys Marsh), 128.92;
Warren, Aux., 3.95; Whitinsville,
Aux., 1,135.46, Extra - Cent - a -Day
Band, 11.38; Worcester, Friend, 100,
Central Ch., Friend, 10, Piedmont
Ch., Friend, 100, Union Ch., 21.74,
Woman's Bible CI., 25, 1,723 45
Total,
5,735 38
LEGACY
Watertown. — Jennette T. Kimball, in
part, 583 91
RHODE ISLAND.
Island Branch. — Miss Grace P.
Chapin, Treas., 150 Meeting St.,
Providence. Barrington, S. S., Prim.
and Beginners' Dept., 10; Paw-
tucket, Park PI. Ch., C. E. Soc, 10,
Pawtucket Ch., Miss Alice L. Tolman,
5; Peace Dale, C. R., 6.41; Provi-
dence, Beneficent Ch., S. S., Begin-
ners' and Prim. Dept., 7.20, Central
Ch., 167.31, People's Ch., Aux., 10,
Pilgrim Ch., Laurie Guild, 30, Union,
Ch., S. S., Prim. Dept., 5; Saylesville,
S. S., Prim. Dept., 2.87; Woonsocket,
Globe Ch., Ladies' Union, 22, 275 79
CONNECTICUT.
Eastern Connecticut Branch. — Miss Anna
C. Learned Treas., 255 Hempstead
St., New London. Int. Eliza Free-
man Woodward Fund, 10; East W^ood-
stock, Aux. (Th. Off., 13), 18; Nor-
wich, First Ch., Jr. C. E. Soc, 3.72;
West Woodstock, Aux., Friend, 5;
WiUimantic, C. R., 1, 37 72
Hartford Branch.— Mrs. Sidney W.
Clark, Treas., 40 Willard St., Hart-
ford. Int. Clara E. Hillyer Fund,
212.50; Int. Julia W. Jewell Fund,
67.50; Berlin, Girls' Aid Soc, 5;
Buckingham, Aux., 5; Glastonbury,
Aux., 108; Hartford, First Ch., F. M.
S., 70, S. S., Jr. Dept., 4, South Ch.,
50; Hockanum, Ladies' Aid Soc, 5;
Manchester, Jr. C. E. Soc, 10; New-
ington, Aux., 26; New Britain, First
Ch.,145; South Coventry, Aux. ,26.50;
Stafford Springs, Aux., 40; Suffield,
Ch., 125, C. R., 3, 902 50
New Haven Branch. — Miss Edith Wool-
sey, Treas., 250 Church St., New
Haven. Bridgeport, Park St. Ch.,
Endeavor Cir., 10; Danburv, Y. P.
M. C, 10; East Haddam, C. E. Soc,
2; East Hampton, C. E. Soc, 5;
Easton, Aux., 7.25; Litchfield, Aux.,
64.71, Y. L. M. B., 3.75; Meriden,
First Ch., Aux., 65; Middlebury,
Aux., 20; Middlefield, Ch., 7.35, C.
E. Soc, 4.23, Middletown, First Ch.,
Aux., 21; New Haven, Center Ch.,
Jr. M. C, 30, S. S., 15.13, Dixwell Ave.
Ch., Aux., 11, S. S., 1, Grand Ave.
Ch., C. R., 5, United Ch., C. E. Soc,
25; New Milford, C. E. Soc, 5; North
Stamford, Aux., 1; Redding, Aux., 37;
Salisbury, Aux., 37.71 ; Saybrook, Ch.,
15.13; Shelton, Ch., 22.50; Stratford,
S. S., 55; Waterburv, First Ch., Jr.
M. B., 2.70, S. S., C.' R., Dept., 4.22;
Westchester, Aux., 4.50; Wolcott,
Ch., 4, 496 18
Waterbury.— Miss Gladys E. Cowles, 10 00
Total, 1,446 40
NEW YORK
Glenora.—Urs. D. L. Whittier, 10 00
New York State Branch. — Mrs. F. M.
Turner, Treas., 646 St. Mark's Ave.,
Brooklyn. Hall, Union Ch., C. E.
Soc, 10 00
Total, 20 00
424
Life and Light
[September
PHILADEUHIA BRANCH.
Philadelphia Branch. — Miss Martha N.
Hooper, Treas., 1475 Columbia Road,
Washington, D. C. D. C, Washing-
ton, First Ch., Aux., 100, C. R., 4.46,
Ingram Mem. Ch., Aux., 46.94, Jr.
