ALONG KINGDOM HIGHWAYS

1941

ONE- H UN DRED-TWENTY- SEVENTH ANNUAL REPORT

of the

American Baptist Foreign Mission Society

Presented by the Board of Managers at the Annual Meeting held In

Wichita, Kansas, May 20-25, 1941

American Baptist Foreign Mission Society 152 Madison Avenue New York, N. Y.

CONTENTS

PAGE MISSIONARY BEGINNINGS ...... 4 P R E F A C E ...... 5 ALONG KINGDOM HIGHWAYS IN ...... 7 Japan ...... 9 Ch in a ...... 13 P hilippines ...... 17 B urma ...... 19 A ssam ...... 22 S outh I ndia ...... 25 B engal-O rissa ...... 27 B elgian Congo ...... 28 E urope ...... 32 A “GOOD SAMARITAN” ALONG KINGDOM HIGHWAYS .... 32 W orld R elief F unds ...... 32 Church Committee for Ch in a Re l i e f ...... 33 A merican H elp for Orphaned M issions ...... 34 INFORMATION SERVICE FOR KINGDOM HIGHWAYS 34 P rinters’ I n k ...... 35 T he M issionaries S peak ...... 35 TORCH BEARERS ALONG KINGDOM HIGHWAYS ...... 36 Joseph C. Robbins, Resolution on Retirement o t ...... 36 P. H . J. L errigo, M.D., D.D., Resolution on R etirement o f 37 M iss M aud B rook, Retirement of ...... 38

JO U R N E Y ’S E N D ...... 39 IMPERATIVE NEEDS FOR KINGDOM HIGHWAYS ...... 48 FUNDS FOR WORK ALONG KINGDOM HIGHWAYS ...... 53 F inancial R eview of the Y ear...... 59 R eport of the T reasurer...... 69 FIELDS AND STATIONS ALONG KINGDOM HIGHWAYS ... 77 FACTS AND FIGURES OF KINGDOM HIGHWAYS ...... 91 Statistics ...... 93 B y-L aws ...... 113 M inutes of the 126th M e e t in g ...... 117 DENOMINATIONAL LEADERS IN KINGDOM WORK 121 Officers, B oard of M anagers ...... 123 General A gent, S tate D irectors ...... 124 MISSIONARY BEGINNINGS

In the early part of the nineteenth century the position of Baptists in America was not one of great prominence. With little organization, they were widely scattered and without facilities for easy communication among themselves. The formation of the English Baptist Missionary Society, which had taken place in 1792, and the early efforts of the pioneer missionaries in India had, however, aroused a deep interest in this country, so that con­ siderable money was raised and sent to their aid. The interest thus awak­ ened and fostered was accentuated also by the reading of letters from Dr. William Carey, which appeared from time to time in the Massachusetts Baptist Missionary Magazine. When early in 1812 a company of five young men was set apart for service in foreign lands, and sailed from our shores, a deep impression was made upon Baptists, although the volunteers were of another denomination.

One of these young men, Adoniram Judson, read his New Testament with great thoroughness during his voyage to India, and as a result accepted the Baptist view of baptism and wrote a letter which was received in Boston, January 19, 1813, in which he said: “ Should there be formed a Baptist So­ ciety for the support of missions in these parts, I should be ready to consider myself their missionary.” This challenge profoundly stirred the Baptists, so that they began at once to make plans to undertake this work. Luther Rice, another of the young men, having experienced a like change in belief, returned to America to plead the cause of missions among the Baptists, the direct result of his efforts being the organization at Philadelphia, May 21, 1814, of “The General Convention of the Baptist Denomination in the United States for Foreign Missions, and other important objects relating to the Redeemer’s Kingdom,” popularly known as the Triennial Convention. The delegates assembled on May 18, a fact which has led to the erroneous statement frequently made that the Convention was organized on that date.

It is significant that the call to engage in foreign mission work was the first thing that led to organization and unity among Baptists in this coun­ try. In 1845 the Southern Baptists withdrew because of a difference of opinion growing out of the slavery question, and in 1846 the name of the Society was changed to The American Baptist Missionary Union. The name was again altered in 1910, becoming American Baptist Foreign Mission Society. The headquarters were established at Boston, Mass., in 1826, and in 1920 were removed to New York. At the annual meeting in 1908, the Society became a co-operating society of the Northern Baptist Convention. PREFACE

A real effort has been put forth to make this book more than a formal annual report. It is that, but we believe there is about it a plus element making it more attractive, more readable, and more serviceable. The format is different from the annual re­ ports hitherto issued. The order in which the material is pre­ sented has been changed. Pictures have been added. Some statistical tables of interest to only a very few have been left out. The ones included either deserve a place in a volume like this because of their general interest or they have been retained as important parts of a permanent record for the year. It is the hope of the editor, therefore, that this may not be just another report to be accepted, filed, and forgotten, but one to be read, marked, referred to, and quoted from throughout the year. Northern Baptists have a right to know how the mis­ sionaries, officers, and Board of Managers of their Foreign Mission Society have discharged their trust. How can they know without a report like this? How can they know with it if it remains unread? Our part has been to make it available and readable. Here it is, therefore, with the hope that it may be—read! “Prepare ye the way of the Lord, make his paths straight. Every valley shall be filled, and every mountain and hill shall be brought low, and the crooked shall be made straight, and the rough ways shall be made smooth; And all flesh shall see the salvation of God.”—Luke 3: 4b-6 ALONG KINGDOM HIGHWAYS

RRESPECTIVE of what the future may hold, for decades now the highways and seaways of the world have been kept I open for the free course of the gospel. Piracy is practically unknown. Highway robbery and brigandage have been all but eliminated as travel hazards. The missionaries of the Cross, along with all other world travelers, have moved freely from nation to nation and often far inland over well-marked caravan routes or little-used footpaths or pony trails. Few places have been unopen or inaccessible, and few have been unreached.

Distance Barriers Reduced Further, with each passing year, the difficulties of travel have been reduced, and more notably the time required to go from one place to another. It took our grandparents much longer to go from New York to New Orleans than it now takes us to go from New York to Shanghai. With the coming of ocean clipper planes and great continental airways, no place on the earth is, in point of time, far removed from any other. Highways’ and skyways, ocean lanes and railway trunk lines have reduced dis­ tance to a relatively inconsequential barrier.

“Unto the Ends of the Earth . . . Along these routes of travel our missionaries have gone. They have gone to Japan, and in fewer than fourscore years, they and other missionaries have called into being a Church of Christ which gives every evidence of having been built on the rock and, therefore, able to withstand the storms which are now beating upon it—even if every missionary has to withdraw. They have gone to China, and in a little more than a hundred years have succeeded in winning both coolies and statesmen to the extent that China has every possibility of becoming as truly a Christian nation as any the world has ever known. They have gone to the Philippines, and schools and churches and hospitals have brought light, life, and hope to thousands who now are members of the 7 8 AMERICAN BAPTIST FOREIGN MISSION SOCIETY

An Easter baptismal scene, Golaghat, Assam

Christian church. They have gone to India and have already succeeded in securing such a sure place for Christ in India’s thought and life that all of her other religions have been lifted, willingly or unwillingly, wittingly or unwittingly, to higher levels because of Him. They have gone to Burma and have been so blessed of God that the churches and schools there are today producing a significantly high proportion of national leaders in all walks of life. They have gone to Africa and have built strong churches in what was only a few decades ago primeval forests and seemingly impenetrable jungles. “Prepare ye the way of the Lord, make his paths straight.” That is what our missionaries have done and are doing. And the Lord Himself has deigned to travel over the ways thus prepared and the paths thus made straight. In the following pages all who read may travel along these kingdom highways in Japan, China, the Philippines, Burma, India, and Congo and see what God by His gracious spirit has brought to pass. ALONG KINGDOM HIGHWAYS 9

ALONG KINGDOM HIGHWAYS IN JAPAN The year 1940 was the most critical in the entire history of our work in Japan, and it closed in the midst of great uncer­ tainty and anxiety. The union of all Baptists of Japan in one Japan Baptist Kyodan (denomination) was reported last year.

National Movements Affecting the Church The registration of this Baptist body with the government under the Religious Organizations Law met with unexpected delays and was never consummated. The whole plan was tem­ porarily abandoned in a new crisis. This came in midsummer, under the pressure of long-continued war conditions, as a part of a national movement toward totalitarianism and an alignment in the world struggle with Germany and Italy. Of the Protestant Christian churches three demands were made: that dependence on foreign financial support cease; that missionaries be removed from all executive or administrative positions, and from teaching positions which involved “thought” subjects; and that the vari­ ous Protestant denominations combine in a single United

Waseda students at Benninghoff home, Japan 10 AMERICAN BAPTIST FOREIGN MISSION SOCIETY

Church. These demands were enforced by a popular and extra- legal means, and have never been embodied in law. Though conflict between national ideas and Christianity as such has not been absent, these changes reflect an anti-foreign rather than an anti-Christian attitude. The Japan Baptist Kyodan held a general meeting September 15 and 16, 1940, at which the following resolutions were adopted:

1. The Nippon Baputesuto Kirisuto Kyodan determines to become self- supporting and independent from March 31, 1941, from which date it declines financial help from the foreign mission societies. 2. In the spirit of mutual help, the member churches, schools, and social- work institutions of the Kyodan will accomplish their own self-support and independence. 3. We, the members of the Kyodan, deeply appreciating the present situation, forgetting self and serving the common good, will seek to over­ come the present sufferings.

At the same meeting the Kyodan approved church union in principle, and appointed a committee to negotiate with other church groups. In evaluating the above resolutions, it must be remembered that the Kyodan has acted under irresistible pressure from with­ out, though some of its conclusions are along the line of pre­ viously held and legitimate aspirations. In our work in Japan, Japanese Christians have long been in complete control. The missionaries have served under the Japan Baptist Convention. Hence there has been a minimum of dis­ location in the program of churches and institutions. In some cases the service of missionaires has been little aifected, but in others the result has been to cut them off from their accustomed tasks. The whole situation in Japan has been made more difficult and complex by the growing tension between Japan and the United States and the consequent repeated advice of our State Depart­ ment that women and children and men not essentially needed should leave Japan.

Steps Taken in the Crisis Because of this total situation the Board has made it clear that any missionaries who desire to withdraw may do so. It has ALONG KINGDOM HIGHWAYS 11

To T H E AMERICAN BAPTIST FOREIGN MISSION SOCIETY Presenting this token of remembrance for the long and untiring co-operation with us, I wish to express the deepest gratitude and appreciation on behalf of THE TOKYO MISAKI TABERNACLE With Best Wishes Director—Tota Fujii Tokyo, March, 1941

Inscription on vase presented by Japanese Christians recommended for consideration the withdrawal of mothers with children, of those in poor health, or those whose furloughs or retirement is near. On April 15, 1941, seven persons of our staff are still in Japan and ten are in the United States. Two of these who have come home are here for retirement, six are on fur­ lough due now or within a year, and the remaining two are mothers who have come with their children, the fathers remain­ ing in Japan. Early in the crisis the Board, mindful of the tremendous dif­ ficulties our Japanese brethren were facing, determined its policy toward the Japan Baptist K)'odan. In November, 1940, the. Board voted:

To instruct the foreign secretaries to continue the correspondence, maintaining fellowship with the Japan Baptist Kyodan, and seeking to discover suitable conditions mutually acceptable to the Kyodan and to the foreign societies, under which the missionaries of the societies may con­ tinue in Japan to bear witness to the gospel, and to serve the best interests of the Kyodan.

In the light of the Kyodan’s heroic undertaking to achieve immediate self-support, a course which will require the churches 12 AMERICAN BAPTIST FOREIGN MISSION SOCIETY to give some four times as much as they have formerly con­ tributed, our Japan missionaries urged the Board to make special good-will appropriations to the Kyodan and its related institu­ tions. This was done in February, 1941. Reports since received from Japan indicate sincere gratitude for this timely help.

Plans for a United Church For the past six months several commissions, representative of the various denominations in Japan, have been at work on an organizational set-up for a new united church. Many dif­ ficulties have been encountered. It is understood that a plan has been adopted and will be shortly implemented. The Protestant Episcopal and Greek Orthodox churches choose not to be in­ cluded. The union promises, at the beginning, to be of a type allowing a large degree of freedom for the former denomina­ tions. There is every reason to expect that the United Church will work out a real place for the missionary.

An Unbroken Fellowship Our missionaries bear testimony to the staunch convictions and character of Japanese Christians. A new sense of pro­ prietorship and responsibility is evident. The present abnormal war-psychology will certainly pass, and it is not unreasonable to expect new opportunities to appear for the Japanese Church and all those who serve it. A trusted Japanese Baptist leader writes :•

Please convey our profound gratitude to our friends in America for what they have done for the past seventy years, and tell them that what­ ever may happen the fellowship through Christ between us shall never be broken; and that we will stand firm in faith in Him and for His Kingdom even unto death. ALONG KINGDOM HIGHWAYS 13

ALONG KINGDOM HIGHWAYS IN CHINA For the whole of China, the year 1940 was one of continuing bitter resistance to the Japanese invasion, of an increasingly severe blockade, of bombing attacks on hundreds of towns, and of an economic situation becoming rapidly worse. Of these fac­ tors, blockade and sky-rocketing prices have been by far the most serious. Vital supplies, especially medicines, are becoming more and more difficult to secure in the interior. In some places the cost of living has advanced more than 1000 per cent. This has been particularly hard on middle class “white collar” em­ ployees. Preachers, teachers, clerks, and even physicians and nurses are having a desperate time to make ends meet. Many have been forced to seek other employment in order to keep their families from starvation. Substantial grants-in-aid have been made from the Joint China Emergency Fund, but these have been small in comparison with the need.

Chinese donors and friends of the Hopo Hospital, South China, at the Tiventieth Anniversary, January, 1941 14 AMERICAN BAPTIST FOREIGN MISSION SOCIETY

Major military events have been few in number. The Japa­ nese are attempting to resolve the stalemate by political moves, blockade, and starvation. The Chinese are resisting with incred­ ible fortitude. Some rifts have appeared in China’s political unity. These have been serious, but are not likely to prove de­ cisive. Late in October the Japanese took Shaohing in East China but retired after three days, setting fire to a large section of the city as they departed. In March Chaoyang in South China was occupied.

War Indemnity and Missionary Love Early in 1940 negotiations with the Japanese authorities were consummated and $60,000 was paid to the supporting Northern and Southern boards in settlement of damages to the property of the University of Shanghai. While this represented only about one-third of the monetary losses sustained, it was thought wise to accept the Japanese offer. At the same time missionaries of the two Boards received $3,600 toward their personal losses, every cent of which they turned over to their Chinese fellow- workers for whom no indemnity could be obtained.

Baptist Stations in Free and Occupied China It is of real concern to mission work to note (May 1, 1941) : Japanese Occupied: East China—Huchow, Hangchow, Shang­ hai (in part), Shaohing, Ningpo; South China—Swatow, Chaochow'fu, Chaoyang; West China—none. Free China: East China—Kinhwa; South China—Kityang, Ungkung, Hopo, Meihsien; West China—all stations.

The Tragic Staff Situation The threat of war between Japan and the United States also has affected our work in China, but not nearly so seriously as in Japan. The State Department advice for withdrawal was not pressed in Free China. For its missionaries in occupied China, the Board followed the same policy as for Japan. (See page 10.) The result to April IS, 1941, has been the return to America of five mothers with their children, one single woman on ad­ vanced furlough, and two couples whose retirement was hastened ALONG KINGDOM HIGHWAYS 15 by ill health due largely to strain. This represents less than five per cent of our total staff. The missionary staff situation, on the whole and irrespective of war conditions, has become quite alarming- during the year. It has now reached a point where radical measures for rein­ forcement must be taken. From South China, Mr. and Mrs. R. T. Capen and Mr. and Mrs. B. L. Baker have had retirement hastened by health conditions. The Society suffered a tragic and wholly unexpected loss in the sudden death of Rev. B. H. Lue- beck, Ph.D. In East China, Ningpo, due to furloughs, has had no General Board missionary for the year. Three key families are near retirement age, with poor health a contributing factor, while another family works under severe health limitations. W est China appears to be better off, but when one considers the age and health of the missionaries and the pioneer char­ acter of that field, as well as the new responsibilities and oppor­ tunities confronting them, it would be a grave mistake to question the need for reinforcement. The strain on all of our mis­ sionaries, in the West as well as in the East and South, of nearly four years of war, has been so steady and at times so nearly unendurable that those in the home office live in fear of the bad news that almost any day may bring! The missionaries have endured everything heroically and their lives and witness have borne fruit and made for new and hitherto unparalleled opportunities.

Triumph through Suffering We may still be gratified at the results achieved in spite of difficulties. The churches have kept open, and their message has had a wide and responsive hearing. Lay leadership has been developed and church training programs, especially in East China, have been multiplied. Retreats for pastors have been held in all missions with encouraging results. The schools above primary grade have generally maintained their work, though economic difficulties and bombing attacks have presented obstacles. The University of Shanghai has a record enrollment. Nanking University and the West China Union University have combined their influential and significant work at Chengtu. At no time in our generation have students 16 AMERICAN BAPTIST FOREIGN MISSION SOCIETY

New Medical and Dental buildings under construction, West China Union University been so responsive to the gospel as they are now. West China Union Theological College is growing. Hospitals have been never more needed or appreciated. In Ningpo, Dr. L. C. Ting, of the Hwa Mei Hospital, led a vic­ torious fight against the bubonic plague. Mrs. B. H. Luebeck, at the Ungkung Hospital, reports severe tropical ulcer cases, the result of malaria and undernourishment. Bombing cases have taxed their resources to the utmost. Thanks to White Cross supplies some needed surgical dressings have been available. In East and South China, much relief work has been done, notably among children. The hospital and the relief work have opened all doors to the Chinese Christian leaders and their missionary colleagues. And thus the work goes on. As a West China missionary put it in writing of these tragic days: “We work with time and truth, with Christ and personality, and we have confidence and hope!” ALONG KINGDOM HIGHWAYS 17

ALONG KINGDOM HIGHWAYS IN THE PHILIPPINES The general situation in the Philippines is in vivid contrast to that in Japan and China. World conditions have brought serious economic stringency, and there have been periods of some alarm, but peace and safety have been unbroken. The work in all de­ partments has gone steadily forward.

A New Spirit for the New Day The difficult period in which the work has been shifted to ,the Filipinos themselves for major support and administration is about over. The Convention has planned well and carried through its programs effectively. In forecasting the future, it

Iloilo Mission Hospital and Student Nurses has shown foresight and a will to move forward. Best of all, as Mr. S. S. Feldman writes, “There has been a growing spirit of intimate fellowship between missionaries and national leaders. Many of the tensions of several years ago are now things of the past.” 18 AMERICAN BAPTIST FOREIGN MISSION SOCIETY

The churches have shown a marked interest in erecting suit­ able buildings and in securing pastors. Evangelistic results have been encouraging. A program of church retreats and training institutes has been carried through, and a good beginning made in a summer camp for youth. Adequate support for adequate leadership is still a problem. After its first year under a Filipino director, Dr. Porras, the Iloilo Mission Hospital is making an excellent record. The staff includes for the first time a Filipino woman physician. Em­ manuel Hospital at Capiz has built a new annex. Both hospitals have extended their service and are operating under their own Boards of Control, subject to the oversight of the Convention. The economic stringency has resulted in a very severe financial crisis for Central Philippine College. When Dr. Harland F. Stuart, for family health reasons, found it impossible to return to the Philippines after furlough, the trustees elected Dean R. F. Chambers as president. Progress has been made in integrat­ ing the courses of the School of Theology and those of the Baptist Missionary Training School, which is now in the Wom­ en’s Division of the School of Theology. Rev. Alfredo Cathe­ dral, graduate of Colgate-Rochester Divinity School, was elected Dean of the School of Theology to succeed Mr. Chambers.

Co-operation for Better Work In April, 1940, the Philippines Committee of the Foreign Missions Conference called a conference in Washington on Christian work in the Islands. The meeting brought together representatives of all boards working there, including mission­ aries and Filipino leaders. On the basis of thorough preparation of a number of studies, substantial results, both educational and inspirational, were achieved: co-operation between the boards, united planning, and an advanced program for the Federation of Evangelical Churches. Particularly significant were plans made for extending leper work, for improving theological edu­ cation and rural work, and for following up the migration of great groups from other islands to Mindanao, where pioneer conditions prevail. Large returns come from relatively small expenditure of money in every aspect of our work in the Philippines. ALONG KINGDOM HIGHWAYS 19

ALONG KINGDOM HIGHWAYS IN BURMA The most famous road of the past year has been the Burma Road. Its rail-head is , its river-head Bhamo, both im­ portant Baptist centers. As the road winds to the China border from Lashio, it passes the Baptist Church and Bible School, one of the outstanding achievements of the Kachin Christians. Near the China border, the Bhamo branch runs past

A section of the Burma-China Road the Namkham Hospital, brought to a place of ever-widening influence by Dr. Gordon Seagrave. Over the Shweli Bridge and on toward the river route to Rangoon, the road passes the fine Bhamo compound and new Baptist church, another one built by the Kachins to celebrate the jubilee of Christian work among them. From that day when Dr. Roberts baptized the first six Kachins to today, when there are almost twelve thousand Kachin church members, we see a tremendous advance. In this area, special government aid has made it possible for Pyinmana Agri­ cultural School to carry on an extension program of rural improvement. W. H. Cummings, of the Pyinmana school, is in 20 AMERICAN BAPTIST FOREIGN MISSION SOCIETY charge of the work. Trained men are stationed in strategic cen­ ters. The Burma Road is part of the Christian highway.

On the Far Frontiers One of the most important developments along the Burma- China frontier has been the opening of Pang Yang station by Rev. Harold Young, son of the great pioneer, Rev. William Young. Harold and his brother Vincent (stationed at Bana) have welcomed into the church during the past year almost four thousand members. Principal Brayton Case, of Pyinmana, writes of the work:

In the three years since Harold Young opened Pang Yang, he has built a mission residence, chapel, dispensary, a small school building, and three teachers’ houses, which is a marvel of achievement when one realizes how all of it has been hewn out of the local forest timber with primitive tools. Its location appears strategic .... It was good to see how all the different races in this region were being evangelized .... The two brother missionaries talk the various languages like hill tribesmen. The friendly attitude of the people was striking .... Many villages are ready to turn to Christ as soon as they can be instructed .... A movement like that which we have seen among the Karens and Kachins is taking place here, and to build these new Christians up into the likeness of Christ is our task.

The Judson Bible and Judson College October 24, 1940, marked the one-hundredth anniversary of the completion by Adoniram Judson of his revision of the Burmese Bible. Twenty-one years after Judson had begun the translation task, he sent to the press his first draft. Immediately thereafter he began the six-year revision. The path of hardship and devotion which this great missionary and scholar followed through these years in order to give to the Burmese people the Bible in their own tongue is too well known to need comment. October was a month of special celebration in Burma. The local press gave real prominence to articles dealing with the work of Adoniram Judson, Ann Hasseltine Judson, and the great “work of Bible translation done by missionaries following in the footsteps of Judson.” The climax came at the Burma Baptist Convention in Rangoon, with representatives of over a thousand churches comprising a total membership of more than 150,000. ALONG KINGDOM HIGHWAYS 21

This same convention was marked by another significant event coming as part of the fruit of Judson’s work, the formal recognition of the transfer of the principalship of Judson College from Dr. G. S. Jury to Dr. U Hla Bu. Dr. U Hla Bu is the first Burmese to become principal of this important in­ stitution. He is the son of Rev. U Tha Din, for many years a teacher in the Bur­ mese seminary. His doctor’s degree is from the University of London, and he is a distinguished teacher of psychology and logic. In these days when national feeling runs high, Dr. U Hla Bu is meeting exceedingly difficult Dr. and Mrs. U Hla Bu and problems in a most Eleanor San Tay able manner. Government is now represented on the governing body of the college by four members. Three of these are Judson graduates, two of them outstanding in their Christian leadership. Twenty- three representative Christians were already members of the governing body. In the Burma government cabinet of seven ministers, three—U Ba Yin, Minister of Education; Saw Pe Tha, Judicial Minister, and U Ba Than, Minister of Commerce and Industry—are Judson graduates. Two other government ministers have children in the college. In countless ways, this vital institution is proving itself worthy of America’s first for­ eign missionary for whom it is named. The enrollment of Judson College (1940-1941) reached a total of 521, representing sixteen racial groups. Although Bud­ dhists, Hindus, Moslems and other religions are noted, the Christian group is predominant in both influence and number. 22 AMERICAN BAPTIST FOREIGN MISSION SOCIETY

ALONG KINGDOM HIGHWAYS IN ASSAM The Assam-China Road, unlike the Burma-China Road, exists only in orders for a survey. The map of its proposed course, as given wide publicity in the daily press, shows the road as beginning at Ningyuen, China, where Baptist missionaries were located for many years, and ending at Sadiya, the outpost station of the Assam Mission. John Selander, missionary at Sadiya writes: “Growing forests and forces are not noisy; only destruc-

Five thousand Sema Nagas at Annual Association, Naga Hills, Assam tive forces are noisy.” It may well be that after many years of quiet work, the hope of the 1800’s of making Sadiya an outpost to enter into China, will be realized. American Baptists are deeply moved by the thought that in the hills along both sides of the Burma-China border there is a group of almost sixty thou­ sand church members, while on the other side of those same hills, on the Assam-Burma-China border, there is another group of fifty thousand or more.. Northern Baptists have practically the exclusive responsibility for the evangelization of this area and for the care and nurture of the churches now established there. If certain government proposals are carried through, this great group of hill tribes may be consolidated into one district whose leadership bears real promise of being largely Christian. ALONG KINGDOM HIGHWAYS 23

In the Impur area one of the great movements into the church is now taking place. There are today more than 21,000 baptized believers in this field alone, and limits on admission to the church are set by the ability of the missionary and his Naga co-laborers to train and examine those who desire to be baptized.

The Jorhat Christian Schools Few places boast so important a group of mission schools as is found at Jorhat, Assam: the Bible school, the high school, and normal school. Encouraging reports have been received. The Bible school has been under the principalship of Rev. J. W. Cook since 1938. Because our churches in Assam minister to hill tribes and valley peoples, tea-garden laborers and As­ samese intellectuals, Mr. Cook’s task of training leaders for these churches is not an easy one. His major emphasis now is on the preparation of pastors for village churches. The school’s an­ nual report, Vision, contains substantial evidence that, under his leadership, real progress is being made in this endeavor. The high school is under the direction of Principal C. E. Hunter. This school reports a continued increase in the number and percentage of Christians in the upper classes. These classes are drawn most widely from the mission, and the fact that their enrollment is now 82 per cent Christian gives assurance of a definitely Christian atmosphere in the school. The Bible classes contribute to this end. Mr. Hunter is also the principal of the normal school which has the high responsibility of preparing teachers for the govern­ ment schools of Assam. If these teachers can be sent forth, some as Christians and all with a sympathetic understanding of the Christian faith, the cause of Christ will be greatly advanced throughout Assam. Principal Hunter reports that in both the high school and the normal school a real effort is made to reach the boys individually. His word is that in this effort the “power of prayer is manifest always. Friendliness and frankness have won the boys to open their hearts and to reveal their needs.” These schools are established not only to give adequate pre­ paration for service to Christian students, but also to win to Christ non-Christian students in the course of their training. The fact that in both the high school and the normal school, 24 AMERICAN BAPTIST FOREIGN MISSION SOCIETY

Christians and non-Christians study and live side by side is helpful to both alike: to the non-Christians, it brings the mes­ sage of Christ; to the Christians it brings the opportunity and obligation of witnessing to Christ by word and life.

Willis F. Pierce Memorial Hospital Jorhat is not only an important school center for Baptist work in Assam, it is also an important medical center. The dispen­ sary and hospital there serve a widespread con­ stituency. A recent generous gift from Dr. W. F. Pierce, of California, is making possible the enlargement of the hospital building, by the addition of a unit giving two new wards, six private rooms, a supply room, X-ray unit, office and examining rooms. The institution bears the name: Willis F. Pierce Memorial Hospital. Two missionary names have been prominently h A. Ahlquist connected with the Christian hospital in Jorhat— Dr. H. W. Kirby and Dr. Jonas Ahlquist. Dr. Kirby retired from active service in November, 1940, but has continued his interest in leper work there. As this report is being prepared, word comes of the death, in a motor accident, of Dr. Ahlquist. Dr. Ahlquist seemed in his very prime of usefulness. Although an eye defect had prevented his doing delicate surgical work at Jorhat, he had been devoting himself, with his customary wholeheartedness, to the needs of Kangpokpi and the work in Manipur. His death brings acutely to our attention the urgent staff needs not only in Assam, but also in every area where the society is at work. There is profound gratitude that the gift of Dr. W ..F. Pierce to the Jorhat Hospital was received before Dr. Ahlquist’s untimely death, and that Dr. Ahlquist thus had the assurance of the widen­ ing and continuing influence of this important medical center to which so much of his life had been given. Dr. Oliver Hasselblad has been in active charge of the hospital since the completion of his language study, and he is continuing a good work there. The Jorhat Christian schools and the Willis F. Pierce Memorial Hospital combine to give the complete Christian impact in Jorhat itself, and the influence of these important centers of light and healing is felt throughout the entire Assam Mission. ALONG KINGDOM HIGHWAYS 25

ALONG KINGDOM HIGHWAYS IN SOUTH INDIA Notable in the advances in Kingdom work in India of recent years has been the movement to promote adult literacy. As an adult church member learns to read, he not only takes an important iirst step toward economic advancement, but he is also enabled to read the Bible for himself, participate in responsive readings in church service, learn Christian hymns, and gain the sense of no longer being a depressed outcaste. The South India Mission has shown fine judgment in securing Mr. P. Samuel, M.A., former principal of our Ongole High School, and the son of one of our able pastors, to give full time to adult literacy

Roadside clinic in South India 26 AMERICAN BAPTIST FOREIGN MISSION SOCIETY work. Such training is a form of helpfulness which has almost unlimited possibilities for strengthening the South India churches and for helping them to win to Christ the great group of Sudras now looking with open heart and mind toward Him. The Sudras are neither Brahmins nor outcastes.

Sudra Witnesses for Christ In a recent issue of the Baptist Missionary Review, Rev. P. S. Curtis gives an able evaluation of the Telugu Sudra movement. He finds a growing dissatisfaction among the Sudras with Hinduism and an ever-increasing awareness of the marvelous manifestations of the power of God in the lives of their neigh­ bors, the outcaste converts. If the Sudras can be won in in­ creasing numbers, they will bring to the Telugu church greater self-reliance and the ability to withstand persecution. Christian Sudras are keen witnesses for Christ, strong supporters of Sabbath observance, and able to contribute far more in a material way than are the Christians from the Mala and Madiga outcaste groups. The need is for more missionaries and more Indian leaders to help bring this great Indian group to Christ.

Clough Memorial Hospital Ongole, with its Prayer Meeting Hill, its great group of churches, its schools, and its Clough Memorial Hospital, is the best known mission station on the Bay of Bengal. A generous specific gift to the hospital, two annual installments of $5,000 each, has made possible the extension of the maternity ward, a large increase in operating room facilities, a shadow-free lamp for night operations, and a new X-ray. All of this is a memorial to Allen L. Upjohn, a grandson of the pioneer missionary, John E. Clough, for whom the hospital was named. “During the past year,” Dr. Arthur G. Boggs reports, “there have been 2,800 in-patients and over 10,000 new out-patients...... One of the rewards of our service is the satisfaction of seeing our Indian doctors take over clinical responsibility with skill and competency.” ALONG KINGDOM HIGHWAYS 27

ALONG KINGDOM HIGHWAYS IN BENGAL-ORISSA Santipore, or “City of Peace,” bears this name because its founding was the result of the rescue of a number of children from the hands of hill tribes who had marked the children for human sacrifice. Though it is the most difficult of access of any of our Bengal-Orissa stations, the work carried on there by Rev. and Mrs. W. C. Osgood has assumed unusual significance and importance. Through a special fund, the First Church, Pitts­ burgh, has made available moneys for the purchase of a motor­ cycle, the provision of a better water-supply system, improve­ ments in the Middle English School, and the erection of a dispensary and maternity welfare building.

A New Missionary Family—After Twelve Years Philip and Henrietta Geary arrived in Bengal-Orissa in 1940 and are the first new missionary family during a period of twelve years. Mission Secretary Brush writes of the eager wel­ come accorded these young missionaries.

Mission-Trained Men for India’s Industries The Christian High and Tech­ nical School, Balasore, continues its fine service to the mission and the community at large. A late re­ port tells that the Technical School is co-operating with the Central Government in training men for industrial development in India:

This war has cut off many of the sources of supply. Now India realizes that- she may begin to take a larger place in the industrial world. The ob­ stacle is lack of trained men. We have offered to take some forty addi­ tional men for intensive training along the lines of our present curriculum. This will also give us a firm standing with the industrial folk and will help our men to be placed after they are Well-drilling, Balasore, trained. Bengal-Orissa 28 AMERICAN BAPTIST FOREIGN MISSION SOCIETY

ALONG KINGDOM HIGHWAYS IN THE BELGIAN CONGO Twice during 1940, the European war has occasioned tense hours for our missionaries in the Belgian Congo. The first time was when the Belgian troops laid down their arms. What was to become of Belgium’s only colony? Fortunately, the word soon went out that the Belgians outside of Belgium proper would continue at war with Germany. The second hour of grave anxiety was when France concluded an armistice. How would this affect French Congo? French Equatorial Africa, if closely linked with the Vichy Government, might be led into conflict with the Belgian Congo. When, however, it announced its stand with General de Gaulle and Free France, our missionaries breathed freely once again. The War and the Prophet Movement Though free from active involvement in war, the Congo and our missionaries there have been affected in a measure. Mails have been slow; prices have risen; certain commodities, includ­ ing medicine at times, have been unobtainable; furlough travel has been by indirect and expensive routes. Beyond these things, the war seems to have occasioned a revival of the Prophet Movement which followed closely after the last war. Prophetic utterances, purporting to be interpretations of certain biblical prophecies, connected with license in the lusts of the flesh, have led hundreds of Christians astray and have given the Jesuit missionaries occasion to try to dis­ credit the Protestant faith, though Catholics and Protestants alike have been involved in it. A missionary speaks of this Congo Christian family Prophet Movement as having ALONG KINGDOM HIGHWAYS 2 9 brought the darkest hours in the life of the mission, but expresses faith in the coming of a new dawn. Rev. P. A. McDiarmid says that in this testing time those Christians who have remained true “have gained depth and rootage for their Christian convictions,” There has been no far-reaching revival, but there has been greater interest in giving for local work and in winning others to Christ. One church gave 500 francs for Belgian refugees. This is highly significant, for people of the Congo are not accustomed to providing for the white man.

Re-establishing Mission Boundary Lines During the year, Baptists turned over to the Swedish Mission 51 villages on the north side of the Congo River, with 2,400 church members. In exchange we received 30 villages and some 700 members on the south side of the Congo. This exchange was made so that reasonable boundary lines could be established. It is an evidence of a fine spirit of unity and co-operation on the part of mission societies, missionaries, and native Christians.

Congo Church Discipline Another instance of unity in effort and policy is given in the fact that representatives of the four Protestant missions work­ ing in the Lower Congo met at Kimpese to determine how to deal with a growing tendency to lower church standards and to disregard church rules. Grievous offenses, specially the making and use of intoxicating liquors, were being fairly generally tol­ erated. The representatives of the four missions unanimously agreed to urge the churches to adhere to their own rules in such matters and to dismiss those who would not, for example, ab­ stain from making and using intoxicants. The four missions in annual meetings confirmed this action, following which the pas­ tors in our Banza Manteke field dealt so uncompromisingly with individual members that many were dismissed from the churches. By this drastic action, the moral and spiritual life of the church has been strengthened. The Tondo field has witnessed an increase in church member­ ship for the year, due not to an increase in baptisms, though there have been many, but to the large numbers who have sought restoration to the fellowship of the church. 3 0 AMERICAN BAPTIST FOREIGN MISSION SOCIETY

Personal Evangelism and Dedication of Life New converts are being encouraged to win others to Christ. Those who come for baptism are asked if they have sought the conversion of any of their friends. A surprisingly large number can give the names of people who have been won through their testimony. The need for dedication to Christian service has had special consideration during the year. At Sona Bata almost all of the graduating class accepted the teaching posts assigned by the churches. Many of them expect to return later for further study either at Kimpese or in the Medical Training School at Sona Bata. A total of eighteen carefully trained medical assistants have gone out after five years of study at the Sona Bata Medical School. In spite of offers of positions with the state or industrial concerns at salaries several times the ones paid in the mission, all but four have remained in mission service.

Missionary Genius in Education Nursery schools and mothercraft classes are common enough as part of our total educational program in the Congo. But this year Mrs. C. E. Smith has offered a course in familycraft for married and engaged couples. It occasioned no little stir among a people who are accustomed to think of marriage as an institu­ tion having only economic significance for the individuals con­ cerned. But missionaries must be social as well as geographical pioneers. Classes in familycraft can help to solve the problem of conserving what is best in the old and combining it with what is best in the new and thus making for Christian homes and a strong, indigenous church in the Congo. Our missionaries deserve high praise for their persistence and effectiveness in village school work despite many handicaps, lack of adequate or permanent buildings, perennial food short­ age necessitating the shortening of the school year, the restric­ tion of the number of students because budgets are severely restricted, and the need to have students spend more hours in manual labor than in the classroom. To do good school work even under ideal conditions calls for hard work and creative ability. To achieve good results under conditions which our ALONG KINGDOM HIGHWAYS 31 missionary teachers face is evidence of heroic endeavor and something closely akin, to genius.

Medical Work The war has so limited medical supplies for the Congo that for months only emergency operation cases could be dealt with. Now, thanks to White Cross supplies and the arrival of medi­ cines from both England and America, the medical work is pro­ gressing normally again. The new hospital at Moanza is the ful­ fillment of a long-cherished dream. A doctor is sorely needed there. The nearest one now is at Vanga, six or seven walking days away. A graduate from Sona Bata Medical School (Ecole Protestante des Auxiliaries Medicaux au Congo), in Moanza, is able to care for some of the work. The Pierce Memorial Hospital at Kikongo experienced a kind of boycott for a while. Leaders of the fanatical Prophet Move­ ment urged people not to go to the white people for medicines or treatments. It was a new experience to have empty beds. Before the year ended, however, the staff faced the usual prob­ lem of what to do with all the seriously ill who came. This was specially true when Dr. Dorothea Witt visited the station for surgery. People have come to regard her as a miracle worker, for, they say, “Were not the blind made to see ?”

Willis F. Pierce Memorial Hospital, Kikongo 32 AMERICAN BAPTIST FOREIGN MISSION SOCIETY

And so the work of Northern Baptists along Kingdom high­ ways in the Belgian Congo continues. God grant that the sea­ ways to this and to all of our missions may be kept open so that teaching and healing ministries to people dear to His heart may be continued.

ALONG KINGDOM HIGHWAYS IN EUROPE

Contacts with our work in Europe were for a while almost completely broken by the war. During the year we have suc­ ceeded in mending a few of them. Some funds made available by the World Relief Committee have been used to bring real help to some of our Baptist pastors and their families. More would have been sent if we could have had any assurance that it would reach those for whom it was intended. Dr. W. O. Lewis, of the Baptist World Alliance, and special representative for Northern Baptists in Europe is making a brief official visit in several European countries in the interests of Christian work among Baptists.

A “GOOD SAMARITAN” ALONG KINGDOM HIGHWAYS World Relief Funds The World Relief Committee, of the Northern Baptist Con­ vention, has claimed the interest and attention of Board members and staff. Dr. P. H. J. Lerrigo was made Executive Secretary and, after his retirement as Home Secretary on October 31, 1940, continued to serve till the end of the fiscal year, April 30, 1941. Rev. J. R. Wilson has served as a member of the committee. Our Society provided office space for the commit­ tee the first year of its work, and many of the first individual gifts came in response to letter appeals directed to those who have shown special interest in thé work of foreign missions. Rev. P. H. Conrad, the recently appointed Secretary of the Council on Finance and Promotion for the Eastern States area, will succeed Dr. Lerrigo as the Executive Secretary of the World Relief Committee. The committee has succeeded in raising to date approximate­ ly $125,000. Appro­ priations have been made to such causes as: (1) relief of Baptist pastors and churches in the in­ A Chinese Madonna Amid the Ruins of Her Home vaded countries of Europe; (2) relief of the scattered and homeless millions in China’s devastated areas; (3) aid for the British Baptist Missionary Society’s work in China, India, and Africa; (4) aid for stranded missions and missionaries in many lands whose funds are cut off by the war; (5) aid for Christian refugees from European countries; (6) aid for some three million prisoners of war; (7) Baptist mission­ ary emergency relief; (8) United States military camp com­ munity service. Some of the organizations through which appropriations have been distributed are as follows: (1) The Church Committee for China Relief; (2) International Missionary.Council; (3) Ameri­ can Friends Service Committee; (4) International Committee of Y.M.C.A.’s; (5) The American Bible Society; (6) The American Committee for Christian Refugees; (7) the two For­ eign Mission Societies; (8) The American Baptist Home Mis­ sion Society.

The Church Committee for China Relief The Church Committee for China Relief was one of the first of many relief agencies to seek funds for distressed people in the present world crisis. Organized by vote of the Foreign Missions Conference of North America and the Federal Council of Churches, it has had the backing of almost all Protestant church bodies and has succeeded in securing and forwarding to China approximately $800,000. This committee has now joined with four other China relief agencies in a campaign to raise $5,000,000, every dollar of which will be needed for the beleaguered people of China. The other 34 AMERICAN BAPTIST FOREIGN MISSION' SOCIETY agencies involved in this joint appeal are: American Bureau for Medical Aid to China; China Emergency Relief Committee; China Aid Council; American Committee for Chinese War Orphans.

American Help for Orphaned Missions One of the agencies to which the Baptist World Relief Com­ mittee has made generous appropriations is the International Missionary Council for the Relief of Orphaned Missions. When the German armies overran Denmark, Holland, Belgium, Nor­ way, and France, and laid siege to the British Isles, several thousand Protestant missionaries in many parts of the world were cut off from their usual sources of income. German mis­ sionaries were also involved. The International Missionary Council, with its world-wide contacts, immediately began to gather facts and to appeal for funds. Other groups also have taken a similar initiative. As a result, practically all of the missionaries have been kept at their posts. This effort has meant not only food and clothing for them, but has enabled them to continue their God-assigned tasks. In America alone, over $1,000,000 have been secured for continental and British foreign missions. This service is one of the ways in which Christians today are holding the world together.

INFORMATION SERVICE FOR KINGDOM H IG HW AYS The Home Department in all of its work proceeds on the as­ sumption that as a foreign mission agency we have a story to tell that must be told here at home—a story of what God has done, what He is now doing, and what clearly He intends to do through us as Baptists. Efforts are being made to multiply the number of ways in which the story is told and the number of people telling it. The whole purpose is to assure continued support for the work and to increase that support. The secre­ taries of the Society give all the time they possibly can to keep­ ing the work and its needs before the Northern Baptist constituency. ALONG KINGDOM HIGHWAYS 35

Printer’s Ink All Kindreds and Tongues, an illustrated handbook setting forth the work of the two foreign societies, has been well re­ ceived. Other attractive literature in printed and mimeographed form has gone forth during the year in a larger volume than usual, and the demand for that which we prepare is increasing. Some of the titles are: Swords and Plowshares, Through the Canal to the Congo, The Most-Talked-of-Road in the World, Drop (the price of) a Bomb, In a World of Destruction North­ ern Baptists Build, and Dangerous Opportunities in China and Japan. In all of this literature an attempt has been made not only to report the work but also to remind readers why we are at work at all and to recall the great Christian convictions and the divine imperatives under which, in spite of all obstacles, we stay by our task. In a world of destructive forces, we are among those who, with God and truth, build for time and eternity.

The Missionaries Speak Our missionaries at home on furlough and certain of those on the retired list continue to be much in demand for deputation service. While some of this service is done under the direction of the Society, most of it is projected under the Field Activities Department of the Council on Finance and Promotion. Almost without exception, foreign missionaries have a drive, conviction, sense of mission, and background of experience which qualify them superbly for service in churches, Sunday schools, schools of missions, associations, conventions, and wherever else people are willing to have their missionary horizon lifted and their hearts and minds enlarged. Among those who have served notably during this past year are the following:

Burm a: J. R. Andrus, R. S. Buker, Mrs. J. H. Cope, V. W. Dyer, Mr. and Mrs. J. M. England, Mr. and Mrs. E. T. Fletcher, Ernest Grigg, Mrs. Ola Hanson, Mrs. H. K. Smith, L. W. Spring, Elizabeth Taylor, J. H . Telford. A ssam : E. E. Brock, J. E. Tanquist. China: H. R. S. Benjamin, Mrs. E. S. Burket, Mrs. E. H. Cressy, Mr. and Airs. D. S. Dye, Dr. and Mrs. F. W. Goddard, D. C. Graham, A. I. Nasmith, H. J. Openshaw, A. E. Root, Joseph Taj'lor, Mrs. Harold Thomas. Bengal- O rissa: J. G. Gilson, H. C. Long. South India: Mr. and Mrs. S. D. 36 AMERICAN BAPTIST FOREIGN MISSION SOCIETY

Bawden, Mr. and Mrs. A. M. Boggs, Wheeler Boggess, J. A. Curtis, B. M. Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. L. E. Rowland, W. A. Stanton, A. J. Tuttle, Thorlief Wathne. Japan: W. A. Axling. Philippine Islands: E. L. Ackley, H. S. Waters. Belgian Congo: Mr. and Mrs. B. W. Armstrong, L. A. Brown, Mr. and Mrs. M. S. Engwall, Dr. and Mrs. H. M. Freas, P. C. Metzger.

TORCH BEARERS ALONG KINGDOM HIGHWAYS The official retirement of Dr. J. C. Robbins and Dr. P. H. J. Lerrigo after many years of highly significant and devoted serv­ ice with the Society took place during the current budget year. A testimonial dinner was given in their honor in New York, on September 23, 1940.

Resolution on the Retirement of Rev. Joseph C. Robbins, D.D. The appointment of a missionary is, both for the appointee and the appointing board, an adventure of faith. One of the happiest of such adventures was the appointment, in January, 1902, of Joseph C. Robbins, educated at Brown University and Newton Theological Institution, to serve in the Philippine Islands. After one term of constructive and fruitful service he returned to this country in 1909, and, being prevented by family health conditions from continued residence in the tropics, became Secretary of the Student Volunteer Movement. In 1916 he was appointed Foreign Secretary of the American Baptist Foreign Mission Society with primary responsibility for Burma and the three India Missions. This position he held until his retirement on May 1st, 1940. T o this place of high responsibility, he brought a genius for friendship which has endeared him not only to thousands in this country but to many of other lands and races. He has discharged the difficult and complex duties of his office with clear insight, sound judgment and sympathetic understanding. During the twenty-four years of his secretary­ ship he visited Burma and India four times, and by wide reading and extensive correspondence has kept himself informed of current trends in political, economic, and spiritual life. To this labor he brought also complete consecration, deep earnestness, and a firm conviction of the primary importance of foreign missions. His contribution has been far greater than that required by the duties of his office. He has been constantly in demand as a public speaker, not only for the presentation of foreign missions, but in the interest of evangelism and many other phases of denominational work. He has found time to write three books embodying his observations and ex­ periences. He is also a Trustee of Brown University and of Newton Theological Institution. ALONG KINGDOM HIGHWAYS 37

The Board wishes also to express its appreciation of Mrs. Robbins and of her part in providing the home atmosphere which has enlarged Dr. Robbins’ usefulness. Musically inclined, she used her talent to ad­ vantage when in missionary service. She also began work among orphans and befriended Josef a Abiertas, later to become an outstanding lawyer and a leader among the women of the Islands. A charming hostess, Mrs. Robbins has opened her home to many missionaries and friends and has traveled with Dr. Robbins on his trips to the fields. The members of this Board and all who have been associated with Dr. Robbins in the work of this Society regret his retirement but rejoice in his life of faithful and efficient service. They rejoice also in his ap­ pointment to the faculty of Andover Newton Theological School where he will have opportunity to present the claims of what has always been his chief interest, the cause of foreign missions.

Resolution on the Retirement of Rev. P. H. J. Lerrigo, M.D., D.D. The retirement of Dr. P. H . J. Lerrigo on October 31, 1940, brought to an official close a notable service. Born in England, Dr. Lerrigo was ordained in Topeka, Kansas, in 1896. H e is a graduate in medicine from the New York Medical College and the Medico Chirurgical College of Philadelphia, now the graduate department of the University of Penn­ sylvania. He served for two years as medical missionary in St. Lawrence Island, Alaska. In 1902 he received appointment by the American Baptist Foreign Mission Society and with Mrs. Lerrigo went to the newly opened Philippine Mission. He established the hospital in Capiz, an institution which continues to grow. In 1913, due to illness in the family, he re­ turned to this country and immediately entered secretarial service as District Secretary for New England, then Executive Secretary for the Five Year Program. In 1919 he became Candidate Secretary and Medi­ cal Director of this Society and in 1921 was elected Home Secretary and Foreign Secretary for the Belgian Congo Mission. Three times he has visited the Congo and has seen the mission grow and consolidate under his leadership, a mission secretary appointed, and has led in the development of interdenominational co-operation. He has served as Chair­ man of the Committee of Reference and Counsel of the Foreign Mis­ sions Conference and as Chairman of its Medical Committee. He has also been Secretary of the American Congo Committee and is the author of six books. In his work Dr. Lerrigo has showTn patience, love, indefatigable zeal, and marked wisdom. In public utterance he has been winning, informing, moving to a high degree. His many offices and relationships with their demands for committee meetings, public addresses, administrative direc­ tion, and personal counsel are a testimony to his mind and heart, h>5 yision and consecration. 3 8 AMERICAN BAPTIST FOREIGN MISSION SOCIETY

Mrs. Lerrigo is the daughter of an eminent physician, Dr. George D. Dowkontt, the founder and director of the International Medical Mis­ sionary Society, in connection with which he was instrumental in helping to prepare for medical missionary service more than two hundred and fifty men and women physicians, some of whom served under our Board. Under the inspiration of her father’s life, Mrs. Lerrigo trained for medical missionary service, and when the hospital was established at Capiz, organized the nursing service and took part in the work of its dispensary clinics. She also participated in the activities of the Capiz Sunday school and work for women and children. To both, the Board of Managers conveys its deep appreciation of these monumental labors, its high regard and affection for them per­ sonally, and offers the prayer that God may give them yet many years for the Kingdom service they have loved so well.