C. E. Soc, 5, Mt. Pleasant Ch.,
Round the World Club, 10; Md.,
Baltimore, Associate Ch., C. E. Soc,
37.50; N.J., Bound Brook, Aux., 37;
Grantwood, Aux., 8; Jersey City, First
Ch., Aux., 25; Newark, Belleville
Ave. Ch., Y. W. Aux., 26; Nutley, St.
Paul's Ch., Jr. M. B., 8; Passaic, C.
R., 3; Plainfield, Aux., 25.90; River
Edge, Aux., 12; Ohio, Cleveland,
Euclid Ave. Ch., Friend, 20, 368 80
Springfield. — Miss Sarah C. Frantz,
10 00
CALIFORNIA.
San Diego.— Miss Susan E. Thatcher, 30 00
Donations, $6,315 72
Buildings, 2,400 58
Specials, 98 00
Legacies, 583 91
Total,
3,398 21
Total irom October 18, 1915, to July 31, 1916
Donations, -193,124 97
Buildings, 41,103 03
Specials, 1,655 94
Legacies, 16,562 51
Total, $152,446 45
golden anniversary gift.
Previously acknowledged,
Receipts of the month,
$157,182 47
2,400 58
Total, $159,583 05
Woman's Board for the Pacific
Receipts for May and June, 1916
Mrs. W. W. Ferrier, Treasurer, 2716 Hillegass Ave., Berkeley, Cal.
calipornia.
Northern California Branch. — Mrs.
Arthur W. Moore, Treas., 415 Pacific
Ave., Oakland. Alameda, 75; An-
gel's Camp, 90 cts.; Berkeley, First,
60, Mrs. W. R. Thorsen, 200, North,
16.70; Ceres, First, 1.25; Collection
at Sebastopol meeting, 3.30; Cradle
Roll wall scrolls, 63 els.; Field's Land-
ing S. S., 1; Eureka, 3; Ferndale, 15;
Fresno, First, 2.81; Martinez, 2.85;
Mill Valley, 93 cts.; Oakland, Calvary,
4.87, First, Cradle Roll, 5.50, Pilgrim,
Cradle Roll, 7.50, Myrtle St., 7.50;
Pacific Grove, 13.75; Palo Alto, 12.50:
Petaluma, 15; Socklin, 2.50; Sacra-
mento, 10; San Francisco, First, 70;
San Rafael, 1.52; Santa Rosa, 2.08;
Sonoma, 6.25; Saratoga, 21.10; Mr.
and Mrs. Chas. Blaney, 875; Suisun,
7.84; Tulare, 12.35, . 1,458 63
Southern California Branch. — Miss Emily
M. Barrett, Treas., 178 Center St.,
Pasadena. Claremont, 129.91, Cradle
Roll, 2.54; Highland, Junior C. E., 13,
S. S., 15; Long Beach, Bible Class, 15,
W. S., 10; Los Angeles, Bethlehem,
3.55, East, 10, First, 273.68, Messiah,
12, Olivet, 4, Pico Heights, 10, Pil-
grim, 10, Plymouth, 15; Pasadena,
First, Bible School, 35, Women's Bible
Class, 60, T. G. Class, 15, Mrs. Call's
Class, 5, Mrs. King's Class, 10, Int.
C. E., 5, Lake Ave., 126, S. S., 15, West
Side, 30, S. S., 8; San Diego, First,
■ 15.45, 848 13
WASHINGTON.
Washington Branch. — Estelle Roberts,
Treas., 1211 22d Ave., Seattle. Bel-
lingham. First, 5.98; Cheney, 50 cts.;
Colfax, 30; Deer Park, 2.02; "Everett,
S. S., 5; Hillyard, 10, Orchard Prarie
S. S., 15; lone, 20 cts.; Lewiston,
Idaho, 61 cts.; Meyer's Falls, 1.17;
Metalline Falls, 15 cts.; Odessa, First,
1.83; Pasco, 1.30; Seattle, Edge-
water, 5.34, Fairmount, 5, Green Lake,
2.40, Pilgrim, 102.50, S. S., 15, Mus-
tard Seed Soc, 5, Mrs. Stoutenbor-
ough Class, 15, Prospect, 22, Queen
Anne, 13.65; Stevenson, 1.25; Spo-
kane, Pilgrim, 3.24, Westminster, 110,
West Side, 1; Tacoma, First, 130;
Tekoa, 40 cts.; Toppenish, 33 cts.:
Vera, 2.40; WaUa Walla, 145; Wash-
ougal, S. S., 3..50; Wallace, Idaho, 1.60;
Miss Brewer, 50, 708 37
Oregon Branch. — Mrs. A. L. Cake, Treas.,
421 West Park St., Portland. Beaver-
ton, 7; Gaston, 20; Hillsboro, 30;
Jennings Lodge, 3; Portland, First,
57.46, S. S., 30; Park Place, 3; Sun-
nyside, 61.35; Waverly Heights, 32.03, 243 84
Idaho Branch. — Mrs. S. N. Travis,Treas.,
Weiser. Boise, 35; Pocatello, 8;
Weiser, 8, 51 GO
Utah Branch. — Mrs. Geo. Brown, Treas.,
Sandy. PhUUps, 10, 10 00
Our World-Wide Work: the woman s Board of
Missions, giving pictures and incidents of its work on the field.