Previous to this time, Randolph L. Howard, D.D., had assumed full administrative responsibility as foreign secretary for India and Burma as Dr. Robbins’ successor, and Mr. Dana M. Albaugh took over from Dr. Lerrigo responsibility for Europe and the Belgian Congo. Rev. J. R. Wilson, D.D., became Dr. Lerrigo’s successor as Home Secretary on November 1, 1940. Dr. Wilson also serves as Candidate Secretary. Rev. L. P. Jensen became an Associate Secretary on June 10, 1940, and is in charge of the Society’s western field office in Los Angeles. Those charged with new or enlarged responsibilities are work­ ing very closely together through the Officers’ Council, and 1941- 1942 will be the first full budget year in which the staff will carry responsibilities on the basis of the new assignments. This new staff comes into a rich heritage of achievement at a time when the problems facing the Christian missionary movement are usually complex and difficult. Retirement of Miss Maud Brook The Fannie Doane Home at Granville, Ohio, is maintained for children of missionaries serving in countries where climatic conditions or limited educational opportunities make it inadvis­ able for the children to live on the foreign field. The family at the home has averaged twenty-five in number during this year and ranged in age from kindergarten to seniors in high school. Miss Maud Brook, who has been in charge of the home since 1925, retired in October, 1940. She has been associated with ALONG KINGDOM HIGHWAYS 39 the administration of homes for Baptist missionaries’ children for more than thirty years, having been at Newton Center, Mass., and Morgan Park, 111., before going to Granville. At its November meeting, the Board paid tribute to Miss Brook for her devoted service. Upon the retirement of Miss Brook, the Board, after a search covering many months, asked Mr. and Mrs. S. W. Cummings, of Shelburne Falls, Mass., to take charge of the home. Mr. Cummings is the son of Rev. J. E. Cummings and was born in Burma. He and Mrs. Cummings came to their new task with good educational equipment, a rich experience of work among young people, and a deep Christian interest in the lives of the children in the home.

JO U R N EY ’S END Some who have traveled the Kingdom Highways in far coun­ tries have returned to the United States to spend their later years in retirement. Of these, fifteen have been called Home this year. Two others died in active service, one in Assam, the other in China.

Jonas A. Ahlquist, M.D. Twenty-five years of devoted activity as a missionary-physician in Assam is the record of Dr. Jonas A. Ahlquist. Brief cable news reported his death on March 12, 1941, as a result of a motor accident. Dr. Ahlquist, of Swedish parentage, came to the United States at an early age. He was a graduate of Creighton Medical College, Omaha, Nebraska, and took postgraduate work at Harvard University School of Tropical Medicine and later at the London School of Tropical Medicine. He was an associate member of the American Medical Association and a member of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine of London. Dr. and Mrs. Ahlquist were appointed to foreign service in 1916 and sailed in Novem­ ber, 1917. Their first term of service was spent among the Garo people where Dr. Ahlquist ministered untiringly to thousands of patients every year. In 1925 they were transferred to the Jorhat Hospital in the plains to be associated with Dr. H. W. Kirby. Dr. Ahlquist’s skill in eye surgery spread throughout that great area “and many blind received sight.” After twelve years at Jorhat the medical work had grown so tremendously that more than 10,000 patients were treated annually. In 1939 Dr. and Mrs. Ahlquist were transferred to Kangpokpi in the Mani­ pur region of Northern Assam. Here they were carrying on an ever 4 0 AMERICAN BAPTIST FOREIGN MISSION SOCIETY expanding program of work which included medical, evangelistic, and educational supervision. Dr. Ahlquist’s passing, at 53 years of age, is a major loss to missions. He was an invaluable member of the Assam mission group and his gen­ erous and jovial spirit attracted friends to himself and his Master. Two of their four children, Ethel and Gerald, are in the homeland training for missionary service. Mrs. Ahlquist and two younger children, Albert and John Arthur, were in Assam. “May God comfort and guide them all” is the prayer of their host of friends in Assam and America.

Mrs. W- B. Boggs Flora Eaton Boggs, widow of Rev. W. B. Boggs, D.D., of the South India Mission, died on March 9, 1941, in Bedford, Massachusetts. Mrs. Boggs was born in Cornwallis, N ova Scotia, on July 16, 1852. She was graduated from the Acadia Female Seminary, Wolfville, in 1869. In 1873, as Miss Eaton, she was sent out independently by the Baptists of the Maritime Provinces to work in Bangkok, Siam. In March, 1875, she was married to Rev. W. B. Boggs, a missionary of the Foreign Mission Society of Maritime Provinces, at Bangkok. They returned to Canada in 1876 and two years later were appointed by the Baptist Missionary Union to evangelistic work in Ongole, South India. In 1882 thejr went to open the new station of Cumbum. When the theological seminar}" at Ramapatnam needed a president Dr. Boggs was chosen and carried on there for nearly ten years. Transferred to Secunderabad, they served for three years until they were again called to the Seminary. Dr. Boggs’s ill health necessitated their return to the homeland for about five years. When the}' did go back to India it was to take up the work of revision of Telugu textbooks and for general literary work, so greatly needed in the Mission. Dr. Boggs died in Coonoor in 1913. Mrs. Boggs continued in service, first in Sattenapalle and then in Narsaravupett. In 1926 she returned to America for retirement. She leaves three sons and three daughters. Three, Dr. Arthur G. Boggs of the Clough Me­ morial Hospital, Ongole; Rev. Albert M. Boggs, of the Ramapatnam Seminary; and Airs. Ernest Hoisted of Ongole, follow their parents in missionary service in South India.

Rev. Frederick J. Bradshaw Rev. Frederick J. Bradshaw, 79, missionary to West China, died at the home of his daughter in Glendale, California, on August 17, 1940. Born on September 28, 1861, in Centerville, P .E J., Canada, he was gradu­ ated from Acadia College, 1890, and from Newton Theological Institu­ tion in 1893. In May of that year he received his appointment to evangelistic work in China. At Suifu and Yachow he served during his first term. In January, 1903, while on furlough in the homeland he was married to Martha A. Philip, M.D. The following month they ALONG KINGDOM HIGHWAYS 41

sailed for China designated to Kiating. For more than twenty-five years they gave devoted service in that land. Evangelistic, educational and medical work were all their responsibility at various times. They re­ turned to the United States in 1929. Since their retirement in 1931 they have made their home with their daughter in Glendale. A wife, two sons and a daughter survive him. Sincere sympathy is extended to them at this time. A stalwart soldier of the Cross, he was ready to answer the command of his Captain.

Ernest W. Clement, D.D. Ernest W. Clement, 81, of Japan, died at his home in Floral Park, Long Island, N. Y., on March 11, 1941. For 37 years he taught in Japan, 17 years under the American Baptist Foreign Mission Society. Dr. Clement was born in Dubuque, Iowa, February 21, 1860. He was a graduate of the University of Chicago, from which he also received his M.A. degree. (In 1908 Colgate University honored him with a D.D. degree.) In 1887 he went to Japan to teach at the Milto High School. From 1894 to 1911, under appointment as a missionary, he served as principal of Duncan Academy, Tokyo. In 1911 he accepted the chair of English at the Koto Gakko College, Tokyo, a government position. During that time he served as acting interpreter for the United States legation. He served as librarian of the Asiatic Society of Japan, record­ ing secretary and vice-president. In 1900, he edited the Japan Evangelist, and also was editor of the Christian Movement in Japan, 1907-1909. He had also been special cor­ respondent of the Chicago Daily News over a 25-year period. The Fifth Class of Rising Sun of Japan was conferred on him in 1927. His books included A Handbook oj Modern Japan, Japanese Floral Calendar, Short History of Japan, Constitutional Imperialism in Japan, Japanese Chronology, Fifty Sessions of Japanese Imperial Diet, and Numerical Categories in Japanese. He is survived by his wife, a son, and two daughters. Mrs. John E. Clough Emma Rauschenbusch Clough, Ph.D., widow of Rev. John E. Clough, D.D., died on July 15, 1940, in Kingston, New York. Born in Rochester, N . Y., August 2, 1859, educated at the Rochester Female Seminary and at Wellesley, she later received her Ph.D. degree from the University of Berne, Switzerland. Appointed by the Woman’s Baptist Foreign Missionar}' Society of the W est for work in Ongole, in 1882, she arrived in South India. After seven months of language study in Madras she proceeded to Ongole where she began her work at the Boys’ School and in connection with Bible women’s activities. Here, too, she laid the foundations for the present Girls’ Secondary School and Normal Training School, schools which have supplied more women teachers, Bible women and Christian workers than any other schools in the mis­ 4 2 AMERICAN BAPTIST FOREIGN MISSION SOCIETY sion. Her special interest in working among caste women brought many into the Christian circle. She was married in June, 1893, to Rev. John E. Clough, D.D., of the South India Mission. They returned to Ongole and labored there until their retirement in 1910. Dr. Clough died in November of that year, in New York. Like her brother, the late Prof. Walter Rauschenbusch, writer and teacher, Mrs. Clough did much literary work in addition to her other activities. To her the Baptists of the world are chiefly indebted for the history and records of Dr. Clough and the great mass movement to Christianity in South India. She took great pains to interview the older missionaries and Indian workers and pastors of those early times. Her first book, While Sewing Sandals, was an account of the shoemaker tribe, large numbers of whom became Christians at the end of the great famine of 1878. A still more important contribution was her book, Social Christianity in the Orient, the history of Dr. Clough’s great work in the Telugu mission.

Mrs. J. A. Curtis Emma Ellis Curtis, 73, wife of Rev. J. A. Curtis, D.D., of South India, died on June 13, 1940, in South Norwalk, Conn. Dr. and Mrs. Curtis retired in 1937 after forty years of unusually active and successful missionary service in India. Born in Redfield, Iowa, January 15, 1867, educated at Dexter Normal School and Simpson College, Iowa, she was married in June, 1895. In 1899 she sailed to join her husband who had gone to India the previous year. They served in Kanigiri and Vinukonda, but practically all of their years were spent in the great Donakonda mission field, with its 600 square miles and population of almost 95,000 people. Nearly 150 villages were their responsibility and the need for training workers to assist in the work early led to the de­ velopment of a central training school for rural work. Their leadership in evangelism throughout their own and other fields, together with the establishment of co-operative credit societies marked their forty years in India as years of real advance in thrift and support. Mrs. Curtis leaves a son, Arthur W. Curtis, M.D., of East Orange, and a daughter, Eleanor, wife of Rev. A. T. Fishman, of South India. A long life, well lived in the Master’s service, is a crowning glory.

M. D. Eubank, M.D. Dr. M. D. Eubank who died in Kansas City, Mo., December 5, 1940, was a veteran missionary with a background of long and varied experi­ ence. He was one of three men who stood for an educational program for Baptist mission work which finally resulted in a complete change in educational policy. As a result of this movement, there now exist such institutions as the University of Shanghai. As a missionary he took part in several lines of work—medical, educational, and evangelistic. In 1935, ALONG KINGDOM HIGHWAYS 4 3 twenty years after his retirement as a foreign missionary, he revisited China. He went to East China, the scene of his early labors, and also to W est China. H e was born on August 30, 1862, in Winchester, Kentucky. He completed his collegiate work at William Jewell College in 1891, and took his M.D. from Marion Simms Medical College two years later. For a year and a half he studied at the Divinity School of Chicago University, and then continued his medical work at Northwest Medical School. In 1899 he went to Hangchow, China. Returning to America in 1906, he organized a party of fourteen people whom he conducted on a tour of Baptist mission fields. In 1915 he returned home to enter general de­ nominational work. For many years he served as Director of Promotion for Missouri and Field Representative of the Council on Finance and Promotion. In his death the denomination and the missionary enterprise have lost an indefatigable worker, a great missionary, and a noble servant of Christ.

Rev. A. F. Groesbeck, D.D. Thirty-eight years of foreign service in South China is the record of Rev. Adam F. Groesbeck, D.D. His death came on February 28, 1941, at Alameda, California. H e was born in Afton, Iowa, on July 23, 1866. After graduation from Des Moines College he entered the Rochester Theological Seminary where he graduated in 1897. In 1912 Des Moines College honored him with the degree of Doctor of Divinity. Appointed in February, 1897, Dr. and Mrs. Groesbeck sailed for China in October of that year, to begin their service in Ungkung. Six months after their arrival they were left in charge of the Baptist work in that great Ungkung field. When the disturbances of the Boxer uprising spread southward in the summer of 1900 their station and field suffered more severely than any other part of the South China Mission. Following the strain of this crisis and the burden of rebuilding, their first furlough was taken in 1902. W hen they returned to China in 1903 they were stationed at Chaochowfu. They moved to Chaoyang in 1905, becoming the first resi­ dent missionaries at that central station. With deep sympathy, constant visitation and tireless evangelism they began their work in a city of some 200,000 population, with responsibility for work in a district of a million population stretching away to the south and west. As the Boxer outbreak brought suffering and loss in the Ungkung period, so the great typhoon and tidal wave of August, 1922, when more than 50,000 people perished in the Swatow region, alone, took toll of the vital reserves of the missionaries who went through that tragic experience. It could not help but leave its mark on this stalwart missionary to the end of his days. Dr. and Mrs. Groesbeck returned to China for their final term in 1930. They were designated to Chaoyang with personal oversight of the Chinese Baptist work in Bangkok, Siam. For nearly a hundred years the church in Siam, which had been the cradle of all our Baptist work for the Chinese people, had continued to survive, serving the people of the great 44 AMERICAN BAPTIST FOREIGN MISSION SOCIETY city. For five years they carried on this double work in two centers. In 1935, following the dedication of the new church in Bangkok, Dr. and Mrs. Groesbeck returned to Swatow and soon sailed for America. Dur­ ing all these years Dr. Groesbeck made a large and continuous contribution to the life of the Mission. For years he was mission secretary, and was one of the founders of the China Baptist Council. He is survived by his wife, a son and a daughter.

Rev.'Samuel W. Hamblen Rev. S. W. Hamblen, retired, a missionary in Japan for twenty-five years, died' at his home in Granville, Ohio, November 5, 1940. H e was born in Lovell, Maine, September 12, 1862, and was graduated from Brown University in 1886 and from Newton Theological Institution in 1889. Appointed to foreign service in April of that year he sailed in October, designated to Sendai. In 1890 he and Miss Alice Adams were married, in Yokohama. They continued their work in Sendai until trans­ ferred January 24, 1910, to Himeji. After their retirement from foreign service in 1914 they took up residence in Granville. In 1916 he was elected clerk of the Granville church and continued in that position for twenty-five years, a compliment to his integrity and accurate record keeping. In 1918 he was elected Recording Secretary of the Ohio Baptist Convention and held this position until 1939. In October of this year, Mr. and Mrs. Hamblen celebrated their golden wedding anniversary, another year-record seldom attained. Mr. Hamblen is survived by his wife and two daughters. They live in the assurance that their loved one “walked with God and was not, for God took him.”

Mrs. Charles K. Harrington Jennie Lovett Harrington, widow of Rev. Charles K. Harrington, D.D., a missionary in Japan from 1886-1916, died November 29, 1940. Mrs. Harrington was born in Cornwallis, Nova Scotia on January 31, 1862. She was graduated from Ladies’ Seminary, Acadia. Married in Kent- ville, Nova Scotia, September 9, 1886, Rev. and Mrs. Harrington sailed in November of that year for Japan, designated to education of evan­ gelism at the Theological Seminary in Yokohama. They returned to the homeland in 1916. Mr. Harrington died in May, 1920.

Rev. George A. Huntley, M.D. Dr. George A. Huntley, 75, died at his home in Branson, Mo., March 2, 1941. Dr. Huntley had served as a missionary in China for thirty-five years, twenty-seven under the American Baptist Foreign Mission Society. Born in Bristol, England, June 13, 1865, he entered Pastors’ or Spurgeon College, London, in September, 1886. He sailed for China in April, 1889, under appointment by the China Inland Mission. The next five years were spent in evangelistic and medical work in Shensi. In 1894 he arrived in ALONG KINGDOM HIGHWAYS 4 5

New York, determined to complete the medical course he had started in the London Hospital with his preparatory studies. He received his M.D. degree from the University of Vermont in July, 1897, and followed it with postgraduate work at the Long Island College Hospital, Brooklyn. On later furloughs he studied at both the West London Hospital and at Harvard Medical School. In October, 1896, he was married to Miss Eliza Jane Reid, trained nurse, of London, England. Together they sailed for China, under the American Baptist Foreign Mission Society, arriving in Hanyang, Central China, in January, 1898. In June, 1900, an edict necessitated the withdrawal of all foreigners from that area. His varied service under the China Red Cross, and as a teacher at Shanghai College, add color and interest to his years of service. In 1924 he was awarded several medals by the Red Cross Society of China, and the “Chia Ho” decoration by the President of China. In 1924 Dr. and Mrs. Huntley returned to the United States, where as field worker under the Convention he traveled among the churches telling the story of the power of the gospel in China. Dr. Huntley is survived by his wife, five sons and two daughters.

Rev. Bruno H. Luebeck, Ph.D. A cable from Shanghai brought word of the death of another key mis­ sionary in active service: LUEBECK DIED HEART FAILURE (March) TWENTY-FIFTH (1941). His sudden passing is another proof of the almost unendurable stress under which our representatives have carried on in China and elsewhere for the past years. Dr. Luebeck was one of our most devoted, vigorous, promising younger missionaries. He was a good linguist and an ardent evangelist, a forward-looking missionarj1-, not satisfied with conventional ways of doing things. He opened and carried on a notable piece of country work in South China. Mrs. Luebeck, with her nurse’s training, re-established the hospital at Ungkung, for the service of which there was wide demand, particularly in the current emergency. Dr. Bruno H. Luebeck was born in Lissen, Germany, on February 14, 1897. H is early education was secured in Lodz, Poland. In 1927 he was graduated from Rochester Theological Seminary. Two years later he received his B.A. degree from Dakota Wesleyan University, Mitchell, South Dakota, and in 1931, his M.A. degree from the Divinity School of the University of Chicago. On his first furlough, in 1938, he secured his Ph.D. degree from Hartford Seminary. In 1934 Mr. Luebeck was married to Miss Katherine E. Bohn, a missionary nurse of the Woman’s Society, stationed in South China. Our hearts go out in deepest sympathy to the bereaved wife and little son, as we join with friends in China and on this side of the Pacific in prayer for their comfort and guidance. 46 AMERICAN BAPTIST FOREIGN MISSION SOCIETY

Mrs. John McGuire The sudden passing, on February 27, 1941, of Mrs. Inez U . McGuire, wife of Dr. John McGuire, following a fall in the home of her daughter in Puerto Rico, comes as a shock to her many friends in the United States and Burma. Inez Ulery McGuire was born in Millersburg, Ind., September 4, 1862. After her graduation from Franklin College, Ind., she was appointed to missionary work in Mandalay, Burma, under the Woman’s Baptist Foreign Mission Society of the West. In September, 1891, she was married to Rev. John McGuire, missionary under the General Society. At Mandalay they continued as general station evan­ gelists, with heavy responsibilities in educational work. When trans­ ferred to Rangoon, where Dr. McGuire became President of the Burman Theological Seminary, Mrs. McGuire continued to aid in every phase of the work. In 1927 they returned to Burma from furlough and were designated to Maymyo to continue work on the revision of the Judson Burmese Bible. They served in Burma for over forty years. Mrs. McGuire is survived by her husband, a son and a daughter. Mrs. J. C. Richardson Lulu Rock Richardson, wife of Rev. J. C. Richardson, Ph.D., D.D., of Burma, died in Ann Arbor, Michigan, on November 14, 1940, following a prolonged illness. Born in Sadorus, Illinois, April 6, 1877, she was graduated from Ewing College in 1896. She was married in 1896 and together they sought missionary appointment in 1903. In September, 1904, they sailed for Burma designated to Sandoway, then a very lonely station, to work among the Burmans and Chins of that district. It was during a jungle trip in the unhealthful Sandoway district that the young­ est son, “Jamie,” born after their arrival in Sandoway, was stricken with fever and died. As they, accompanied by a few native Christians, laid their little one to rest beside the graves of two pioneer missionaries who had also paid the supreme price, these devoted missionaries began to realize what it meant to serve Christ in a place where medical aid, even of an inferior kind, was often unavailable. Later on, in 1908, the ill health of both Dr. and Mrs. Richardson necessitated their transfer and they were appointed to Judson College, Rangoon. After their return to America on furlough in 1910, Dr. Richardson entered the pastorate at Morris, Illinois. In 1920 they returned to Burma, leaving their two oldest children, Andrew and Evelyn, in the Missionary Home at Morgan Park. Here Andrew died two years later. Part of this second term was served as station missionaries in Bassein. Dr. Richardson was also a teacher in the Burman Theological Seminary, Insein. H e became President in 1926, and served until 1933. W hile President of the Seminary, Dr. Richardson acted as pastor of the English Baptist Church, Rangoon, and he and Mrs. Richardson assumed charge of the Union Hall High School in Rangoon. In connection with this ALONG KINGDOM HIGHWAYS 4 7 school Mrs. Richardson did an outstanding piece of work. The supervision of the work in this school of 600 was no small undertaking and she did it with great credit. After their retirement from foreign service in 1934 Mrs. Richardson spent a good deal of time in deputation work. She was a good speaker and always in great demand among the churches. She was an interesting writer and from time to time wrote articles for the denominational papers and magazines. Mrs. Richardson leaves her husband, a daughter, and three sons.

Rev. Charles H. Tilden Rev. Charles H. Tilden, fourteen years (1908-1923) a missionary in Jorhat, Assam, died July 12, 1940. Mr. Tilden was appointed to Assam in 1908 and sailed in September of the following year. At the Jorhat Christian Schools (then the Assam Valley Preachers’ Training School), his knowledge of, ■ and training in, industrial work aided greatly in the building up of the schools. Mr. Tilden was born in Worcester, Mass., May 9, 1878. H e followed his trade, that of machine patternmaker, for some time in his early manhood, but the call to the ministry and to ad­ ditional educational preparation came and he devoted the rest of his life to it. Step by step, he worked his way through preparatory school, through college (Colgate University, A.B., 1906), and through Hamilton Theological Seminary (B.D., 1909). The definite call to service in far lands came during his college years, and at the Student Volunteer Con­ vention in Northfield, under the leadership of Dr. Robert E. Speer, he gave himself to his Lord in willingness to be sent “to the ends of the earth.” Appointed to Assam, his special study of geology, irrigation, draining, and surveying, and his natural abilities in this direction, led to his appointment to Jorhat. His full two terms of service were given at the Jorhat Christian Schools, over which he had full supervision for a share of the time. W hile on furlough in 1915, Mr. Tilden and Miss Grace B. Darling, of Norwich, New York, were married. They sailed for the field in September, 1917, and continued at Jorhat until their return to America in March, 1922. Mrs. Tilden died in July, 1939. Sin­ cere sympathy of friends everywhere is extended to their three sons.

Mrs. Emil Tribolet Melissa Aldrich Tribolet, widow of Rev. E. Tribolet, missionary of the American Baptist Foreign Mission Society in Burma, died in Cleve­ land, Ohio, on July 25, 1940. Born in Deming, New York, February 20, 1861, she received her education at the Colby Academy, New London, N. H., and at the Normal School, Cortland, New York. She was ap­ pointed to foreign service under the Woman’s Baptist Foreign Mission Society in April, 1888, designated to Chin work in Sandoway, Burma. In September, 1892, she was married to Rev. E. Tribolet. Together they went to Bassein, engaged in both educational and evangelistic work, built up an excellent central station school and toured both the Bassein and 48 AMERICAN BAPTIST FOREIGN MISSION SOCIETY

Myaungmya districts. Later, in Mandalay, they continued educational and building work, and contributed vitally to the ongoing of the mission. At Myingyan, too, they served both the schools and churches in full-time service. After three 3rears in the homeland (1905-1908) they returned to service in Myingyan and there continued until his death in April, 1924. Mrs. Tribolet returned to the homeland in 1926. To their children sympathetic word is expressed. The foreign service of their parents is a rich heritage in memory. Rev. William Wynd Rev. William Wynd, 75, died at his home in Scotland, on February 12, 1941. H is foreign service was given in Japan from 1891 to 1932, forty-one years. Mr. Wynd was born in Perthshire, Scotland, in October 24, 1866. H e was educated in Guinness College, London, and went to Japan under appointment, in 1890, by the Buxton Independent Mission. In Maj', 1890, he sought and received appointment under the Baptist Missionary Union (now the American Baptist Foreign Mission Society) and was designated to Osaka. In November, 1894, Miss Anna M. Morris and Mr. Wynd were married in Swatow, China. Their many years of devoted service in Tokyo endeared them to the Japanese people. Upon their retirement, in 1932, it was said of them: “Spirituality is the one word which approaches description of the period of service of our beloved friends, Mr. and Mrs. Wynd.” LJpon retirement they settled in Edinburgh, Scotland. Mr. Wynd is survived by his wife and their four children.

IMPERATIVE NEEDS FOR KINGDOM HIGHWAYS Some imperative needs in the Society’s work which confront Northern Baptists may be listed as follows:

War Emergency Needs These needs are the most immediately pressing. They admit of no argument. They confront us this year; they will confront us next year. They must be met, and they must be met when they arise. More specifically, are: a) The need to safeguard the life, health, and general welfare of our missionaries in China and Japan under conditions of war and threat of war, and therefore to maintain by the frequent use of cable and ocean air mail the closest possible contacts with them. Contacts in normal times are almost exclusively main­ tained with all our missionaries by ordinary mail. Now, this is not adequate, and the use of ocean air mail and cables calls for ALoiiG k in g d o m h i g h w a y s 40 heavy extra expense. This is purely a war-occasioned expenditure. b) The need to safeguard the health of missionaries by pro­ viding ocean and rail passage for them whenever necessary, even though travel costs have increased by reason of the war from twenty-five to fifty per cent. Shall we refuse to bring our missionaries home in times like these just because the passage costs have greatly increased? They have worked as members of reduced staffs. They have worked under abnormal war conditions and with added nervous strains. They need their normal furloughs now more than ever. Under war condi­ tions, extra funds—war emergency funds —are needed. Some missionaries, wholly apart from their furlough periods, have had to come home from China and Japan for their safety's sake. This has meant extra ex­ pense. It also is a war emergency item. Other missionaries must return to the fields after furlough. If they do not go their fellow missionaries, already over­ worked and with their own furloughs due, K. G. Hobart, China, like many others, has seen will have to carry on at great risk to their his family leave for America health. Those at home are ready and will­ ing to risk all the hazards of the return journey—a journey which is usually devious and always expensive because of wars. Shall we send them back or keep them here ? c) The need to provide more adequate salaries for our mis­ sionaries where living costs have risen sharply because of the war. Missionaries are on minimum salaries. They have little, if any, margin for savings. A sharp rise in commodity prices works an immediate hardship. In some cases, families have been divided, necessitating a home here and one on the field. This, too, means extra expense for them as well as for the Society. d) The need to provide extra help for our Christian national leaders and workers. They, also, are confronted with greatly increased living costs. Travel in the doing of their work has become more expensive. Shall we dismiss them in this time of 50 AMERICAN BAPTIST FOREIGN MISSION SOCIETY economic upset and crisis in their own lands, or provide the extra funds necessary? What is fair and right? Thousands are looking to them for relief and for spiritual ministry. Shall we help them provide it?

Basic Personnel Needs Consider for a moment the tragic loss of missionaries in recent years. Over a long period of years, the missionary staff has been reduced by two factors working together: the retirement and

After the Bombing of Chungking death of missionaries, and the Society’s inability to make normal replacements. In 1922-1923, we had 603 missionaries; a year ago, 360; this year, 354; with a forecasted reduction during 1940-1941 to 325. Not for forty years have we had as few mis­ sionaries as now. The average annual loss for a number of years has been about eleven units. Between forty and fifty new missionaries are urgently needed right now to relieve our overworked staff; to take their places when they retire or fall; to shepherd the people whom God’s Spirit, through our efforts, has already called into the Christian ALONG KINGDOM HIGHWAYS 51 faith and the Christian church; to receive those who are be­ seeching us to give them the bread of life and teach them the way of the Lord; to enter new doors which prayers have opened.

Common-Sense Equipment and Appropriation Needs These are the most obvious and the most easily certified. In many cases we are asking our missionaries to do the equivalent of making bricks without straw. A carpenter who goes out with only a saw and a hammer is called a “jackleg” carpenter. A good carpenter must have good tools. We are in danger of mak­ ing our missionaries jackleg missionaries through lack of equip­ ment. One medical missionary says that the greatest hardship he has to bear is to confront a seriously ill person, to be able accurately to diagnose the illness, to know exactly what treat­ ment is needed, to be perfectly sure that if the treatment were given the patient would recover, and to be unable to give this treatment through lack of proper equipment. Many things are needed for all kinds of missionaries—from school equipment to automobiles. Over against this great need, work appropriations have been cut in recent years over fifty per cent. Rising commodity costs have decreased the purchasing power of the few dollars available. When the writer was on John Carman’s field in South India, he met one patient who, because of a special illness, required more than the total ap­ propriation for medicine available for that station. The only saving factor in this situation was that some of Dr. Carman’s family and friends were helping to make up the deficiency. A missionary in South India wrote that his work was in a center where earthquakes are prevalent, malaria is a common disease, and many people are affected with another dread disease (probably plague). The missionary said, in substance. “We are not disturbed by earthquake, by malaria, or other diseases, but we are disturbed by not being able to go ahead with our work.” God is working in the hearts of our missionaries. He is work­ ing in our hearts. We believe that He is also working in the hearts of you to whom this appeal comes. What is your response ?

FUNDS FOR WORK ALONG KINGDOM HIGHWAYS

GENERAL STATEMENT FINANCIAL REVIEW OF THE YEAR TREASURER’S REPORT

ALONG KINGDOM HIGHWAYS 55

FUNDS FOR WORK ALONG KINGDOM HIGHWAYS The Budget for 1940-1941 The Board of Managers makes it a practice to adopt the budget for each fiscal year several months in advance of the beginning of that year. This is done so that all the missions may know just what appropriations they may count on. The total budget for the year, May 1, 1940 to April 30, 1941, was set at $837,500. Within the year, however, conditions de­ veloped which necessitated two major adjustments. The first adjustment was to increase the appropriations to the missions in China and Japan. This was made necessary by the further and severe depreciation of Chinese currency and the resulting sharp increase in living costs for national leaders and missionaries, and in the cost of carrying on the work of conventions and institutions. The second adjustment was to increase the amount allowed for the travel of missionaries to this country. Because of a growing tension between Japan and the United States, the Board was led to. advise the withdrawal from threatened areas in both of these countries of mothers with children, and of those in ill health, and to allow the withdrawal of others, specially those whose furloughs were near, or for whom the retirement time was due or overdue. This meant additional passage just at a time when, also because of war conditions, travel costs were increased from 25 to 30 per cent. In some instances, families were separated by these moves and additional funds were called for to meet the extra expenses occasioned by the maintenance of two homes instead of one. In not a few cases, missionaries have had to follow longer routes of travel in going to or return­ ing from their fields. Longer routes necessarily entail extra ex­ penses. The total increase over budget forecasts to meet this situation has been approximately $11,000. Toward this item, the Board would gratefully record the receipt from World Relief funds of $4,000.

The Budget for 1941-1942 The budget authorized for 1941-1942 has been set at $837,500, the same as for 1940-1941. Every one of the ten mission fields 5 6 AMERICAN BAPTIST FOREIGN MISSION SOCIETY has felt the repercussions of the war, some more than others. Wide fluctuations in the amount of local currency which can be purchased for each United States dollar, separated families re­ quiring additional allowances, unusual travel routings with in­ creased travel costs, augmented income taxes, are some of the factors which have conditioned budget decisions. An additional and major factor has been the trend of income from non-donation sources. The estimated income from such sources for 1941-1942 is less by $19,500—the difference between $385,000 for 1940-1941 and $365,500 for 1941-1942. This estimation downward is dictated by the greatly reduced income from invested funds actually received in recent years and our inability wisely to make a transfer from the matured annuity reserve to the regular budget. To off-set partially the decrease from the matured annuity reserve an amount of $20,000 was transferred from the modest exchange reserve. Income from donation sources shows an expectancy of $507,520 based on the preliminar}'- announcement by the Finance Committee of the Northern Baptist Convention of the Society’s share in the anticipated receipts from churches and individuals. However, this total will not be available unless the entire uni­ fied budget goal for the year is achieved. In planning the budget, the Board took into account the fact that the current year’s receipts show some increase over the receipts for the past fiscal year and based the spending budget upon an increase of ap­ proximately 10 per cent over the receipts for 1939-1940. After evaluating all factors affecting income, the Board never­ theless came to the conclusion that in the light of the needs on the fields the spending budget for 1941-1942 could not be reduced below the figure of the current year—$837,500. Although the field staff has decreased in numbers, the salary item in the budget remains about the same. Separation of fam­ ilies on account of war conditions has required additional expenses. Furthermore, certain funds which have been available previously to carry missionaries on The Ministers and Mission­ aries Benefit Board pension fund are now exhausted and a sum of over $8,000 has been included in the salary item to meet this obligation. Higher passage rates and unusual routes which some ALONG KINGDOM HIGHWAYS 57 missionaries are compelled to use have increased this item of expense considerably over 1940-1941. There will be some savings on appropriations for work in Europe in the current year due to the impossibility of forward­ ing money to some countries to which appropriations were made. These moneys are being kept available in the hope that a way may be found to make the remittances later. The World Relief Committee has assisted in meeting the extraordinary war emergencies in the countries to which funds can be forwarded. The budget for Europe is not large and the same appropriation as was made for the current year was included in the 1941-1942 budget. If the war should end suddenly the Board will face a heavy responsibility for aid in the rehabilitation of European church life.

The Missionary Dollar and Foreign Exchange Under present world conditions it is almost impossible to make appropriations for mission work in local currency for a fiscal year closing sixteen months later. The Board, therefore, must determine a rate that will protect both the missions and the Board. Work appropriations are therefore authorized at ex­ change rates slightly under current quotations. The limited re­ serve due to exchange savings which accumulated over several years because of this procedure is now being used to avoid a general cut in the appropriations to the missions for 1941-1942. The fact that appropriations for the new year can be maintained at last year’s level is something for which to be thankful. This level, however, makes no provision for the increased costs which are even now appearing as a direct result of the war.

Decreasing Staff and Rising Costs Rising costs of maintaining present missionary staff have absorbed every bit of the leeway which should have been realized in the 1941-1942 budget because of the decrease in staff. It is now estimated that there will be on the missionary staff in 1941- 1942, counting the three new families for whom provision has been made, 333 missionaries as against 338 missionaries in this current year. Since the adoption of the budget, word has been 58 AMERICAN BAPTIST FOREIGN MISSION SOCIETY received of the untimely deaths of two missionaries which fur­ ther reduces the number of active missionaries.

Lay Workers’ Pension The $128,884.10 included for 1941-1942 home expenditures is the same as for the current year. Since the office staff at head­ quarters do not come within the government’s Social Security provision, the Board is co-operating in the plan of the denomina­ tion to establish a Lay Workers’ Pension Fund. Reductions are being made in other items of home expenditure to cover the cost involved.

Annuities and Wills Two sources of funds for the work along Kingdom Highways are annuities and wills. An annuity is a form of gift which pro­ vides a substantial annual return to the donor throughout his or her lifetime. When a gift on the annuity plan is received, an agreement signed and sealed is delivered to the annuitant guaran­ teeing a life return. The amount of this return depends upon the age of the annuitant. It is designed especially for people forty years of age or older. The older one is, the larger the annual return. The gift thus received is not immediately used for the work. It is put with other annuity funds and is invested to help pay the annual return to the donor. W hen the donor dies, that portion of the annuity fund accruing to the gifts is used for the work. An annuity may provide an income for the donor or for anyone whom the donor names as the annuitant. Agreements covering two people (never more than two) and known as sur­ vivorship annuities are also issued. For further information, write to Jesse R. Wilson, Home Secretary. A booklet entitled, “Annui­ ties—A Way To Give and To Receive,” is available upon request. A moral dignity attaches to the making of a will. One who makes a will acknowledges a responsibility for how his property and other forms of wealth, whether much or little, shall be used following his death. Funds made available through the legacies of friends who recognize this moral obligation make possible much of the evangelistic, educational, medical, and other work done by the American Baptist Foreign Mission Society. Forms of bequest recommended by the Society are printed on the inside back cover. FINANCIAL REVIEW OF THE YEAR

OUTCOME OF THE YEAR The fiscal year, ended on April 30, 1941, registered an increase of 6.15 per cent in the contributions received by the Society from churches and individuals. While this increase in donation receipts is heartening, the encouragement it brings must be tempered by the recognition that budget appropriations for the year were maintained at an amount that places important areas of the Society’s work in the position of near collapse. The total income for the year was $982,520.51 and the total expenditures were $981,856.61. The excess of income over appropriations in the current budget was $663.90. The accumulated deficit of $145,707.53, reported on April 30, 1940, was reduced during the year by the following item s:

Contributions applicable to the 1939-40 budget, including the remittance of the Council on Finance and Promotion of $11,196.19 received on June 12, 1940...... $11,396.19 Net adjustments of income and appropriations related to the 1939-40 and previous budgets ...... 7,781.27

$19,177.46

This amount of $19,177.46, together with the excess of income of $663.90 from the year just closed, has reduced the accumulated deficiency of income at April 30, 1941, to $125,866.17.

SUMMARY OF INCOME AND BUDGET APPROPRIATIONS Receipts on account of the regular budget from sources other than donations were $376,592.94, and from donations $463,540.23, making a total of $840,133.17. The actual expenditures and appropriations amounted to $839,469.27, a total very closely approximating the authorized spending budget of $837,500.00. The result is an excess on the current budget of $663.90.

RECEIPTS Income from Sources Outside Donations The income from sources outside donations amounted to $376,592.94 as compared with $388,294.35 in 1939-40. Income from investments of permanent funds of $281,825.20 approximates the amount received for the last fiscal year of $281,225.77. It is hoped that the return on invested funds will not decline further and that the Board can continue to count on approximately $280,000 of income from this source. Transfers from 59 6 0 AMERICAN BAPTIST FOREIGN MISSION SOCIETY the annuity and legacy equalization reserves have been reduced $10,000 and $5,000 respectively, below those of previous years. The payment of $7,500 from The Ministers and Missionaries Benefit Board toward expenditures of the Society for retired missionaries and widows now amounting to approximately $114,000 has been continued. Conditions in the Far East have made it desirable for mothers and children and missionaries in ill health to return to America. The added passage costs were approximately $11,000, toward which $4,000 was made available by the World Relief Committee.

Donations—Gifts from Churches and Individuals The donation receipts of $463,540.23 show an increase of $26,855.74 as compared with last year’s receipts of $436,684.49. In making this com­ parison, however, it must be borne in mind that the donation receipts for the year ended April 30, 1940, were less than those received in any year since 1906-07. Gifts forwarded directly to the Society were $38,182.74, which represented a decrease of $9,840.68 when compared with last year’s receipts of $48,023.42. This decrease is accounted for by the contributions of three or four individuals who were unable to continue their gifts of last year, or who donated this year to other phases of the denominational program. Contributions through the Council on Finance and Promotion were $425,028.01 as compared with last year’s receipts of $389,979.65, an increase of $35,048.36. The undesignated and designated receipts as compared with last year are shown below. Increase or 1941 1940 Decrease (*) Undesignated $270,073.83 $239,594.06 $30,479.77 12.72% Designated 193,466.40 197,090.43 3,624.03 1.84%*

$463,540.23 $436,684.49 $26,855.74 6.15%

The unified budget expectancy of undesignated receipts for the fiscal year was $1,850,000, of which the Society was to receive a participation of $280,200. Preliminary reports of the Council on Finance and Promotion indicate that the total undesignated receipts will very closely approximate this amount. The Society’s undesignated receipts were $270,073.83, in­ dicating that the total donation receipts of several of the states or cities must have reached the allotment line and that these state or city areas benefited by 50 per cent of the so-called secondary allotments. Offsetting this, in some state areas the total undesignated receipts collected must have been less than those of preceding years, or the Society’s receipts from undesignated sources would have more closely approximated the budget expectancy of $280,200. ALONG KINGDOM HIGHWAYS 61

BUDGET APPROPRIATIONS The regular budget appropriations and expenditures amount to $839,469.27 as compared with the authorized budget of $837,500. The necessity of maintaining the budget at this amount has impinged on the work of the foreign field at two points in particular—missionary staff and appropria­ tions for the work of missionaries and native agencies. The appropriation for missionary salaries has amounted to $339,667.06, or $16,885.88 less than last year’s authorizations. The number of active missionaries is 338 and will be reduced to 327 in the 1941-42 budget. A study of the mission­ aries under appointment for the six fiscal years ended April 30, 1941, reveals a loss of approximately twenty missionaries a year. This fact, when considered in light of the increasing age of the missionary staff, presents a most difficult and perplexing problem. The Board has continued its policy of not paying to the missionaries the full amount of local currency for each United States dollar of salary appropriated. The savings thus realized have been credited to the budget. Rising costs in China and Japan have exceeded the increased amount of local currency that the missionaries receive as a result of depreciated currency. While a slight adjustment has been made in the rate of exchange for salaries of the China and Japan missionaries, there is urgent need for a further adjustment in all fields. The mission work appropriation must be authorized in February each year for the fiscal year commencing May 1. This means that foreign exchange rates must be estimated nearly fifteen months in advance. The war in Europe, as well as the continued conflict in the Far East, has caused the currency of all the countries in which the Society has work, with the exception of the Philippine Islands, to depreciate in terms of United States dollars. The mission treasurers’ reports for several mission fields, which ordinarily would have been received prior to the close of the fiscal year, have been delayed by war conditions. It is estimated that, when these have been received and reconciled to the treasurer’s accounts in New York, there will be an exchange credit in addition to the $10,000 included in the budget. The exact amount cannot be determined until early fall, when the April 30 reports will have been received from the mission treasurers, and at that time it will be credited to the Reserve for Possible Fluctuation in Foreign Exchange, in accordance with the Board’s policy. This reserve stood at $46,904.93 on April 30, 1941, and is in reality not large when compared with the foreign exchange risk to which the Board is constantly subject, more acute just now because of present world conditions. The retention of this exchange saving by the Board is being felt severely on all fields. Missionaries’ correspondence clearly discloses that steps must be taken to make added appropriations available in local currency. The appropriation for retired missionaries and their widows requires a large part of the budget It must be remembered, however, that many 6 2 AMERICAN BAPTIST FOREIGN MISSION SOCIETY of these missionaries were sent to the field before the establishment of The Ministers and Missionaries Benefit Board. The Society at great sacrifice has taken out memberships for all missionaries born subsequent to 1900 with The Ministers and Missionaries Benefit Board. This will result in the gradual lessening of this item, but it will be many years before the Society will receive a substantial amount of relief.

Home Expenditures The total home expenditures for the year were $131,923.15. This repre­ sents an increase of $6,073.52 as compared with last year’s total of $125,849.63. The major portion of this increase is due to the increase in the item of retired officers and pension premiums. An expenditure of approximately $2,500 included in this item will be nonrecurring for it represents the funding of an obligation incurred many years ago. The members of the office staff do not come within the provision of the Federal Social Security laws and during the past year the Board, in co-operation with the other Baptist organizations, entered into the Lay Workers Pension Plan which has been approved by the Northern Baptist Convention. This is a contributory plan to which the employee contributes 3 per cent of his annual salary and the employer’s cost is approximately 4 per cent of the salary paid each individual. Many of the office staff have been writh the Society for a number of years and through the generosity of an individual the Board has been able to make a modest provision for the past service rendered by these workers. The cost of the past service annuity has been entirely cared for by this gift; therefore, the payments made out of current income are for the future service pension obligation only, and this will be charged directly to the salary item in the budget. These payments will amount to approximately $1,800 a year. The wars in Europe and the Far East have greatly added to the wrork at headquarters. The problems of administration are always greatly in­ creased when the mission work is inadequately supported.

Interest The cost of borrowed money as represented by the interest item of $447.56 is moderate when compared with the debt at the close of the current fiscal year of $125,866.17. It has not been necessary for the Board to borrow large amounts during the year as the income from the legacy and matured annuity equalization reserves has been transferred in May, thus providing a substantial amount of cash during the months in which the donation receipts are the lightest. In addition to this, bank balances on the foreign field have been maintained at the lowest possible amount. The Board has also had advantage of the cash covering the Foreign Exchange Reserve. These factors have made possible a substantial sav­ ing of interest. ALONG KINGDOM HIGHWAYS 63

Specific Budget Receipts and expenditures in the specific budget amounted to $142,387.34, an increase of $44,236.57 as compared with the total for 1939-40. The direct contributions, and those from the World Relief Committee, account almost entirely for this increase. The direct gifts would show a decrease were it not for the contribution of an individual for the past service annuities for the office staff under the Lay Workers Pension Plan. The other direct specifics are in most cases gifts of individuals who have asked that their contributions go directly to some phase of the work in addition to any provision made in the regular budget. The receipts from the World Relief Committee of $40,964.04 have been classified under three headings in the financial statement: those for relief work in Europe, $5,000; those for the China Emergency Fund, and items which have been disbursed at the request of the committee, such as the remittances made to the British Baptists and the Danish and Norwegian Foreign Mission Society in the Belgian Congo.

INVESTMENTS OF PERMANENT FUNDS World events during the past fiscal year have accelerated the problems involved in caring for the investments of the permanent, annuity, and designated temporary funds of the Society which total $9,463,755.84. Money rates have continued to decline, for example, the better grade public utility bonds are selling at prices to yield 2.70 per cent annually. The ability to borrow at low interest rates has enabled most public utility and industrial corporations to refinance their indebtedness at a greatly reduced interest cost. The replacing of these securities with ones bearing a smaller interest coupon has seriously lessened the income available for the work of the Society from permanent funds. It is the opinion of many financial students that interest rates will continue for a few years at approximately current levels. It is hoped that this is the case, for further curtailment of this source of income will mean additional reductions in the missionary programs. The extent to which the changes in money rates affect the Society can be gleaned from the total securities called or sold during the past fiscal year of $1,799,176, and the amount of new purchases of $1,681,410. These amounts are unusually large for an investment portfolio approximating $9,500,000. In addition to the problem of cheap money, the railroad situation is one to which the Investment Committee has given considerable thought and studj". Since the outbreak of war, the railroads have made a notable record of recovery. Railroad bond prices have ndt, however, fully reflected this change in their position. The total portfolio at book prices includes $2,162,285.69 of railroad bonds. The securities comprising this total have all been carefully studied and the Board has approved of a program which will gradually reduce the amount of railroad bonds now owned. The 6 4 AMERICAN BAPTIST FOREIGN MISSION SOCIETY

April 30, 1941, market value of the railroad bonds is $2,106,402.50 or $55,883.19 less than the book value. If, under increased traffic resulting from the national defense program, railroad security values continue to improve, the Board hopes to work out of many of the weaker rail­ road bonds. The Investment Committee, which is a subcommittee of the Finance Committee, has met regularly and has constantly reviewed the securities in the investment portfolio. These men have freely given many hours to the study of investment problems, and the fine condition of the port­ folio, which shows an excess of market value over book value, is due to their devotion to this task. For many years the Society has followed the policy of maintaining a portfolio of high-grade bonds. The annual reports showing the condition of the investments of the permanent funds over a period of years have justified this policy. Money rates are now lower than they have been in seventy-five years. The Investment Committee recognizes that a 3l/2 per cent bond selling today at 110 might sell, on the basis of money rates alone, at 84, if the income return on invested funds should again return to the normal rate of the last fifty years of approximately Al/z per cent. How to guard against the depreciation which will take place if money rates return to their former basis is a problem facing every institution with an investment portfolio. The Investment Committee believes that it is necessary to keep a part of the Society’s funds in short term invest­ ments, and the balance wherever possible in spaced maturities, so that some money will be available for reinvestment each year. It recognizes that the program will not entirely offset the possible decline in the prin­ cipal of these so-called low coupon bonds, but hopes that over a period of years it will partially offset it. Whether this program of investing in high-grade bonds, with the resulting difficulty of procuring diversified investments, and the effort being made to have funds available for reinvest­ ment in a possible period of higher interest rates, will protect the perma­ nent funds of the Society under present economic and war conditions is a problem that the Finance and Investment Committees have given a great deal of thought and study to. For several years many educational and other institutions with large endowment funds have been investing a portion of their portfolios in common stocks. The problems created by the abnormal money rates existing at the present time, which have forced bond prices to an all-time high, together with the difficulty of securing diversified investments, have led the Investment Committee to give full and careful study to the question of including some common stocks in the investment list. The Investment Committee concluded after an extended study that it should recommend a policy of investing in common stocks. The Board approved this policy, recognizing that it must take the long view and accept losses willingly as they occur as the price paid for a hedge against the ALONG KINGDOM HIGHWAYS 6 5

abnormal conditions existing today. The Board approved the purchase of common stocks for the following reasons: 1. The urgent need of increasing income. 2. The limited number of high-grade bonds available for investment. 3. The desirability of greater diversification. 4. The feeling of many that we are approaching a situation of excessive prices, with regard to high-grade bonds comparable to that which prevailed in the stock market in 1929. 5. The fact that so many colleges and other institutions have already invested a large percentage of their funds in stocks. It adopted specific recommendations for the fiscal year closed on April 30, 1941, to become operative at such time as the Investment Committee felt they should be put into effect: 1. That investments be made in common stocks of an amount not to exceed 10 per cent of the present book value of unrestricted and restricted funds within the fiscal year which would end April 30, 1941. It is under­ stood that the percentage as applied to the restricted funds would not include the present investment in stock of the Columbia Gas & Electric Corporation. 2. That the investment of an amount up to 10 per cent in each of these funds should be made gradually during the next twelve months. This policy was kept constantly in mind throughout the year and approxi­ mately $120,000 of bank stocks were purchased. This amount did not approach the total stock investment authorized by the Board. It is antici­ pated that the policy authorized will be continued throughout the coming year. \ Tarious studies are kept constantly before the Committee, a few of which are briefly summarized in the following paragraphs. The relationship of book and market values on bonds of railroad, public utility, and industrial companies is expressed in percentage form for the last four fiscal years. Per Cent of Per Cent of Per Cent of Per Cent of Book Value Book Value Book Value Book Value April 30, April 30, April 30, April 30, 1938 1939 1940 1941 Unrestricted Investments ... 97.87 99.93 100.30 100.68 Restricted Investments ...... 102.11 105.08 105.07 106.78 Annuity Investments ...... 94.96 97.15 97.85 100.02 All Bond Investm ents 100.31 103.00 103.14 104.66

A detailed analysis of the book and market values shows that the only group of bonds on which the market values are less than the book values is the railroad bonds. This is to be expected for, since 1929, there have been placed into receivership or trusteeship 110 railroad companies. These companies operate over eighty thousand miles of road, which is over a 6 6 AMERICAN BAPTIST FOREIGN MISSION SOCIETY third of the mileage in the United States and represents well over one- quarter of the total United States railroad capitalization. Some of these railroads are gradually reorganizing and working into a sound position. The quality of the Society’s investments is shown by the percentage of investments in Aaa and Aa and A grade bonds.