Especially useful with the Jubilee Series of Programs, and should be
in the hands of every program committee. Price 25 cents ; postpaid 6
cents additional.
United Study Text-books for 1916-1917
World Missions and World Peace: A Study of Chrisfs
Conquest, by Caroline Atwater Mason. Price 30 cents in paper ; 50 cents
in cloth ; postage 7 cents additional.
How to Use! Helen Barrett Montgomery's invaluable little guide to
the study of World Missions. The Complete Outlines Ready in
September. Price 10 cents.
A series of articles to supplement this text-book v^ill begin in
the October number of Life and Light.
The Junior Book : Soldiers of the Prince, by charies
E. Jefferson, D.D. Price 25 cents, postage 3 cents; "Helps for Leaders"
included.
Children of the War Paper Dolls, 25 cents ; 95 Flags of the Nations,
25 cents ; and Peace Buttons at 5 cents each, help to make the ideals of
peace real to children.
" Golden Anniversary Gift in
Picture and Story"
The attention of leaders in Branches and auxiliaries is called to the
illustrated lecture prepared by the Woman's Board to interest people in
fields to be aided by our Golden Anniversary fund. The lecture has sixty
slides, many of them charmingly colored, and includes not only buildings
and plans, but pictures of schoolgirls at work and at play, of native life and
scenery, and of fascinating babies. Written description accompanies slides.
Place your orders for this unique lecture, especially arranged for our con-
stituency. Loaned free. Only expense, transportation rates and cost in
case of breakage,
4pply to Miss Helen S. Conley, 704 Con^re^atlonnl Honse, Boston
Nearing the Jubilee
An attractive Program Portfolio, containing all the material for a
JUBILEE INCREASE CAMPAIGN MEETING
Plan to hold such a meeting in your auxiliary in October or No-
vember, 1916.
Apply to your Branch Secretary ot Literature for one copy 01
this program, free. Not sent from the Board Rooms. Ask for
them at your Branch meetings.
Jubilee Guide, bookmark : Five Things I Can and Will Do.
For free distribution at the Jubilee Increase Meeting; sent free.
Jubilee Hymns, 35 cents a hundred. "Words only.
Jubilee Series: now ready, The Pioneer and Present
Day Worker Series; Program Outlines, Ambassadors for Christ
Biographical material for study in senior and junior auxiliaries in
1916-1917 ; Life Stories of Native Helpers, giving sketches of
women workers in Africa, China, India, Japan, Bulgaria, Turkey
and Mexico. Price, 10 cents. Other Leaflets, 5 cents each. Entire
set, if ordered at one time, 50 cents. ORDER EARLY, BEFORE THE
EDITION IS EXHAUSTED.
Good material for Christian Endeavor Meetings or Mission
Study Classes. ,
Life and Light for Woman
PUBUBHBD MONTHLY BY THB WOMAN'S BOARD OP MISSIONS, CONORBQATiONAii
BOU8B. AMD BNTBRBD AS 5BCOND-CLASS MATTBR AT THB BOSTON POST OPPICB
TERMS: 60 Cents a Year in Advance
SINGLE COPIES. FIVE CENTS
Dates : Subscriptions may begin with January, April, July or October.
All subscriptions and requests for Sample Copies should be addressed to
Miss Helen S. Gonley, 704 Conitre|{atlonal Honse, Boston, Haas.
TEXT-BOOKS, LEAFLETS, MONTHLY PLEDGE AND THANK OFFERING
ENVELOPES, COVENANT CARDS, MITE BOXES, ETC.
May be obtained by sending to Boston and Chicago
For Woman's Board of Missions
Address Miss A. R. HARTSHORN
No. 704 Congregational House, Boston, Mass.
For Woman's Board of the Interior
Miss ANNIE £. NOURSE
Room 131S, 19 South La SaUe Street, Chicagc
4g^List of Leaflets may be obtained free from each Board as above
THE PRANK WOOD PRESS, BOSTON