1937 1938 1939 1940 1941 Unrestricted Investments 92.65 93.70 92.73 85.41 84.64 Restricted Investments .. 85.06 89.84 80.87 79.82 79.47 Annuity Investments .... 84.83 87.07 80.63 77.48 80.29

Many of the Society’s bonds now rated Baa and lower, especially the railroads, had a higher investment rating when they were purchased, Aa or A. This reduction in rating is largely due to a more conservative attitude toward railroad bonds under present economic conditions. All securities with a Baa and lower rating are constantly reviewed by the committee. It is its policy to change to a high grade as soon as this can be done without too great a loss of principal.

Real Estate and Mortgages The Foreign Mission Realty Corporation was organized on August 21, 1933, to take title to the properties which the Society found it necessary to foreclose. It holds title to all properties taken over by the Society either on foreclosure or by purchase of deeds to the properties in lieu of foreclosure. The entire stock of the Foreign Mission Realty Corporation is held by the Society. The Corporation’s fiscal year is the calendar year, and all statements in the following paragraphs are for the year ending December 31, 1940. The Directors of the Corporation at the annual meeting of the Corpora­ tion reviewed statements on each one of the properties owned by the Foreign Mission Realty Corporation, having a total cost of $272,671.72. Fifteen of these properties showed earnings during the past calendar year and it is anticipated that the remaining five properties will show earnings during the current calendar year. An effort has been made to appraise these proper­ ties on the basis of a quick sale value, if buyers could be found. The quick sale value of these properties is between $185,000 and $190,000, while the cost of the properties is $272,671.72. The directors recognized that the approximate quick sale value was a very conservative basis of appraising these properties. They also reaffirmed their general policy to dispose of all properties as rapidly as possible and requested the treasurer, in following out this general policy, to present to them any reasonable offer received on any property. They recorded again in their minutes the Board’s general policy to remove any fire violations under the New York City Multiple Dwelling Law; to keep all properties in good repair; to fully insure for fire and public liability; and to employ every means to obtain a reduction in tax assessments. ALONG KINGDOM HIGHWAYS 6 7

The Corporation has clearly set aside on its records all of the properties belonging to the Society’s “Investments of Reserve for Special Gift Agree­ ments with Life Annuity Return,” and these are kept entirely separate in segregated accounts. The mortgage investments of the Society on December 31, 1940, were seventy-two in number with a book value of $1,065,139.61, on which the average interest return was 4.62 per cent. If there is added to this amount the earnings of the twenty pieces of real estate, title to which is held by the Corporation, the one assignment of rents and three mortgages under foreclosure, and the two properties sold during the year, the total of the principal amount is $1,426,395.44, on which the income earned was $61,690.35, or a return of 4.33 per cent on all mortgages, real estate and properties sold during the past calendar year.

CHANGES IN PERMANENT FUNDS The permanent funds held by the Society, including the net profits on investments, amounted to $7,793,607.54 on April 30, 1941. The following is a list of the additions to the permanent funds during the year:

Unrestricted as to Income Restricted as to Income Unrestricted as to Investment Unrestricted as to Investment ♦Oliver B. Grant...... $2,489.85 ♦Aboriginal Tribes Fund... $197.43 ♦R. B. G riffith...... 15.00 ♦William A. Ayers 200.00 *C. L. Robinson, Endow­ ♦Eliza Constantine...... 400.00 ment ...... 15.58 ♦Charles A. and Katharine ♦Marguerite G. Strong----- 500.00 B. Crissey ...... 2.00 ♦Elisha M. White...... 60.00 ♦Vilotta M. Dennison 1,095.00 *Mary Williams ...... 1,037.90 ♦Ruth L. Gates...... 5.00 Wolleman Memorial...... 500.00 Loughridge and Milne Me­ morial ...... 2,000.00 ♦William R. Schoemaker.. 2,486.57 ♦Marguerite T. D oane 276.01

RESERVE FOR SPECIAL GIFT AGREEMENTS WITH LIFE ANNUITY RETURN In last year’s annual report a very full and complete statement was made concerning the revision of the Insurance Law' of the State of New York, which became effective on January 1, 1940. This law requires the segre­ gation of annuity fund assets as separate and distinct from all other funds of the Society, which funds are not applicable to the payments of debts of the Society other than annuity benefits. A minimum reserve must be maintained for annuity contracts and the form of agreement and the schedule of annuity rates must meet with the approval of the Superintendent of Insurance. The Society has com­ plied with the provisions of the law.

* Existing fund increased during the year. 68 AMERICAN BAPTIST FOREIGN MISSION SOCIETY

The report to the Insurance Department of the State of New York is, at their request, based upon the calendar year. The report filed on December 31, 1940, showed total assets in the segregated annuity fund of $1,231,128. The required reserve was $1,012,738, leaving unassigned funds or a surplus of $218,390. The figures in the following paragraphs cover a report of transactions occurring during the fiscal year and, therefore, are on a different basis than the report made to the Insurance Department at the end of each calendar year. The outstanding special gift agreements with life annuity return as shown on the balance sheet at April 30, 1940, amount to $1,220,256.78, to which has been added 140 new gifts totalling $42,046.09 and adjustments of $9,725.72. Charges have been made for maturing agreements of $75,638.92 and adjustments on these agreements of $4,847.34. This account has also been charged with the amount of $70,561.01 which represents the amount by which the annuity payments of $112,848.42 exceed the income of $42,287.41 earned on invested funds. As a net result of the transactions for the year this account stood at $1,120,981.32 on April 30, 1941. It will be noted that in the total annuity fund of $1,231,136.07 shown on the balance sheet, there is added the net profit on disposal of investments of $33,141.10, the amount of matured agreements not allocated of $76,900.96 and the annuity payments which are held by the Society at the annuitants’ request of $112.69.

RECEIPTS FROM LEGACIES The total receipts from legacies during the year were $84,631.14, of which $22,177.66 was designated for permanent funds and other purposes, and $62,453.48 was undesignated. There was transferred to budget income $45,000 which represents ap­ proximately the average amount of legacies received during the past three years. Among the larger legacies received during the year were the following:

Designated for Permanent Undesignated Funds and Other Purposes Abby C. B a r n e s...... $3,800.00 Mary Williams ...... $1,006.62 Sophus A. Neilsen ...... 1,800.00 J. Ackerman Coles ...... 13,977.84 D. K. Edward...... 4,000.00 Oliver B. Grant...... 2,489.85 Fred T. Estabrook...... 2,319.38 William R. Schoemaker. .. 2,491.57 Julia Harkness ...... 1,953.59 Ida Mae Dennison ...... 1,095.00 Charles S. Estes ...... 1,000.00 Florence E. Bangs ...... 1,580.02 John W. Luckenbach...... 12,765.93 Sarah P. Livingston___ . . . 1,705.49 O. J. Maynard...... 2,300.00 American Baptist Foreign Mission Society

TREASURER’S REPORT Year Ended April 30, 1941

Foreign Mission Headquarters 152 Madison Avenue New York

C e r t if ie d P u b l ic A c c o u n t a n t s

NEW YORK DETROIT HOUSTON PHILADELPHIA CLEVELAND SAN FRANCISCO CHICAGO CINCINNATI LOS ANGELES BOSTON ROCKFORD SEATTLE BALTIMORE LOUISVILLE WASHINGTON ST. LOU IS LONDON PITTSBURGH ATLANTA PARIS DALLAS

A merican B aptist Foreign M ission S ociety, N ew York, N . Y.

We have examined the accounts of the A merican Baptist F oreign M ission Society kept at its home office in New York as at April 30, 1941. Cash on hand was counted and balances in banks were confirmed by direct correspondence with the respective depositaries; securities owned were accounted for either by certified lists received from the custodians thereof or by inspection. The investments in bonds, stocks, and mortgages (including mortgages and notes received with respect to properties held by the Foreign Mission Realty Corporation, the entire capital stock of which is owned by the Society) are carried in the Society’s records at amounts which represent principally cost or values assigned thereto by the Society, which values do not exceed the estimated values at time of acquisition. We are informed that, in the opinion of the Society’s Investment Committee, the net profit from disposal of investments, shown under the several funds, is adequate to provide for possible losses on investments. The major portion of the foreign field appropriations is disbursed through mission treasurers in the field, who make quarterly reports to the Society’s home office. We made a test review of such reports to establish the receipt by such mission treasurers of the appropriation remittances to them as shown in the accounts at New York, but we did not examine the accounts kept by the mission treasurers in the foreign field. In our opinion, based upon such examination and subject to the fore­ going explanations, the appended balance sheet, statement of income and budget appropriations, and statement of deficiency of income set forth the position of the Society at April 30, 1941, and its fiscal operations for the year then ended. L ybrand, R oss B ros. & Montgomery N ew Y ork, May 14, 1941

REPORT OF THE TREASURER

SCHEDULE I

STATEMENT OF DEFICIENCY OF INCOME Year Ended April 30,, 1941

Deficiency of Income, May 1, 1940 (without applying Undesig­ nated Reserves for the Equalization of Income, aggregat­ ing $158,039.04) ...... $145,707.53 Credits: Contributions applicable to 1939-40...... $11,396.19 Net Adjustments of Previous Budgets...... 7,512.65 Net Adjustments of previous year’s income...... 268.62 ------19,177.46

$126,530.07 Excess of Income over Budget Appropriations, for year ended April 30, 1941 (Schedule II) ...... 663.90 Deficiency of Income, April 30, 1941 (without applying Un­ designated Reserves for Equalization of Income, aggregat­ ing $158,621.13) ...... $125,866.17 6

SCHEDULE II SUMMARY OF INCOME AND BUDGET APPROPRIATIONS CURRENT BUDGET Year Ended April 30, 1941

INCOME Regular Budget: Sources other than Donations: Income: From Unrestricted Investments ...... $55,167.72 From Restricted Investments ...... 235,698.17 From Designated Temporary Funds ...... 6,425.96 From Securities Received as Gifts...... 15.00 $297,306.85 Special Credits to Income ...... 318.21 ------$297,625.06 Less: Income Designated: To be credited or paid to churches...... $525.14 To be paid to beneficiaries...... 518.84 For Specific Purposes, held awaiting ex­ penditure ...... 9,903.81 To be credited to the Fund...... 2,977.07 Investment Service Fees charged against Income ...... 1,875.00 ------15,799.86 $281,825.20 Appropriated: From Matured Special Gift Agreements...... $20,000.00 From Legacy Reserve ...... 45,000.00 From Designated Temporary Funds ...... 4,066.33 ------69,066.33 The Ministers and Missionaries Benefit Board...... 7,500.00 World Relief Committee ...... 4,000.00 Woman’s American Baptist Foreign Mission Society toward Field Administration Expense...... 8,473.39 Rent of Mission Properties, Net...... 4,769.84 Interest ...... 958.18 Total Income from Sources other than Donations... $376,592.94 Regular Donations: Contributions: Direct ...... $38,182.74 Through Council on Finance and Promotion 425,028.01 Transferred from 1939-1940 ...... 5,245.87 Total Regular Donations ...... $468,456.62 Less: Designated to 1941-1942 Budget...... 4,916.39 ------463,540.23 Total Income Regular Budget...... $840,133.17 Specific Budget—per Contra: Contributions: Direct ...... $65,395.79 Through Council on Finance and Promotion...... 8,818.33 Through World Relief Committee: For China Emergency...... $17,750.96 For European Relief ...... 5,000.00 For Distribution to other Organizations 18,213.08 ------40,964.04 Appropriated from Designated Temporary Funds...... 27,209.18 Total Income Specific Budget ...... 142,387.34 Total Income Regular and Specific Budgets...... $982,520.51 V

SCHEDULE II SUMMARY OF INCOME AND BUDGET AAPPROPRIATIONS CURRENT BUDGET Year Ended April 30, 1941

BUDGET APPROPRIATIONS Regular Budget: Foreign Field Appropriations: Salaries of Missionaries:

On Furlough ...... 93,013.05 ------$339,667.06 Passages of Missionaries to and from the Field 72,701.00 Work of Missionaries and Native Agencies...... 121,229.96 Care of Property...... 22,884.23 Work and Workers in Europe...... 15,000.00 Retired Missionaries and Widows...... 114,023.80 New Appointees ...... 11,533.30 Land, Buildings, and Equipment...... 650.00 Education of Oriental Students...... 222.50 Homes for Missionaries and Missionaries’ Children... 14,141.67 Foreign Missions Conference and Other Co-operative Movements ...... 4,327.00 M issions and Literature Sent Missionaries...... 718.04 $717,098.56 Less: Estimated Foreign Exchange Credit...... 10,000.00

Total Foreign Fields Appropriations...... $707,098.56

Home Expenditures: Foreign Department Administration...... $30,338.48 Home Department Administration ...... 43,295.72 Treasury Department Administration 47,945.07 ------$121,579.27 Retired Officers and Pension Premiums...... 10,343.88 Total Home Expenditures ...... 131,923.15 Interest ...... 447.56

Total Appropriations Regular Budget ...... $839,469.27

Specific Budget—per Contra: Land, Buildings, and Equipment...... $17,393.32 General Work ...... 69,895.55 Support of Missionaries ...... 13,921.15 China Emergency Fund ...... 17,964.24 European Relief ...... 5,000.00 Distributed to Other Organizations ...... 18,213.08 Total Appropriations Specific Budget ...... 142,387.34

Total Appropriations Regular and Specific Budgets...... $981,856.61 Excess of Income over Budget Appropriations for Year Ended April 30, 1941, transferred to Deficiency of Income Account ...... 663.90 $982,520.51 8

SCHEDULE III BALANCE SHEET April 30, 1941 ASSETS Permanent Funds Assets: Unrestricted: Investments ...... $1,701,909.06 Cash in Bank ...... 25,783.34 Interest Receivable on Bonds Purchased ...... 93.82 ------$1,727,786.22 Restricted: Investments ...... $5,890,157.90 Cash in Bank ...... 175,352.94 Interest Receivable on Bonds Purchased...... 310.48 ------6,065,821.32 Total Permanent Funds Assets ...... $7,793,607.54 Annuity Fund Assets (See Note A): Investments ...... $1,180,715.54 Cash in Banks ...... 50,305.68 Interest Receivable on Bonds Purchased...... 114.85 Total Annuity Fund Assets ...... 1,231,136.07 Plant Properties in the United States of America (See Note B ) ...... 99,614.36 Special Trust Funds Assets—Investments ...... $75,016.00 — Cash in Bank ...... 500.00 ------75,516.00 Designated Temporary Funds Assets: Investments ...... $320,820.96 Cash in Bank ...... 118,189.74 Interest Receivable on Bonds Purchased...... 1.53 Total Designated Temporary Funds Assets ...... 439,012.23

Current Assets: Cash: In Banks and on Hand...... $50,671.66 In Transit—April 30, 1941, Distribu­ tion of Council on Finance and Promotion ...... 73,687.70 ------$124,359.36 Securities Received as Gifts at nominal amounts...... 220.00 Accounts Receivable: Missionaries ...... $11,929.31 Other ...... 16,185.26 ------28,114.57 ------152,693.93 A dvances: By Missiqn Treasurers on Missionaries’ Field Accounts: Mission Work ...... $14,842.45 Personal ...... 7,846.90 ------22,689.35 To Homes for Missionaries and Missionaries’ Children 2,550.00 To Missionaries for Traveling Expenses...... 6,216.01 To Representatives of the Society to be accounted for 2,287.96 ------33,743.32 Legacy and Special Gift Agreements Reserve Assets: Investments ...... $45,361.09 Cash in Bank ...... 119,663.87 Advances on Account of Prospective Legacies...... 932.11 ------165,957.07 $9,991,280.52

N ote A. Article IV, Section 45 of the Insurance Law of the State of New York requires the segregation of annuity fund assets as separate and distinct from all other funds of the Society, which funds are not applicable to the payments of debts of the Society other than annuity benefits, together with the maintenance of prescribed minimum reserves for annuity contracts. - The annual report on the form prescribed by the Insurance Department has been tiled for the year ended December 31, 1940. The calculation of the Reserve require- 9 SCHEDULE III BALANCE SHEET April 30, 1941 FUNDS AND LIABILITIES Permanent Funds: Unrestricted as to Income: Unrestricted as to Investment...... $765,156.65 Restricted as to Investment...... 5,308,835.25 Net Profit on Disposal of Investments, unallocated 47,123.88 $6,121,115.78 Restricted as to Income: Unrestricted as to Investment...... $915,505.69 Restricted as to Investm ent...... 756,186.89 Net Profit on Disposal of Investments, unallocated 799.18 1,672,491.76 Total Permanent Funds ...... $7,793,607.54 Annuity Fund (See Note A ): Outstanding Special Gift Agreements, with Life An­ nuity Return ...... $1,120,981.32 Net Profits on Disposal of Investments...... 33,141.10 Matured Agreements not allocated...... 76,900.96 Annuity Payments awaiting Annuitants’ Disposition.. 112.69 Total Annuity Fund ...... 1,231,136.07 Plant Funds—Properties in the United States of America 99,614.36 Special Trust Funds—Special Trust Agreements...... 75,516.00 Designated Temporary Funds: For Land, Buildings, Equipment, and Maintenance of Mission Property ...... $305,209.87 For Mission Work ...... 81,296.06 For Support of Missionaries...... 7,742.41 For Other Objects ...... 44,763.89 Total Designated Temporary Funds ...... 439,012.23 Current Liabilities: Notes Payable to Bank ...... $25,000.00 Accounts Payable: Missionaries ...... $11,029.54 Others ...... 23,840.47 34,870.01 Deposits with Mission Treasurers—Personal Funds of Missionaries aggregating $19,321.86 less $19,094.36 deposits in foreign banks applicable thereto...... 227.50 60,097.51 Foreign Field Appropriation Balance against which charges have not yet been reported: Current Budget ...... $347,527.09 Previous Budgets ...... 16,758.56 $364,285,65 Add: Deposits with Mission Treasurers for Mission Work Appropriations aggre­ gating $103,928.66 less $77,771.95 de­ posits in foreign banks applicable thereto 26,156.71 ------390,442.36 Less: Net Advances to Mission Treasurers applying on above balances ...... 190,057.77 ------200,384.59 Unexpended Income and Donations for Designated Purposes 4,916.39 Reserve for Possible Fluctuation in Foreign Exchange 46,904.93 Legacy and Special Gift Agreements Reserve: Reserves for Equalization of Income: From Legacies—Undesignated ...... $147,286.33 From Matured Special Gift Agree­ ments—Undesignated ...... 11,334.80 From Matured Special Gift Agree­ ments and Legacies—Designated. 6,375.36 ------164,996.49 Unadjusted Estates ...... 960.58 165,957.07 Deficiency of Income ...... *125,866.17 $9,991,280.52

ment at December 31, 1940, was certified to the Insurance Department by Officers of the Board and indicated that the assets of the annuity fund were adequate to meet the reserve requirements of that date. No determination of the required reserve has been made as of April 30, 1941. N o te B. This balance sheet does not include physical property of the Society on the mission fields or office furniture and fixtures at headquarters in New York. * Deduction 10

SCHEDULE IV SUMMARY OF FOREIGN FIELDS APPROPRIATIONS

Borne F ie ld Mew MISSIOMS Salaries Salaries Passages A ppointees

Burma *27,22U.91 #58,837.51 #21,06l;.00 ♦1 , 136.00 Assam 7,233«31 25,1*29.37 U,235*oo South India I6,lii3.00 36,520.76 9,700.00 3,956Jtf) Bengal-Orissa 6,652.98 15,513*k7 3,1*65.00 3,086.90 India General China, t South 131 13,872^.92 3,9U3«00 E ast 9,191^5 22,573.52 8,715.00 West 5,815.06 13,371.51 i+,803.00 A ll China 3,090.66 2,155.18 Japan 1,81^.79 16,890.91+ 6J4+5.00 Congo Beige 10,131.07 20,227.39 8,1*53-00 3,35U.OO Philippine Islands 3,219.77 17,295.56 1,880.00 Medic&l Examination of M issionaries 2,3jh.»6S Missionaries Supported by Specifics ______

Total* 193.013.05 <2142,690.16 ♦72.70l«00 <11,533.30

R e tire d M issio n a rie s and Widows Education of Oriental Students Work in E urope: Regular Budget Appropriations Specific Appropriations Homes for M issionaries' M issionaries’ Children: Regular Budget Appropriations Miscellaneous Specifics "Missions" and Literature sent to Missionaries Estimated Foreign Exchange Credit Ministers and Missionaries Pension 13,963*85 Cooperative Agencies World Relief Lay Pension Fund

193,013.05 ♦2Z|£,65k.01 $72,701.00 111»533*30 11

Work of Missionaries Speoific8 Iaoone and Native Care of General Support of on Funds Agencies P roperty Buildings Work Missionaries Total

<2,899.23 <26, 11*9.81 <5, 605.82 <3, 100.00 <6, 368.06 <152.385.3ll 27.67 lU .366. i 5 2,845.23 8,414*80 5,996.64 68,548.17 5,406.04 12,220.18 3.392.31 3. 503*44 15.899.32 106,741*45 41i4.98 9. 53U.77 1,999.06 465.00 2,985.61 43,747.79 2,129*31 2,129.31

65.14 2,866.67 75.00 587.88 21.544.0U 600.53 6,875.25 537.QÌ4 200.00 10, 135.12 58,045*91 53*74 4,990.23 110.08 2,798.45 31,9142.10 720.80 2I4O.OO 12,134.30 18,31*0.91* 32.12 a.511.91 2,236.25 2,074.59 51, 035.60 32*57 7,31^.72 1,368.14 300.00 2,397.74 53.578.63 7,136.50 892.00 1,875.00 1.38 32, 300.21 2.33U.62 <13.921.15 13.921*15 ♦9.582.0g #115.816.30 <18.715.87 <18,043.32 »61.379.09 <13.921*15 <657.395.26 <11^,023*90 222.50

15, 000.00 #32*50 32.50

l4.H a.67 ¿16.63 1*6.63 718.014. 10,000.00* 3,963*85 4,327.00 29,6li|.65 29,614.65 20,000.00 20,000.00

<9,582.02 <115,816.30 <18,715.87 <16,0U3.32 <111.072.87 <13,921.15 <£^9.^5.

* Deduct / In agreement with Schedule II as followst Total Foreign Fields Appropriations, Regular Budget <707,098.56 T otal S p ecific Budget *hj!q*^B5«^q 12

SCHEDULE V DETAILS OF HOME EXPENDITURES For the Fiscal Year Ended April 30, 19Ul

(1) Foreign Department Administration

Cablegrams ♦163.246 Miscellaneous Expense 52.90 Offioe Equipment 26.75 Postage 2i95.17 Salaries of Secretaries and Staff 15,758.00 Stationery and Supplies 2jO*66 Telegrams 1+1.07 Travel of Missionaries to meet the Board 1 9 5 .3 6 Travel of Officers and Others 2406.61 Proportion of General Expense 11,802.21 Candidate Department Administrationt Appointees' Conference ♦1 5 0 .5 3 Ifedical Examination of Candidates 5 7 .5 0 Postage 22* .l6 Stationery and Supplies 3U8J+5 Telegrams 7.W+ Travel of Candidates 761.13 Travel of Officers 27.08 1,356.29 ♦50,338.2+8

(2) Kune Department Administration

Cablegrams ♦1+.07 Library Expenditures 5U.86 Miscellaneous Expense I42. 9I+ Office Equipment 15UJ+5 P ostage 1,1*11.57 Salaries of Secretary, Assooiate and Staff 13,007.00 Stationery and Supplies 369.01 Telegrams 10.62 Travel of Officers and Others 355.22 Proportion of General Expense 11,802.21 Promotion of Interest and Beneficence: Deputation Work of Missionaries #10.00* D eputation Work o f O ffic e rs 307.9U Field Secretaries: Salaries ♦5,121.10 Moving Expense 781+.53 Offioe and Travel Expense 2,10lt.8l 8,010*ljl] Literature: All Kindreds and Tongues ♦7814*86 Annual Report 1,215*09 Credit Sales 6. 50* General Literature and Printing 1,359*62 Prints and Electros 80.98 Postage and Express 1.09 5,1*55.31+ Missionary Exhibits 100.91* Office Equipment 75.75 P u b lic ity 973.36 Salaries of Office Staff 5 .192.00 16.085.77 1*5,295.72 13

(3) Treasury Department Administration

Cablegrams #182.76 Certified Public Accountant 1 , 107.01 Collection and Exchange Custodianship Service 1,335.1*5 Investment Service 67U.92 Legal Expense 1 , 077.22 Miscellaneous Expense 191.98 Office Equipment 175.26 Over and Short Account 2.00 Postage 1 , 1141.02 Safe D eposit Box 6.1(0 Salaries of Treasurer and Staff 22,971.25 Stationery and Supplies 558.10 Telegrams 71.1(2 Travel of Officers and Others 286.72 T reasury L ia b ility Bonds 199.50 Proportion of General Expense 11,802.21 *ia,ti23.65 Less: Discounts #205.11 Credits by Commission 758.92 96U.03 #140,859.65 Shipping Department: Miscellaneous Expense #20.01 Packing Supplies 2 k 33 Salaries of Staff 7 .o i q .l l 7,085^5 *1*7,91*5.07 (I4.) Miscellaneous General Expense

Retired Officers and Pension Premiums , 10. 3U3.88 Home Expenditures, Sohedule II ¿131,£23.15

(5) Details of General Expense

Annual Meeting ♦1 , 238.37 Board of Managers Expense 3, 021.02 Electric Light 386 Ja Insuranoe 3 2 8 ^ 9 Miscellaneous Expense 375.38 Office Equipment 7.50 Office Cleaning 1,51*2.57 Postage I4O6.36 Rent 1 1 , 302.86 Budget and Researcht Miscellaneous Expense *39.03 P ostage 126.08 Salaries of Secretary and Staff 7,789.85 Stationery, Supplies and Office Equipment I 8.38 Travel of Officers and Others 262.82 8, 236.16 Salaries and Ifeges 5,81+3.19 Special Conference Expense 97.62 Stationery and Supplies 1,180.02 Telephone 1 ,141+1 .6 8 Sale of Stamps 1.00+ ♦ 35.U06.63 14

Apportioned as folloWBt

To Foreign Department Administration ♦11,802.21 To Home Department Administration 11,802.21 To Treasury Department Administration 11.802.21 $35^406.65

* Deduotion 15

SUMMARY OF BOOK M S MARKET VALUES

Unrestricted, Restricted «ad Annuity Investment* Detailed in Schedule a T1 and 711

Investmente of Permanent Funds Investments of Permanent Funds Unrestricted as to Investment Restricted as to Investment ------T5F ------Book Book Boole Value Market Value Value Book Value Market Value Value Railroad, Traction, E le c tric , Gas and Water, Telephone and T elegraph, Muni­ cipal, Government, I n d u s tr ia l, Cansner- cial Notes and Sundry Bonds *1,3UU,USU.3U ll.353.62U .26 100.68 *l+, 1*01,631.38 tU.699.96U.92 106.78

Stooks 83^ 36.75 80,1*15.00 96.38 666.869.00 65i . 9L a .i3 97*76

T otal A ll Bonds and Stocks *1^27.921.09 *1 ,U3U,039*26 100J t 3 *5, 068, 520.38 *5,351,906.05 105.59

Mortgages, Real Estate, Note*,etc. 273.987.97 273.987.97 100.00 821,637.52 821,637*52 100.00

Grand Total *1,701,909.06 *1,708,027.23 IOO.36 *5,890,157.90 *6,173.5U3.57 IOU.81

Investments of Annuity Funds ^ ------Total Book Book Book Value Market Value Value Book Value Market Value Value Railroad, Traction, Electric, OaB and Hater, Telephone and T elegraph, Muni­ cipal, Government, I n d u s tr ia l, Consner- oial Note8 and Sundry Bonds *855, 662.72 *855,829'.07 100.02 *6,601,778J 4U *6,909^18.25 IOU.66

Stocks jj. ______^ ______750.325*75 732.356.13 97»6l

Total All Bonds and Stocks *855,662.72 *855,829.07 100.02 *7,352,10U.19 *7,6Ul.77U.38 I 03.SU

Mortgage*, Real Estate, Notes, etc. 325,lU6»57 325,lU6»57 100*00 1 ^ 20, 772*06 1 ,U20, 772.06 100.00

Grand Total *1,180,809*29 *1,180,975*6U 100.01 *8, 772, 876.25 *9,062,5US.UU 103*30

* See Balance Sheet note oovering the segregation of Annuity Assets SCHEDULE VI

General Summary of Investments of Permanent Funds

Investments of Permanent Investments of Permanent Funds Unrestricted as to Funds Restricted as to Total Investment Investment fiook Value Market Value ëook Value Market Value Book Value Market Value

Railroad Bonds #1408, 550.92 #393.1+73.75 #1,512,205.1^5 #1,1)95,353*75 #1,920,756*37 #1 , 888, 827.50 Traction Bonds 3,737*92 1,593*75 ...... 3,737*92 1,593*75 Electric, Gas and Water Bonds 370,389*1)2 383 ¿ 50. 00 1,391,302.1+1+ 1,£ 43, 136.25 1,761,691*86 2,026,586.25 Telephone and Telegraph Bonds 65,717*55 72 , 656.25 225,652*73 21+2,01)6.25 291,370*28 31I+,7 0 2.50 D istrict, Government, Municipal and State Bonds 175,83^*53 176 , 828.75 527,709*78 555, 1142*50 703,5W+*31 731,971*25 United States Government Bonds 79,787.1a 83, 258.01 203,31+5*65 215,395*13 283, 133.06 298,653.11+ Industrial Bonds 21+0,166.59 21+2,063.75 1+66,820.51) l+7Î+,296.25 706, 98 7.13 716,360.00 Sundry Bonds 3®^*^ ••• ••• J00«00 300#00 Commercial Hotes ... ______~ * ______7l+,59U*79 7l+,59l+.79 7Î+.591+.79 7l+,59l+*79

Total All Bonds #l, 3l4lj,U 8!+.3l+ #l,353,62l+.26 #1+, 1+01,631.58 #l+,699,9&+.92 #5,71+6,115*72 #6 , 053, 589.18 Market Value Per Cent of Book Value 100.68 106.78 105*35

S to c k s 83,1+36.75 80,1415*00 666, 889.00 651,9lq»13 750.325*75 732,356*13

Total All Bonds and Stocks #1,1+27,921*09 #l,l+3l+,039*26 # 5 , 068, 520.38 #5,351,906.05 #6,l+96,U+l.l+7 #6,785,91+5*31 Market Value Per Cent of Book Value 100*1+3 105*59 lOl+J+6

Notes Secured by Real Estate, Mortgages and Trust Deeds 266^+87.80 266,1+87.80 700.877.1+5 700,877*1+5 967, 365.25 967, 365.25 Miscellaneous 2,250.17 2,250.17 29,600.66 29,600.66 3 1, 850.83 3 1, 850.83 N otes 5,250*00 5,250*00 9 1 .1 5 9 .lq 91,159*1+1 96,l+09*lq 96,1+09.1+1

Total #1,701,909.06 #1,708,027.23 *5,890,157.90 *6,173,51+3.57 #7,592,066.96 #7,881,570.80 Market Value Per Cent of Book Value ______100.36 1QÎ+.81______103*81 SCHEDULE V I INVESTMENTS OF PERMANENT FUNDS UNRESTRICTED AS TO INVESTMENTS

SUMMARY Per Cent of De s c r i p t i o n B ook V a lu e Market Value B ook V alu e

Railroad Bonds #1408,550.92 *393.^73.75 96.31 Traction Bonds 3.737.92 1,593.75 U2. 6U E lectric, Gas and Water Bonds 370. 389.J42 383,U50.00 103.53 Telephone and Telegraph Bonds ' 65,717.55 72, 656.25 110^56 D istrict, Government, Municipal and State Bonds 175.83U.53 176,828.75 100.57 United States Government Bonds 79.787.Ul 8 3 , 2 5 8 .0 1 IOU.35 Industrial Bonds 2U0 , 166.59 2U2 , 063.75 100.79 Sundry Bonds 300.00 300.00 100.00

Total Bonds ♦l,3UU,U8U.3U *1,353,62U.26 100.68

S to c k s 83,U36.75 80,Ul5.00 96.38

Total Bonds and Stocks $1,U27,921.09 $1 ,U3U,039.26 100 .U-3 Mortgages on Real Estate 2 66 ^+87.80 266^ 1.87.80 100.00 Real Estate 2,250.17 2,250.17 100.00 N o te s 5,250.00 5,250.00 100.00

11,701,909.06 #1,708,027.23 100.36 INVESTMENTS OF PERMANENT FUNDS UNRESTRICTED AS TO INVESTMENT Railroad Bonds Par Value Rate M a tu rity Book Value Market Value I57<355— Atchison, Topeka ft Santa Fe Rwy., Gen* Mtg. 100 Yr* V s Oci. 1, 1995 FOTBTTT" 25,000 Baltimore ft Ohio R.R., 1st 5^ stamped Modified U'b J u ly 1 , 191+8 2&,05l*.50 17 , 000.00 15,000 The Canada S outhern Rwy. Co*, Cons. S e rie s "A" 5*8 Oot* 1, 1962 l5,U5U.oo 12, 618.75 10,000 Chioago, Indiana ft Southern R*R* Jan* 1, 1956 9,720*57 7 . 150.00 15.000 Chioago Union Station Co*, 1st Mtg. Series "E” Stamped 3 3 A ’« July 1, 1963 15,519.1*5 16,11*5.75 15,000 The Cincinnati Union Terminal Co*, 1st Mtg. Series "D" May 1 , 1971 15,521.1*5 16.275.00 10,000 Cleveland Terminal ft Valley R.R. Co., 1st Nov. 1, 1995 9,9 5 7 .1 5 6. 500.00 20,000 Erie R.R., Prior Lien Vs Jan. 1, 1996 l5>i5l+.67 18. 375.00 10,000 F lo rid a E a st C oast Rwy. C o ., 1 s t ft R ef. S e rie s "A" 5'« S e p t.l, 1971+ 1 . 500.00 987.50 5.000 H ouaatonio R*R., Cons* 5'b Nov. 1, 1937 5. 000.00 5. 200.00 25*000 Kansas C ity Term inal Rwy. Co*, 1 s t Mtg* V« Jan. 1, I960 25, 260.00 26. 906.25 50.000 Lehigh ft New England R.R . Co*, Gen* Mtg* "A" h'B A pr. 1 , 1965 50,807.11+ 1*7,562.50 10.000 Lehigh ft New Tork R.R. Co*, 1st Ve S e p t .l , 19U5 9,298*51* l+,225.00 15.000 Louisville ft Jeffersonville Bridge Co* V« Mar. 1 , 191+5 15 , 105.19 16.181.25 5.000 Minneapolis, St. Paul ft Sault Ste. Marie Rwy. Co*, 50 Tr* 1 s t Cons * Mtg* Vs July 1, 1938 l*,8l*7.85 537.50 5.000 Minneapolis, St. Paul ft Sault Ste. Marie R*y. Co., 50 Tr* 5’s July 1, 1938 1*,962.80 37.50 20.000 M isso u ri, P a o ifio R.R . C o ., Gen* Mtg* Ú's Mar. 1, 1975 5. 000.00 *00 30.000 H.Y. Central ft Hudson Eiver R.R. Co*, Lake Shore Coll* Feb. 1, 1998 25,561*85 20. 550.00 10.000 New Tork, New Haven ft Hartford, R.R*, Deb* I 1/ 2" July 1, 1955 2. 500.00 2. 600.00 15.000 Oregon-Washington R.R. ft Navigation Co*, 1st ft Ref* Mtg* S e rie s nA" Vs Ja n . 1 , 1961 1 3,813.55 16,050.00 35.000 P ennsylvania R.R . Co*, Gen* Mtg* S e rie s "A" 1* 1/ 2's June 1 . 1965 55, 525.02 57,187.50 5.000 Southern Rwy. Co*, Development ft Gen. Mtg. S e rie s "A" V s A pr. 1» 1956 2. 500.00 5,162.50 i+,000 Southern Pacific; Co*, San Franoisoo Terminal, 1st Mtg* Va A pr. 1 , 1950 3,1*01.91+ 5, 14*0.00 50.000 Terminal R*R* Assoc, of St. Louis, Gen* Ref* S.F. Vs Ja n . 1 , 1953 1*7,795.75 55. 250.00 1.000 Texas ft P a o ifio Rwy. C o ., Gen* ft R ef. Mtg* S e rie s nBn 5 '» A pr. 1 , 1977 992*50 750.00 15.000 Toledo Termial R.R. Co*, 1st Mtg* h 1/ 2 »o Nov* 1, 1957 15,000.00 16. 550.00 2l*,000 The V irg in ia n Rwy. Co*, 1 s t L ien ft Ref* Mtg* S e rie s "A" 3 i/h '* Mar. 1, 1966 2l+,l*l*6*90 25. 860.00 10.000 Hashington Terminal Co*, 1st 3 1/2’» Feb. 1. 19U5 9,1*25*05 10. 700.00 5,000 V isoonsin C e n tral Rwy. C o ., 1 s t Gen* Mtg* h'B Ju ly 1 , 191*9 750.00 1 , 725.00

Traotion Bonds

♦3.750 Cert, of Deposit, Chicago Rwys. Co., 1st 20 Tr. 5 '» Feb. 1, 1927 ♦3,737.92 ♦1,593.75

Eleotrio. Gas and Water Bonds

♦15,000 Boston Edison Co., 1st Mtg. Series "A" 2 3 /V s Deo. 1, 1970 ♦15.1*55.00 ♦15,595.75 25.000 Brooklyn Edison Co., Inc., Cons. Mtg. 3 l A ’» May 15, 1966 26,598.16 27,187.50 25.000 Columbus ft Southern Ohio Eleotrio Co., 1st Mtg. S e p t .l , I97O 26,691.67 26,656.25 iQn 5 1A' b 10.000 Connecticut Light ft Power Co., 1st ft Ref. Mtg. Series 5 l A ’s Dec. 1, 1966 10,769.23 10, 750.00

Hate Maturity Book Value Market Value Eleotrio, Gaa and Water Bonds (Cont'd) P a r V alue 3 l / 2 ' s Apr* 1 , 19l*8 ♦51,028.69 ♦52,875.00 Consolidated Edison Co. of N.Y., Ino. 10 Tr. H ♦50,000 Consolidated Gas, Eleotrio Light & Power Co* of Baltimore, 15,11*2.80 1 6 ,1*25.00 1 5 .000 1st Mtg. S.F* Seriess N" 3 tyl*'e D00* *971 11,100.00 3 1/ 2*8 1 » 1967 10,205.1*1 2 6 .6 8 7 .5 0 10.000 Dallas Power & Light Co*, 1st Mtg. 3 1/2*8 June 1, 1965 2 5 ,8 2 2 .9 2 55, 000.00 25,000 Duquesne Light Co*, 1st Mtg. 3 l/2*s July 1, 1969 5¡+,l*é2.1+9 2 7 .3 7 5 .0 0 50,000 Kansas Power ft Light Co*, 1st Mtg* 3 l/2's Sept.l, 1966 27,256.91*. 25,000 Louisville Gas ft Eleotrio Co., let Ref, k R e f. 3 8 .2 3 7 .5 0 35.000 Niagara, Lookport ft Ontario Power Co., 5»b Apr* 1, 1955 3 5 ,5 8 5 .1 6 2 7 .1 2 5 .0 0 3 l/2*8 Aug. 1, 1969 26, 283. 31* 1 5 . 357.50 Pennsylvania Power ft L ig h t C o ., 1 s t M tg. 3»s Sept*l, 1965 1 5 , 51*0.00 25.000 2 1 . 750.00 Southern California Edison Co., Ltd., 1st ft Ref. 3 l/2's July 1, 1968 20,891.1+6 15.000 1 1 . 550.00 Toledo Edison Co*, 1st Mtg. V s June 1 , 19l*9 8*876.15 20.000 >393.j+5ô7ôô 10,000 United Electric Co. of N*J*, 1st Mtg*

Telephone and Telegraph Bonds Deo. 1 , 1966 ♦9,627*56 ♦10,825.00 American Telephone ft Telegraph Co., 30 Tr* Deb* 3 l A '» 15,178.68 16,500.00 ♦ 10,000 5 's June 1, 1957 10 , 097.50 1 0 ,1 7 5 .0 0 15.000 Bell Telephone Co. of Canada, Series B 1st 2 j A ' s J a n .1 5 , I 98I 10.000 Illinois Bell Telephone Co., 1st Mtg* New E ngland T elephone ft T e le g ra p h C o ., 1 s t M tg. 3° «*. l+,908. 5l* 6 , 106.25 5,000 5 »s June 1 , 1952 S e r ie s A" 9 , 860.00 12 , 1+75.00 U l / 2 ' s May 1 , 1961 10,000 New England Telephone ft T e le g ra p h 3 l/2's Dec. 1, 1964 16,01+5.27 16.575.00 Southwestern Bell Telephone Co., 1st & Ref. Mtg* Series 15,000

D istrict. Government. Muniolpal and State Bonds ♦1 7 , 825.00 J a n .1 5 , I 96I ♦19,172.00 3 l A ’ « 1 5 , 206.25 ♦20,000 The Government of Dominion of Canada, 25 ^r* , , . 2*8 M ar. 1 , 19l*2 1 5 ,0 2 8 .3 6 Co^nVof Dutchess, N.Y., Work Relief C e r t , o f Indebtedness 2 5 .3 7 5 .0 0 15,000 2 . 90'8 M ar. 1 , 19l*2 25,03U .78 County of Erie, State of N. Y., Emergency Relief 1 5 , 262.50 25,000 1 1/2*8 F e b . 1 , 191*2 ll+ ,66l . 2t+ 15,000 Town of Malone, N.Y., Emergency Relief Dec *15, I 9I+3 I 5 J4 2 5 .9 3 1 5 , 768.75 10,1+75.00 15,000 County of Nassau, State of N.Y., Emergency Relief F Sept*15,19l*2 1 0 , 313.88 I 8 16 . 260.00 10.000 S ta te o f New York, G en eral Im provem ent 1 6 ,2 0 9 .0 0 3*8 Deo .1 5 , 19l*l 25. 050.00 16.000 State of New York, General State Improvement Apr *19, 19l*7 2l*,891.90 State of New York, Loan for Elimination of Grade Crossings 1 3 / V 8 10 200.00 2l+,000 1* 1 /2 '8 Deo *15, 191*1 10 , 000.00 . 10.000 Omaha W ater Works o f th e C ity o f Omaha Town o f S o a r s d a le , H.Y. Bd. of Education of Union Free 2 5.i406. 25_ £ 25,000 2*l(D*s Mar .1 5 . 19l»2 25-OQ7Jill School Dist. No. 1 I Ï 7 Onited States Government Bonds P ar Valu« Rate Maturity •Book Value Market Value #10,000 U» 3. Treasury Notes 3,600 U» 8» T reasury 3A'« d»o.1 5 , 1945 #9,931.25 #9,993.75 Sept.15,19l|.7 35.000 U, S. Treasury 3A’« 3,625.13 3,9014.88 1/8*8 30.000 Federal National Mortgage Assooiation June 15,19^9-m^' 35,915.83 38,871.88 5/8'8 Ja n . 3, 19i*iW*0 30,1*87.50 179.707.1*1 Industrial Bonds

#¿{0,000 The Atlantic Refining Co#, 15 Yr» Deb» S e p t.l, I 953 30.000 Inland Steel Co., 1st Mtg. Series "F" 3'* #Ì4Ù,268.01 #1*1 , 600.00 3 ’8 Apr. 1, 1961 25.000 Sooony-Vaouum Oil Co., Ino. 25 Tr. Deb. 31, 11*0.00 31, 012.50 3’« J u ly 1 , 1961+ 26,33l4..00 2^,000 Standard Oil Co. of N. J., 25 Tr. Deb. 3»s 26,218.75 50.000 Texas Corp., Deb. June 1 , 196I 23. 520.00 25.020.00 3’8 50.000 Union Oil Co. of California, Deb. May 15, 1965 51. 908.00 52.375.00 Aug. 1, 1959 15.000 Youngstown Sheet è Tube Co., 1st Mtg. 8.F . S e rie s "D" 3’% 51,569.08 51.250.00 3 l A ’ Hot. 1, I960 15.1*27.50 sa a f t c a . g #¿1*1 »063.75 Sundry Bonds

#1 ,000 City Real Estate Trustees Chicago 5*e ♦300.00 #300.00 S hare8 Stooks 50 Central Hanover Bank * Trust Co., Capital l*oo Chase N atio n al Bank #1+,856.25 #1*,625.00 200 Chemical Bank ft Trust Co., Capital 12.837.50 11,800.00 100 Continental Illinois National Bank & Trust Co. of Chicago 9,1*37.50 8.700.00 200 General lfill«, Ino.f # Cun. Pfd. 8, 625.00 8. 250.00 1*0 Guaranty Trust Co. of N. Y., Capital 25. 098.00 25,900.00 J400 National City Bank of N. Y., Capital 1 1 . 520.00 10, 7t40.00 11.062.50 lOJiOO.OO 113^56.75 # t t o S . o o ' Mortgages on Real Estate

Mortgages on properties in Metropolitan New York Mortgages on Properties in Metropolitan Hew York #212,152.90 #212,152.90 (Title held by Foreign Mission Realty Corporation) Farm Mortgage* 5p,15l*.57 50,15l+» 57

Real Estate Charles M. Van Velzer, Alberta," Canada «2.250.17 #2.250.17 Notes Foreign Mission Realty Corporation covering mortgage formerly held ■by the Soolety on property located at 11*2-15 Cherry Ave., Flushing, L. I. #5, 250.00 #5.250.00

SCHEDULE V I INVESTMENTS OF PERMANENT FUNDS RESTRICTED AS TO INVESTMENT

SUMMARY

Per Cent of Description Book V a lu e Market Value B ook V a lu e

Railroad Bonds #1,512,205.1+5 Ì1.U95,353.75 98.89 E leotrie, Gas and ffater Bonds 1,591,302.1*1+ l,6l4.3,136.25 118.10 Telephone and Telegraph Bonds 225,652.73 21*2,01*6.25 IO 7 .2 6 D istriot, Government, Municipal and State Bonds 527,709.78 555,1^2.50 10 5.2 0 United States Government Bonds 203,3i+5.65 215,395.13 IO5.9 3 Industrial Bonds 1*66,820.5U I4.7I+,296.25 10 1.6 0 Commercial Notes 7U.59it.79 7I4., 59^.79 100.00

Total Bonds #1*., ¿*0 1 , 6 3 1 .3 8 #1+,699,96L*.92 10 6 .7 8

S to c k s 666,089.00 651,91a.13 92.76

Total Bonds and Stooks # 5 , 068, 520 .38 *5.351,906.05 IO 5 .5 9 Mortgages on Real Estate 700,877.^5 700,877.^5 100.00 M iscellaneous 29 . 6o o .6 6 29,600.66 100.00 N o te s 91,159.ia 91,15 9 M 100.00

#5,690.157.90 #6,173,5Ü3.57 lOU.Bl INVESTMENTS OF PERMANENT FUNDS RESTRICTED AS TO INVESTMENT P ar Value R ate Book Value COLES AND ACKERMAN MEMORIAL FOND M arket 'Value #10,000 Certifioiate of Deposit for "Kansas City, Fort Soott ft Msmphis Rwy. C o., R e f. 1ftg . k'B #10,000.00 # 4,300.00 EMILIE S. COLES DORMITORY FUND #1,000 Baltimore & Ohio R.R. Co., Ref. ft Gfen.' iSg. Series "A" 5*s #810.00 #365.00 EMILIE S. COLES MEMORIAL FÜND Mortgages on Properties in Motropolï^an New York #97,683.14 Mortgages on Properties in M stropolitan New York #97,683.14 (Title to properties held by Foreign Mission Realty Corporation) 36,003.31 36,003.31 Foreign Mission Realty Corporation Note covering morta-aere formerlv held by Society on property at; 3554-8Bth Street, Jackson Heights, N. Y. 5 ,5 00.00 5.500.00 #139, 186. 4.5 7 1 W A & th r ELIZA CONSTANTINE FUND Mortgage of Property of W illard E. Closs, Summit, N. J. #20, 600.00 #20, 600.00 A. g . HAWKS FOND Deposits held in èavings "Banks #500.00 #500.00 FRANK J . LEONARD FOND #4*900 U. S. Treasury 2 3 A ’s S e p t. 15 ,1947*4-5 #4,931«4o #5 .314.97 BEBECCA MANNING FUND #1,000 The Virginian kwy. Co., 1st Lien ft Ref. Mtg. Series "A" 3 3 A ’8 M ar. 1 , 1966 1.000 Central New York Power Corp., Gen. Mtg. #1 ,0 1 8 .6 5 #1 , 077.50 3 3 A ’8 O ct. 1 , 1962 985.00 10.000 Philadelphia Electric Co., 1st ft Ref. Ktg. I , 071.25 3 l / 2 ’e Mar. 1 , 1967 10,269.38 II , 000.00 8.000 City of Oswego, County of Oswego, N. Y., Home Relief 1.1)0 * 8 May 1 , 191+4 8,1 2 2 .0 8 8 ,120.00 *¿0,395.11 * 0 1 ,0 6 8 .^ CAROLINE PIERCE FOND #10,000 Baltimore ft Ohio tl. R., 1st 5’s stamped Modified 4*s July 1, 1948 #10,091.68 #6,800.00 4.000 The Virginian Rwy. Co., 1st Lien ft Ref. Mtg. Series "A" 3 3 A '8 Mar. 1, 1966 14.000 Toledo Edison Co., 1st Mtg. 4 ,0 7 4 .5 0 4 ,3 1 0 .0 0 July 1, 1968 14,961.30 5.000 City of Dallas, Public School Improvement 15. 225.00 4 l / 2 's May 1 , 1950 5,0 3 9 .8 4 6, 212.50 5.000 City of Dallas, Public School Improvement 4 1/ 2*3 May 1 , 1949 11.000 U. S. Treasury 5 ,0 36.91 6,1 1 8 .7 5 2 3 A , s Sept.15,1947 Mortgages on Properties in Metropolitan New York 11,070.49 11 , 931.56 3 4 .4 io .o o 34.410.00

R ate M aturity Book Value Market Value P ar Value CAROLINE PIERCE FUNP(COUT'D) #10, 250.00 #10, 2*0.00 Mortgage on Property at ’¿l lynton Place, White Plain®* N,T\ . 7 6 May lit, 1935 (Title to property held by Foreign Mission Realty Corporation) 5.000.00 5.000 .0 0 Deposits held in Savings Banks *97,9 OT“

GEORGE A. PILLSBURY FUND Mortgage on Property at ¿16 Francis S t., Pelham, N. Y. July 1, 1934 (Title to Property held by Foreign Mission Realty Corporation; WILLIAM REIFF FOND ,2(0'£ May 1 , 1914+ #1,522.90 #1,522.50 #1,500 City of Oswego, County of Uswego, N. Y., Home Relief Sept.15,1947 5,535.25 5,965.78 5,500 0. S. Treasury 3 /V Mortgage on Property of Cecilia A. McAllister, 6,937.50 6,937.50 65 Walbrooke Road, SoarBdale, N. Y. 2 .968.00 2. 968.00 Note of First Baptist Church of Pottstown, Pa. iiè!965.65 #r/l5Vj«7r

JOHN D. ROCKEFELLER FOND Railroad Bonds O ct. 1, #27,524.33 #27,093.75 Atchison, Topeka ft Santa Fe R.R., Gen. 100 Yr. 4 ' s 1995 #25,000 s June 1 , 191+9 30, 000.00 40, 187.50 Alleehany Corp., 20 Yr. Coll. Tr. Conv. 111.750.00 50.000 s Oct. 1, 1952 108, 000.00 Atlantic Coast Line R.R., Louisville ft Nashville Coll. 4* 10 200.00 150.000 4* s J u ly 1 , 1948 15.087.05 , 15.000 Baltimore ft Ohio R.R., 1st 5$ stamped Modified 25.375.00 5 ' 8 J u ly 1 , 1969 24, 875*00 25.000 Canadian N atio n al Rwy. C o., 40 Y r. 103. 500.00 3 l / 2 's May 1 , 1996 99. 500.00 Chesapeake & Ohio Rwy» Co** Rof* & Imp* Jftg* es 63.281.25 100.000 4* 8 Mar. 1 , 1958 7 9,227.46 75.000 Chicago, Burlington ft Quinoy R.R. Co., Gen. Mtg. Chioago, In d ia n a p o lis ft S t. Louis S h o rt Line Rwy. C o ., 1 s t 100.000 Apr* 1 , 66. 500.00 72. 500.00 Mtg. 50 Yr. 4 ' 8 1953 Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul ft Paoific R.R. Co., Conv. Adj. 120.000 2000 12,000.00 3, 300.00 Mtg. S e rie s "A" 5 18 Ja n . 1 , 160.000 Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul ft Paoific R.R. Co. 50 Yr. Mtg. 16. 000.00 15, 200.00 5' 6 Feb. 1, 1975 S e rie 8 "A" n n 36. 000.00 35. 100.00 4 3/2*8 May 1 , 1989 90.000 Chioago, Milwaukee ft St. Paul Rwy. Co., Gen. Series C 37,668.75 3 A ’8 Ju ly 1 , 1963 36. 212.05 35.000 Chicago Onion Station Co., 1st Mtg. Series E 3 60.450.00 4'»S Ju ly 1 , 1952 59. 902.50 65.000 Chicago ft Western Indiana R.R. Co., Cons. 50 Yr. ^ ^ 27.125.00 3 1/ 2 's May 1, 1971 25,535.75 25.000 The Cincinnati Union Terminal Co., 1st Mtg. Series D 22,161.25 14.625.00 Cleveland, Cincinnati, Chicago ft St. Louis Rwy., Ref. ft Isg>< :"4 1/ 2's Ju ly 1 , 1977 25.000 •s June 1, 199? 35, 918.91 31. 300.00 40.000 Cleveland, Cincinnati, Chicago ft St. Louis Rwy., Gen. 4 •s S e p t.l, 1974 13. 500.00 8, 887.50 90.000 Florida East Coast Rwy. Co., 1st ft Ref. Mtg. Series A 5 12 120.00 4 *6 Ja n . 1, 1947 12,165.29 . 12.000 Georgia H.R. & Banking Co. n (| 23. 312.50 23.031.25 Great Northern Rwy. Co., Gen. Mtg. Series E 4 1/ 2 's Ju ly 1, 1977 25.000 60,010.40 56,100.00 Louisville ft Nashville R.R. Co., 1st ft Ref. Series "D 4 's A pr. 1, 2003 24 000.00 60.000 's Mar. 1, 40 .000.00 , 100,000 Missouri Paoific R.R. Co., 1st & Ref. Mtg. Series F 5 1977 Pur Value JOM D. ROCKEFELLER FUND Sftte Maturity Book Value M arket Vaine bailroad üonfls

♦25,000 Appalaohian Electric Power Co,, 1st Mtg. 50.000 Associated Gas ft Electric Co., Conv. Deb, } i A ’» Deo. 1 , 1970 ♦26,691.67 4 l / 2 's ♦26,468.75 5,000 Blackstone Valley Gas ft Electric Co., Mtg. ft Coll. Tr. "Dn J a n .15, 1949 45.750.00 7.625.00 30.000 Boston Edison Co., 1st Mtg. Series "A" 3 1/2*8 Deo. 1, 1968 5,361.61 5.450.00 2 3 A ’s Dec. 1 , 25,000 Brooklyn Edison Co., Ino. Cons. Mtg. 1970 30.870.00 30.787.50 20,000 Central New York Power Corp. 3 l / V s May 15, 1966 24,778.50 27.187.50 24,000 The Cincinnati Gas ft Electric Co., 1st Mtg. 3 3 A '8 O ot. 1 , 1962 20,293.33 2 1,1(25.00 3 1/ 2 's 30,000 Columbus ft Southern Ohio Electric Co., 1st Mtg. June 1 , 1967 2 6 .l423. 3i 26,310.00 3 l A S e p t ,l , 35.000 Consolidated Gas, Electric Light ft Power Co. of Baltimore '8 1970 32.030.00 31.987.50 1st Mtg. S.P. Series "N" 25.000 Consolidated Gas, Eleotric Light ft Power Co. of Baltimore 3 l A ‘» Dec. 1 , 1971 35,662.96 38, 325.00 1st Mtg. S.F. Series "P" 1+0,000 Consumers Power Co., 1st Mtg. 5 " , June 1 , 1969 26,026.68 26.750.00 50.000 Dayton Power ft L ig h t C o., 1 s t ft R ef. 3 1/ 2 's Nov. 1 , 1970 4 0 ,267.27 144. 100.00 65.000 The Detroit Edison Co., Gen. ft Ref. Mtg. Series "H" 3 ' 8 Ja n . 1 , 1970 51,369.83 53,ooo.oo Dec. 1, 1970 25.000 New England Power Co., 1st Mtg. Series "A" 3 '% 69,555*42 68. 087.50 N0V.I5, I 96I 15.000 Niagara, Lookport ft Ontario Power Co., 1st Mtg. ft Ref. 3 i A '* 26,785.72 26, 968.75 . S e rie s "A" 24.000 Niagara Fall» Power Co., 1st Ref. Mtg. 5 s A pr. 1 , 1955 15,155.90 16. 387.50 65.000 Northern States Power Co., 1st ft Ref. Mtg. 3 1 /2 's Mar. l f 1966 25.838.Lo 26,250.00 3 1 /2 's Feb. 1 . 1967 67J4I 6.69 71.337.50

Par V alue JOHN D. ROCKEFELLER FUND Rate Maturity Book Value Market Value E le o tr io , Gas and W ater Bonds (c o n t'd ) ♦25,000 New York Edison Co., Inc., 1st Lien ft Ref. Mtg. Serieb "D" 3 l A ’s O ot. 1 , 1965 ♦25,008.18 ♦26,937.50 25,000 New York Edison Co., 1st Lien ft Ref. Series "E" 3 lA ' 8 A pr. 1, 1966 26,680.00 27. 125.00 50,000 New York Gas, Eleotrio Light, Beat ft Power Co.,Purchase Mraey 4 's F eb. 1, 1949 55,104.20 57.125.00 500,000 H. Y. ft Westchester Lighting Co., Gen. Mtg. 100 Yr. 4's Ju ly 1 , 2004 270,000.00 522. 500.00 15,000 Ohio Power Co., 1st Mtg. 3 lA ' 8 O ot. 1, 1968 15,855.80 16. 125.00 25,000 P a o ific Gas ft E le o tr ic C o ., 1 s t ft R e f. Mtg. S e rie s "H" Z 3/ 4 's Deo. 1 , 1961 24,1441.25 27.993.75 25,000 Paoific Gas ft Eleotric Co., 1st ft Ref. Mtg. Series "G" 4's Deo. 1, 1964 25,247.82 28, 156.25 40.000 Pennsylvania Water ft Power Co., Ref. ft Coll. Tr. 3 lA 's J a n .15» 1970 141, 866.68 42 .4 0 0 .0 0 5.000 Potomac Electric Power Co., 1 st Mtg. 3 lA ' 8 Ju ly 1, 1966 5, 264. 1(2 5,437.50 28.000 Publio Service Eleotric ft Gas Co., 1st ft Ref. Mtg. 3 lA ' 8 Ju ly 1 , 1968 30. 637.33 30. 905.00 50,000 Public Servioe Co. of Northern Illinois, 1st Mtg. 3 l/2's O ot. 1 , 1968 53.724.14 54.562.50 6.000 Public Servioe Co. of Colorado, 1st Mtg. 3 l/2's Dec, 1, 1964 6,110 ,ljO 6,435.00 20,000 Rooheeter Gas ft Eleotrio Corp., Gen. Mtg. Series "J" 3 lA ' 8 Mar. 1 , 1969 2 1. 024.15 21. 650.00 35.000 Southern California Edison Co., Ltd., 1st ft Ref. 3's S e p t.l, 1965 36, 200.00 35.787.50 50.000 Union Eleotric Co, of Missouri, 1st Mtg. ft Coll. Tr. 3 3A 'S J u ly 1 , 1962 51, 415.22 53.562.50 25.000 West Penn Power Co., 1st Mtg. Series "I" 3 l/2 ' 8 Ja n . 1, 1966 25,580.43 27.750.00 50.000 Wisconsin Electric Power Co., 1st Mtg. 3 1/2's O ot. 1, 1968 L8.40 54.812.50 >71 »1,5«7,312EE Telephone anfl Telegraph Bonds ♦25,000 American Telephone ft telegraph Co., 25 Yr. Deb. 3 l/V® Oct. 1, 1961 ♦26,931.82 ♦27.093.75 60.000 American Telephone ft Telegraph Co. 30 Yr. Deb. 3 lA ' 8 Deo. 1, 1966 60,500.80 64.950.00 25.000 Bell Telephone Co. of Canada, 1st Mtg. Series "B" 5's June 1, 1957 22,625.36 27. 500.00 25.000 Pacific Telephone ft Telegraph Co., Ref. Mtg. Series "C" 3 l A ' 8 Deo. 1, 1966 25,922.33 27. 250.00 25.000 Southern Bell Telephone ft Telegraph Co., I4O Yr. Deb. 3'8 July 1, 1979 25,831.24 26, 312.50 8,000 Southern Bell Telephone ft Telegraph, Deb. 3 lA ' 8 Apr. 1, 1962 8, 590.00 35.000 Southwestern Bell Telephone Co., 1st ft Ref. Mtg. Series nBn 3 l / 2 's Dec. 1 , 1964 38. 675.00 fd .gii...n i — fi" m m D istrict, Government, Munlolpal and State Bonds ♦50,000 City of Binghamton, N. Ÿ, 2's Mar. 1 , I 9I42 ♦50, 266.75 ♦50, 750.00 20,000 The Government of Dominion of Canada, 25 Yr, 3 lA ’8 Jan.15. 1961 19. 172.00 17,825.00 20,000 City of Elmira, N, Y,, Sewer System 2's Mar. 1 , 191*2 20, 115.25 20, 300.00 30.000 County of Herkimer, N.Y., County Road ft Publio Welfare 1,10's Mar. 1, 1946 30. 000.00 30.150.00 10.000 Village of Mt. Kisoo, N, Y., Water ft Gen. Imp, 2.70*8 Nov. 1 , 191+1 10,081,51* 10. 100.00 25.000 The Commonwealth of M a ssachusetts, S e rie s "E” Emergency Public Works 1 3A ’ 8 Deo. 1 , 191*2 25,105.16 25.562.50 50.000 City of Minneapolis, Minn., Sewer Systerm 2.60's A pr. 1 , 191*2 50,392,85 50.875.00 15.000 County of Monroe,N.Y., Tax Revenue, Series "H" 2 l/2's A pr.15, 191*2 i 5.Ol42.lO 15.281.25 50.000 State of New York, Loan for Construction of Buildings for State Institutions 1 J/li ' 3 Apr.19, 1946 51,824.22 52.062.50 25.000 State of New York, Emergency Qonstruotion 3 3A ' 8 Oot.15, 1943 26,302.15 27 ,000.00 25.000 City of New York, N. Y. 4's Deo.15, 1959 22.635.00 29. 125.00 25.000 Corporate Stook of the City of New York 4's May 1, 1959 12.000.00 29.312.50 15.000 County of Nassau, State of N. Y., County Road ft Highway 4 l A '8 Ju ly 1 , I 9I4I 15,207.27 15.131.25 S e rie s "C" Par Value Rate M a tu rity JOHN. D. ROCKEFELLER FUND Book Value M arket Value District*, (jovornment. Munlolp&l and State Bonds (oant’d) 15*000 C ity o f Oswego » Coun'tjr o f Oswego, N .Y ., Sewer System and Publio Works 1«1*0*8 May 1 , 191*1* 5 076.28 5,000 Tillage of Peekskill, N. Y., Street Paving ♦, ♦5*075.00 1 .9 0 ’ 8 Nov. 1 , 191*1 5,007,80 5,000 Village of Peekskill, N. T., Street Paving 5,012.50 1 ,9 0 'e Nov. 1 , 191*2 5*012 «1+6 5,081.25 15.000 City of Arovidenoe, R. I*, Highway 2*8 May 1 , 19l*U i 5 . 3OO.6 9 50.000 City of Syracuse, N. Y., General Relief 4 Welfare 15,1*87.50 2*8 ifar. 1, 191*2 50,186.58 20.000 City of Toronto, Cone. Deb, 50,687.50 4 l / 2 *t A pr. 1, 1952 20,529J *2 19*300.00 50,000 State of Maryland, Series "W" Emergency Relief & Unemployment W F eb .1 5 , 191*2 51,116.10 51.U37.50 United States Government Bonds ♦25,000 U* S. Treasury ttotes "Dw National Defense Series 3 /V s 100,000 U, S. Treasury Sept.i5,i9l*l* ♦21*,976.57 ♦25, 023^*1* 3 l/8 's June 15,191*9-1*6 102,928.58 111,062.50 25,000 U. S, Treasury 2 's 30,000 Mar.15, 1950 23, 630.15 25,609.38 Federal National Mortgage Association, Series "B" 1 5 /8 's Ja n , 3, 191*1*4*0 30,275.21

I n d u s tr ia l Bonds ♦50,000 Bethlehem Steel Corp.-, Cons. Mtg. S.F, 25 Yr. Deb. Series "H" 3 l A ’s F eb. 1 , 1965 ♦50, 000,00 ♦51,812.50 1*6,000 The Firestone Tire 4 Rubber Co., Deb, 3 1/ 2*8 O ot. 1 , 191*8 1*0,000 1*6 , 11+8,03 1*7, 610*00 MoCrory Stores Corp., 15 Yr. 8.F . Deb. Apr. 1, 1955 60.000 3 l A ’8 1*1 , 300,00 1*2, 000.00 National Dairy Produots Corp., Deb. 3 l A '8 Deo. 1, I960 50.000 Shell Union Oil Corp., 15 Yr. Deb. 62. 707.50 62. 175.00 2 1/ 2*8 Ju ly 1 , 1951* 1*7, 756.25 1*8, 500.00 25.000 Sooony**Vaouum O il C o., I n c ., 25 Y r. Deb. Ju ly 1 , 1961* 26*006,25 26, 218.75 25,000 Standard Oil Co. of N. J., 15 Yr. Deb. 2 3A 'a July 1, 1953 25, 775.01 26, 062.50 26,000 Standard Oil Co. of N. J., 25 Yr. Deb. 3 ’s June 1, 1961 35»ooo The Texas Corp., Deb. 25. 562.50 27. 105.00 3*8 Apr. 1, 1959 i+5,ooo West Virginia Pulp 4 Paper Co., 1st Ittg, 35. 297.50 36.575.00 Deo. 1 , 1951* ill*, 550.00 1*6, 012.50 35,000 Youngstown Sheet 4 Tube Co,, 1st Mtg, S.F. Series "D" 3’8 * 3 l A 's Nov. 1, I960 35. Commercial Motes ♦50,000 Comneroial Investment Trust, Ino. Aug, 5 , 191*1 25,000 General Motors Acceptance Corp. ♦1*9,718.75 Ju ly 3 , 191*1 2U .876.0Í Shares S tocks 200 Amer lo a n Power 4' L ig h t C o., $5 F fd . ♦1 6 , 31*0 .0 0 ♦5,925.00 150 Central Hanover Bank 4 Trust Co., Capital 200 ii*,8 0 0 .0 0 13.875.00 Chase National Bank of the City of New York, Capital 6 , 0 6 2 .5 0 200 Chemical Bank 4 Trust Co., Capital 5.900.00 9 , 3 5 0 .0 0 8. 700.00 250 Commerolal Investments Trust Corp., |t*.25 Cum. Conv. Pfd, 2 5 ,1*0 0 .0 0 26.375.00 3.912 Consolidated Oil Corp., Common 78,21*0.00 21.516.00 130 Continental Illinois National Bank 4 Trust Co. of Chicago, Comnon 200 E le c tr ic Bond 4 Share C o., |6 P fd . 11,1*03.75 10. 725.00 21, 125.00 1 1 . 900.00

Rate Maturity Book Value Market Value JOHN D. ROCKEFEmiR FUND Stooka (oont^dj General Food dorp., Cum, Pfd. ♦2 2 J42U.OO ♦22, 725.00 Guaranty Trust Co. of N. Y., Capital 8, 625.00 8,055.«o Long Island Lighting Co., Cum. Pfd. Series "B" 6 ’ 8 20, 750.00 1*,1*00.00 National City Bank of New York, Capital 8,200.00 7,800.00 N o rfo lk 4 W estern Rwy. C o ., Common 33. 000.00 66, 990.00 1*5 . 750.00 Ohio Oil Co., Common 120,000.00 United Light 4 Power Co., Cum. Conv. Pfd. ^6.00 Class "A" 20.000.00

Mortgages on Real Estate Mortgages on Properties in Metropolitan New York ♦1*26, 150.66 tl*26, 150.66 Mortgages on Properties in Metropolitan New York 11.500.00 11.500.00 (Title to properties held by Foreign Mission Realty Corporation) ♦1*37.^0.66 ♦l*37.¿5o.'6T

Miscellaneous Deposits held in savings banks ♦26, 000.00 ♦26.000.00

Notes Foreign Mission Realty Corporation, covering mortgages formerly held by Sooiety on property located at* 621 Jerome Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. ♦li*,900.00 ♦!!*,900.00 36 Lawton Street, New Rochelle, N. Y. 1*1,51*1.1*1 1*1,51*1.1*1 2172-60th Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. 6.750.00 6,750.00

♦5.11*5.313.57 5.29U,19943.

ANDREW Q. 4 JOSEPHINE ROLF FUND P ar ValueI Mortgage on property of Anna Angelman, Lynden Street, Rye, N.Yi ♦2, 700.00 | 2, 700.00 Foreign Mission Realty Corporation Note covering mortgage formerly held by Sooiety on property located at 22 Bay 8 th S tr e e t, B rooklyn, N. Y. 8,000.00 8,000.00 ♦ 10, 700.00 j i o , 700. 0fr M. C. TREAT FUND Railroad Bonds 125,000 Pennsylvania R.R., ¡Equip. Tr. Series "G" 2 3A 's Dec. 1, 191*1 ♦25,152.79 ♦25.281.25

E leotric, Gas and Water Bonds $10,000 Philadelphia Electric Co., 1st 4 Ref. Mtg. 3 lA 's Mar. 1, 1967 11,015.61* 11,000.00 10,000 Dallas Power 4 Light Co. 3 l/2»s Feb. 1, 1967 10, 205. 1*1 11,100.00 to 03

P a r Value M. C. TREAT FUND Rate Maturity Book Value Market Value »6.000 C^tna krot,d) 3 3/4» s Oct. 1 , 1962 * 5 .9 1 0 .0 0 _ #6 ,427.50 Ï27.131.05 ^ s s S s r t . S ♦20,000 M m T .i.p £ rt T»'iogSpE1'co°7,|5 ft. Dtt. 3 lA ’e Oot. 1 , 1961 ♦ 1 9 .7 9 2 .5 0 * 2 1 .6 7 5 .0 0 *7 Rnn jlatriQ t, Government, Muniolpal and State Bond« *7,500 City of Oswego, County of uswego, N .T ., hibiio Works and Hone Relief l# U 0 's May 1 , # 7 ,6 liw 4 l * 7 ,6 1 2 .5 0 _ Industrial Bonds #25,000 Texas Corp., Deb. 3 'a May 15, 1965 # 2 5 .720.00 # 2 6 ,187.50 Shares Stook 2|8#ioc ColunMa Sas i Eleotrio Corp., Common c Gas * Eleotrio Corp., Cun. 6# Pfd. Series "A" #123,583.28 # 8 0 ,9 3 9 .8 8 5,630 Columbia Oil & Gasoline Corp., Common 126, 642.15 29 8 ,8 5 6 .2 5 1.00 5 ,6 3 0 .0 0 ?250#226#i+l v38*?flt26»l3 Mortgages on Properties in Metropolitan New York Foreign Mission Realty Corporation note oovering mortgage ^ , 3 9 2 . 8 U “ l5oV39¿.aií formerly held ly Sooiety on property located at* 85 Vernon Avenue, Mt. Vernon, N. Y. 1 1 .5 0 0 .0 0 1 1 . 500.00

#4 17 . 530.00 15 5 6 *602.72 JOSEPH A . WARNE FUND 21 Pennsylvania R.B. Capital D ep o sita h e ld in S avings Rani™ ♦9Í42.3U *504*00 100.66 100.66 TI.Ô45.QO " *¿04.66 SCHEDULE VII

SUMMARY OP INVESTMENTS OF ANNUITY FUND

Per Cent of Description Book Value Market Value Book Value

Railroad Bonds ♦241,529.32 ♦217,575-00 90.08 Eleotrio, Gas and Hater Bonds 304.5l4.10 315,252.50 103.53 Telephone and Telegraph Bonds 83.034,65 85,50 6.2 5 102.96 Distriet, Government, Municipal and State Bonds 73.583*39 75,976.25 103.25 United States Government Bonds 128,126.26 136,6144.07 106.65 Commercial Notes 24,875.00 24,875.00 100.00

Total Bonds ♦855,662*72 ♦855,829.07 100.02

Mortgages on Real Estate 299,896.57 299,896.57 100,00 Real Estate 4 ,000.00 4 ,000.00 100.00 Note 8 21,250.00 2 1 ,250.00 100.00

♦1,180,809.29 »1,100,975.^ 100.01

Total Book Value #1,180,809.29 Less: Reserve _____ 93*75

Total Schedule III tl,180,715*54

to

120,000 Boston Edison Co., 1st Mtg., Series "A" 2 3 A Dec. 1 , 1970 $20,580.00 *20, 525.00 50.000 Cleveland Electrio Illuminating Co., 1st Mtg. 3's J u ly 1 , 1970 5 2 ,6 5 8 .3 3 5,000 Consolidated Edison Co. of N. Y., 20 Yr. Deb. 5 3 .5 0 0 .0 0 3 1/ 2 's J a n . 1 , 1956 5 ,0 7 0 ,0 2 25.000 Consumers Power Co., 1st Mtg. 5 ,3 7 5 .0 0 3 l / 2 ‘ s Nov. 1 , 1970 25.000 Duquesne Light Co., 1st Mtg. 2 6 ,7 0 1 .7 6 2 7. 562.50 3 1/2 »S June 1 , 1 9 6 5 2 5 ,8 5 7 .0 8 12.000 Louisville Gas 4 Electric Co., 1st 4 Ref. Mfcg. 26. 687.50 3 1/2 »S S e p t . l , 1966 13 . 140.00 30,000 Narragansett Electric Co., 1st Mtg. Series "A" 1 2 ,3 2 6 .0 5 3 1/2 »S J u ly 1 , 1966 50.000 The Ohio Power Co., 1st Mtg. 3 0 ,7 9 3 .1 5 32. 812.50 3 l A ’s O c t. 1 , 1968 5 1 .8 8 8 .ijO 25.000 Southern California Gas Co., 1st Mtg. 5 3 .7 5 0 .0 0 3 l A * s O c t. 1 , 1970 26,000 Toledo Edison Co., 1st Mtg. 2 5 ,8 4 5 .8 4 26. 250.00 3 l /2 » s JU ly 1 , 1968 25,000 Virginia Electric 4 Power Co., 1st 4 Ref. Mtg. Series "B" 2 6 ,8 6 7 .5 9 2 8 .2 7 5 .0 0 3 1/2 *s S e p t .l , 1968 2 5 .9 2 5 .8 8 27. 375.00 ¥3 0 4 . 5 1 4 .] — S B H B f Telephone and Telegraph Bonds P ar Value Bate Maturity Book Value Market Value $5.000 Amerioan Telephone 4 Telegraph Co., 25 Yr. Deb. 3-I 7 I? s Oct. 1. 1961 I 4 .4 7 W ♦$,4m.re- 10.000 American Telephone 4 Telegraph Co., 30 Yr. Deb. 3 lA '« Deo- 1, i960 9, 627.56 10, 825.00 15.000 Illinois Bell Telephone Co., 1st Mtg. Series "A" 2 3A'b Jan.15 , 1981 15, 1146.25 15 , 262.50 50.000 Mountain States Telephone 4 Telegraph Co., 30 Y r. Deb. 3 1/4'» June 1, 1968 53.782.34 54.000.00 »ë^OSU.frj? *Sf50b.i§5

D istrlot, Government, Municipal and State Bonds

*20,500 Corporate Stock of the City of M.Y. for Transit Unification 3»s June 1, 1900 *18, 625.00 *21, 320.00 15.000 Province on Ontario, Deb. 5'8 Apr. 1, 1952 15,332.40 15,112.50 25.000 Provinoe of Ontario, Deb. 4 1/2*s Jan.15, 1954 2^,531.25 2U,250.00 10.000 Town of Soarsdale, N.Y., Bd. of Education of Onion Free School Dist. No. 1 2.1*0's Mar.15, 19Í42 10, 034.62 10, 162.50 5,000 City of Soheneotady, N.Y. Public Improvement Series "B” 1.80's Sept.l, 1943 5 . 0 6 0 .1 2 5 .I 3I .2 5

United State8 Government Bonds

*10.000 U. S. Treasury Notes 3 A , b Deo.15 , 1945 *9.931.25 *9,993.75...... 1,000 U. S. Treasury 2 3A '8 Sept.15.1947 1 , 000.00 1,004.691,084.* 90.000 U. S. Treasury 3 1/2’ s June 15.1949-46 92, 510.95 99, 956.25 . 68L.06 25. 609.38 25.000 U. S. Treasury 2's M ar.15. 1950 É.Ì26.26 • "ti& M '.or

Comneroial Motes

*25,000 Universal Credit Corp. July 10,19m *2l+,875.00 *2^,875.00

Mortgages on Real Estate

Mortgages on Properties in Metropolitan New York *276,896.57 *276,896.57 Mortgages on Properties in Metropolitan New York (Title to Property held by Foreign Mission Realty Corporation) 23.000.0023.000.1 25.000.00

Real Estate In Various States IU,000.00 *u,000.00 Motes Foreign Mission Realty Corporation oovering mortgages formerly held ty the Society oa property located ati 19 Bay 8th Street, Brooklyn, M. Y. 23 Bay 0th Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. 67 Bay 8th Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. O) CO

SCHEDULE V III

SUMMARY OF PERMANENT FUNDS AND INCOME EARNED Income Income Unrestricted Restricted B alance Balance as to as to May 1« 19I4D Increase Decrease A p r il 30, 19/4! Investment Investment C1&8B I “ Unrestricted as to Income, Unrestricted as to Investment #760,538.32 #14,618.33 #7614,156.65 ♦25,155.914 C la s s II - Unrestricted as to Income Restricted as to Investment 5.30i*.9Lt6.67 7,1)27.52 #3,51*0.914 5,308,835.25 ♦185^-37.01+ C1&88 III “ Restricted as to Income Unrestricted as to Investment 9O8. 8l43.68 6,662.01 9 1 5 ,5 0 5 .6 9 C la ss IV - Restricted as to Income 30,011.78 Restricted as to Investment 7 5 6 . 7 5 3 .5 7 ______566.68 7 5 6 .1 8 6 .8 9

# 7 ,7 3 1 , 08l u 2l4 #18 , 707.86 #l+,107.62 #7 , 71+5, 681+J 4.8 #55, 16 7 .7 2 #235, 698.17 33

SCHEDULE V III C lass I

PERMANENT FUNDS - UNRESTRICTED AS TO INCOME UNRESTRICTED AS TO INVESTMENT

Balance Balance Income May 1 , I 9I4O In o re a se A p ril 30,191*1 E arned

Adams, W illiam M. #l,93l*.2t* ♦l,93l*.2i* *63.69 Ambler, Abigail T. 3, 500.00 3 ,5 0 0 .0 0 115.25 Ambler, J»V., Memorial 13, 000.00 13 , 000.00 1*28.07 Angle, Derrick Lane 3,370.243 3,370.1*3 110.98 Argabright, S. V* 100.00 100.00 3.29 "As Unto Him” 5, 000.00 5, 000.00 16U61* A xtell, Hannah E. 12i*Jll* 12l*.l*l* 1*.10 Bailie, David 1,000.00 1,000.00 32.93 Ballew, William B. 192.11* 192. 11* 6.33 Bamford, Cbloe Lizzie 50,00 50.00 1.6 5 Banister, John E, 1 ,3 9 0 .9 8 1 ,3 9 0 .9 8 1*5.80 Barker, Julia E. 1 , 115 .12 1 , 115 .12 36.72 Barney, Benjamin., Memorial 5 , 000.00 5, 000.00 i6i*.a* Barrett, Jennie 758.07 758.07 2l*.96 Bates, Lora E. 1*,1*1*3.77 11*6.32 Bennett, Montgomery 3. 383.33 3. 385.33 l l l J j l Bostwick, J. A* 20, 300.00 20, 300.00 668J+5 Boswell, Richard V* 2, 703. 1+8 2, 703.1*8 89.02 Bradford, Shadrack S. 1,000.00 1,000.00 32.93 Brow, Arnold, Rhoda and Abbie J* 532.50 532.50 17.53 Bryant, William 1*53.71 1*53.71 H*.9i* Burchard, Hannah M. 3,87l*.38 3, 8714.38 127.58 Burke, J* W. 100.00 100.00 3.29 Butler, Charles T. 1 ,0 00.00 1,0 0 0 .0 0 32.93 Butler, Elizabeth N. 1 ,0 00.00 1,0 0 0 .0 0 32.93 Carlton, Younglove 830.01 830.01 27.33 C arr Fund 1 ,0 00.00 1 ,0 0 0 .0 0 32.95 Case, Ehutson 2,liU5.ol4 2M 5.QU 80.51 Chandler, Elizabeth B. 1 , 555.85 1 , 555.85 51.23 Chickering, Sarah E. 3,721*. 56 3,72l*.56 122.«* Clarke, Ellen 1 , 023.93 1 , 023.93 33.72 Colby, E. S. 1*76.32 1*76.32 15.68 Colgate, Mary 50, 000.00 50, 000.00 1,6146.1|1 Cook, Chapman M. 32l*.00 32I+.00 10.67 Cortiss, Celinda 393.73 393.73 12.96 Cox, Effie W. 1514.00 15U.00 5.07 C ro zer, R o b ert H. 50, 000.00 50, 000.00 1,61)6.1*1 Crozer, Sallie L. 3, 000.00 3, 000.00 9 8 .7 8 Currier, Emily E. 125.00 125.00 1*.12 Dart, Samuel W. 1*, 523.77 1+1523.77 11*8.96 David, Sarah H. and Joseph U. 3, 733.83 3, 733.83 122.95 Davis, Isaac 5, 000.00 5, 000.00 16I4. 6I* D av is, Jeuoes M. 3, 1*12.50 3, 1*12.50 112.37 Dayton, A* Alphonse 1*50.00 1*50.00 11**82 Dimock, L. and F. W. 2,0 0 0 .0 0 2 ,0 0 0 .0 0 65.86 Divine, F. H. 900.00 900.00 29,6k Dizer, Marshall C. 1,0 0 0 .0 0 1 ,0 0 0 .0 0 32.95 Doyen, E. P. and Clara C. 6 ,3 2 8 J j5 6, 328. 1.5 208.39 Drown, Mary Newell 8 ,5 3 7 .8 2 8,5 3 7 .8 2 281.114 34

Balance Balance Income May 1 , I 9I4D Increase April 3°, 19I4I Earned

Dror, Adaline #900*00 $900.00 *29.64 Dunbar, Robert 500.00 500*00 16*46 Eastburn, Martha, Memorial 67*08 67*08 2*21 Eastman, Lucy J. 36*57 36.57 1*27 Eaton, Fidelia D. 10,253.14 10,253.H * 337.63 E l dre d g e , Lyman 100.00 100.00 3 .2 9 Estes, Carrie A. 25*00 25.00 *82 Evans, Evan W. and Rebekah W. 1,756*89 1,756*89 57.85 Evans, Levi P. 500.00 500.00 16*46 Farwell, Clara M* 214*28 2 1 4.28 7.06 Fellows, Ifary J. 2,058*23 2, 058.23 67*77 Fengar, Mary E. l6,18l|*50 16,184*50 532*93 Flagg, Mary 6,339*90 6,339*90 208.76 Flint, Harriet N. 5,000.00 5. 000.00 164.61* Free Baptist Permanent 32,783*51 3 2 ,783.51 1,079*51 French, Joseph E. 8,101.69 8, 101.69 266*77 Fry, Lutheria R. E* 2,085*89 2,085*89 68*68 Gale, Gertrude Bakes 5,000.00 5. 000.00 164.64 Gale, Susan H. 1^26*89 1,1*26.89 46*98 Gay, Addie D. 285.00 285.00 •9*38 General Endowment 135*11 135.11 4*45 Gibbs, Norman and Mary 6,699*76 6 ,6 9 9 .7 6 220.61 Glover, Henry R. 5,000.00 5 , 000*00 164.64 Grant, Oliver B* l4,282.14 #2^ 89.85 16 , 771.99 533*90 Griffith, R. B. 125*00 15*00 1140.00 4 .2 3 Bam, William 89.55 8 9 .5 5 2 .9 5 Hannon, Eugene E* 985*00 985.00 32*43 Hewitt, Harriet Barker 7.4l3.2li 7 ,1413. 21* 2l|4.10 Howe, Martha L. 1,528*75 1 ,5 2 8 .7 5 50. 3k Hoyt, Joseph B. 24,523*00 24, 523.00 807.50 IlBley, Austin T*, Memorial 300.00 300*00 9.88 Ingersoll, Edith M. 432.47 432.47 14.214 Jett, Me Ivina, Endowment 1)45*32 .1*14.5.32 14.66 John, Lizzie T* 500*00 500.00 16*46 Johnson, Elizabeth and Mary I4DO.OO 400.00 13.17 Jones, John J* 50,000*00 50. 000.00 l , ¿46*141 K e lle r , Rowley R* 1 ,8 6 1 .6 ^ 1,861*614 61*20 Ketcham, George W., Foreign Memorial Fund No. 2 35,860.87 35, 860.87 1,180*83 latourette, E. S. 29*00 29.00 *95 Leavens, Julia E., Memorial 2,149.31 2. 149.31 80.65 L e e s, W. B. 14.75*00 475.00 15.614 Leonard, Anna S. 6,000*00 6.000.00 197.57 Leonard Memorial 1,19b* 72 l,1 9 l* .7 2 39.3U LeBter, Sarah Edson, Foreign Mission 1,000*00 1,000.00 32*93 Lewis, Mary J* 228*35 228*35 7 .5 2 L in d sey , Mary E* 2,000*00 2.000.00 65.86 Little, George W* 5,000*00 5. 000.00 1 6 4 .4 ; Logan, John 100*00 100.00 3*29 Lougee, Clara A. 1,000*00 1.000.00 32*93 Lovell Mother and Son 5,182*31 5 .1 8 2 .3 1 170.614 Mann, Marcia J* 500*00 500*00 16*46 Matheir8, Thomas S* 475*00 475.00 15*64 Mendenhall, Nannie 7,216*50 7 , 216.50 237.63 Mendenhall, Thomas G. 1,932*33 1 ,932.33 63.63 Merrick, Austin 77,782*31 77 , 782.31 2,561*23 35

Balance Balance Income May 1 , 19i40 Inorease April 30, 1941 Earned

M ille r , Amanda #775.00 *775.00 #25.52 M ills, Thomas L. 150.00 • 150.00 4 .9 b Iforse, Mary Dean 1 , 000.00 1 , 000.00 32.93 McKoon, Mamre Ann 815.81 815.81 26.86 Nelson« Olof 200.00 200.00 6 .5 6 Norcross, Stephen W. 500.00 500.00 16*46 Nowell# Ur. and Mrs. George E. 882.82 882.82 29.07 Nowland, Lucy A. 1 1 J |2 11*42 .38 Owen, Hannah A . l6 8 .ll; 168.14 5 .5 4 Owen, W illiam B. 1 2 ,0 0 0 .1 7 12 ,000.17 395.15 Parker Fund 1 .4 5 5 .6 3 1.4 5 5 .6 3 4 7 .9 3 Parks, Louisa M. 1 ,0 0 0 .0 0 1,0 0 0 .0 0 32.93 Pease, Nancy P. 358.70 358.70 11.81 Peebles, Adaline 4 ,5 8 8 .6 8 4 . 588.68 151.10 Perkins Memorial 4 ,3 7 3 .0 2 4,373.02 144.00 Perry, William E. 1 ,9 4 5 .9 3 1 ,9 4 5 .9 3 64.08 Phillips, Margaret D. 1 ,0 0 0 .0 0 1 , 000.00 32.93 Pierce, Eliza L. and W illian Ralph L ardner 920.49 920.49 30.31 Pierce, Dr. Levi and Mrs. Sabra K. 4 8 7 .9 2 48 7.92 16.07 Porter, Benjamin 1 ,0 0 0 .0 0 1,0 0 0 .0 0 32.93 Porter, N. Charlotte 307.97 307.97 10.14 Pruett Memorial 10,000.00 10,000.00 329.28 Quincy, Robert 90.50 90.50 2.98 Renfrew, Jefferson 1,000.00 1 ,0 0 0 .0 0 32.93 Rice, The W illian 1 1 , 816.41 1 1 , 816.41 389.09 Rinewalt, Margaret M iller 7 , 658.58 7 , 658.58 252.18 Robinson, C.L*, Endowment 4 5 8 .8 4 #15.58 474.42 1 5.24 Robinson, Jane E. 100.00 100.00 3.29 Robinson, Louise Van de Veer 3, 555.04 3, 555.04 117.06 Rookwrell, Rufus 230.90 230.90 7.60 Rowley, Levi 475.00 475.00 15.64 Ruth, Mordeoai T. 5, 2142.68 5 , 242.68 172.63 Sanderson, Deacon Daniel 6 , 000.00 6,0 0 0 .0 0 197.57 Sargeant, Lizzie S. 50.00 50.00 1 .65 Sheldon Fund 1,000.00 1 ,0 0 0 .0 0 32.93 Sheldon, Chaunoey 250.00 250.00 8.23 Skofield, Sarah A. 500.00 500.00 16.46 Smith, Susan E. 50.00 50.00 1.6 5 Spenoer, Charles D. 2,000.00 2,000.00 65.86 Stark, Laura Hooker 430.90 430.90 14.19 Strong, Marguerite G. 4 , 250.00 500.00 4 , 750.00 145.13 Stuart, Elvira A. 100.00 100.00 3.29 Sunderland, James 10, 511.0 7 10, 511.0 7 346.11 Swaim, Mary Augusta Noble 9 , 000.00 9 , 000.00 296.35 Sweet, John D. 1 0,0 0 0 .0 0 1 0,000.00 329.28 Tanner, Augusta 201.09 201.09 6.62 Taylor, Josephine and G. lone 6, 967.94 6, 967.94 229 .¿i4 Thomas, Hannah 3, 500.00 3, 500.00 115.25 Thresher, Henry C* 2 ,0 0 0 .0 0 2 ,0 0 0 .0 0 65.86 Towne, Mary J . 2 , 500.00 2, 500.00 8 2 . « Tripp, Susan 1 , 167.99 1 , 167.99 38.46 Trowbridge, Edward N. and Mary P., Memorial 928.00 928.00 30.56 Tubbs, E lla Embery 1 , 831.81 1 , 831.81 60.32 CO f H • Turley, Calvin Judeon, Memorial 569.02 569.02 £ 3 6

Balanoe Balanoe Income May 1 , 192*0 Increase April 30, 192a Earned

Van Hueen, C. *2,000.00 *2, 000.00 *65.86 Varney, Addison P. 71*7*25 71*7.25 2l*.6l Waring* James 5,000.00 5 , 000.00 164.64 Watson, Maria 737*39 737.59 24.28 Watts, Mary J. 2, 500.00 2, 500.00 82.52 Wentworth, Oliver U. 1 , 000.00 1 , 000.00 52*95 White, Elisha M. 6, 219.55 *60.00 ' 6,279.55 2 0 4.85 Whitternore, George H# 674.81 671+.81 22.22 Wiggin, Meroy A* 5, 800.00 5, 800.00 125.15 Williams, Catharine 500.00 500.00 16.1*6 Williams, Mary 5. 12*1 .1 3 1 ,0 3 7 .9 0 4 .1 7 9 .0 3 156.59 Wisler, Harry E. 1*20.00 1*20.00 15.85 Wollertaan Memorial • • • 500.00 500.00 IO.85 Woman's Fund of the Adams Village Baptist Churoh 25.00 25.00 .8 2 Wood, Mary Anna 2, 000.00 2 , 000.00 65.86 Woolvarton, George A. 5, 000.00 5, 000.00 164.64 Wormsley, Thomas 5, 000.00 5, 000.00 164.64 Young, The Alwilda 365.09 363.09 11*96

Total ♦760, 558.32 *4 . 618.55 ♦765,156.65 *25,155.91*

Class II PERMANENT FUNDS - UNRESTRICTED AS TO INCOME RESTRICTED AS TO INVESTMENT

Balanoe Balance Income May 1 , 192*0 Increase April 50, 192*1 Earned

Hawks, A. K. *500.00 * 500.00 *10.05 Leonard, Frank J. 5.053.19 5.055.19 129*55 Manning, Rebecca 2 0 ,7 6 5 .8 5 2 0 ,7 6 5 .8 5 4 9 0.57 Pillsbury, George A. 5, 000.00 5, 000.00 • •• Reiff, William E. 17.785.29 17.785*29 601.57 Rockefeller, John D. 5,245.096.53 *3, 886. 58* 5,248,983.11 184,057.02 Rolf, Andrew G. and Josephine Rolf, Memorial 10,72+7.81 10,747*81 148.50

Total *5.504.948.67 *3. 886.58 ♦ 5 .5 0 8 ,8 5 5 .2 5 *185,2+57.01* * Inorease - Net profits on sales of securities.

C lass III PERMANENT FUNDS - RESTRICTED AS TO INCOME UNRESTRICTED AS TO INVESTMENT Balance Balance Income May 1, 192*0 Inorease April 30. 192*1 Earned

Abbott, Arminda P. #1,1*07.00 #1,2*07.00 #2*6.35 A b b o tt, E . L ., Endowment l2*,158.39 l2*,1 3 8.39 2*65*56 A b o rig in a l T rib e s Fund 6,22*1*.59 *197.2*3 6,1*1*2.02 206.ll*. Mams, Paul Allen, Memorial 536*50 556*50 17*67 37

Balanoe Balanoe Income May 1 , 194» In o re a se April 30, 1941 Earned

African Medical Fund *3,627.58 #3,627.58 #119.45 Allen, Julia I., Memorial 1 , 200.00 1 , 200.00 39.51 Allen, Walter K., Memorial 683.37 683.37 22J 4O Ambler, J. V., Scholarship 300.00 300.00 9 .8 8 Anderson, Mary A. 500.00 500.00 I 6J 46 Angus Scholarship 500.00 500.00 16.46 Anthony, Kate J. 10, 000.00 10, 000.00 329.28 Arnold, George H. 1 ,9 4 9 .1 8 1 ,9 4 9 .1 8 64.18 A ttleton, Salome Loomis 4 ,2 8 7 .5 0 4 , 287.50 H+1.18 Ayres, Rev. William A. 175.95 #200.00 375.95 10.19 Baker, Bessie Louise, Memorial 950.00 950.00 31.28 Bamford, Cornelia Elizabeth Rand 200.00 200.00 6 .5 9 Bamford, Dr. William 250.00 250.00 8.23 Berkaly, Harris, Restricted Permanent 1,0 0 0 .0 0 1 , 000.00 32.93 Bishop, Nathan 34, 167.23 3 4 ,167.23 1 ,1 2 5 .0 7 Bixby, E. M. 1,000.00 1 , 000.00 Bixby, Lydia M. Campbell 1 , 217.55 1 ,2 1 7 .5 5 09 Blaisdell Memorial Baptist Church of Waterboro, Maine 2 , 500.00 2, 500.00 82.32 Blake, Jesse 4 1 . 341.20 4 1 ,3 4 1 .2 0 1 ,3 6 1 .3 0 Bond, Stella 224.96 224.96 7.4 1 Bradford, Pearl S. 4 ,8 8 4 .5 0 4 ,8 8 4 .5 0 i 6o.au Bradford, Pearl S. 976.90 976.90 32.17 Bradford, Pearl S. 976.90 976.90 32.17 Briggs, Elizabeth M. Falls 5 ,4 9 1 .7 5 5 ,4 9 1 .7 5 180.84 Brown, Jennie 400.00 400.00 13 .17 Brown, Jennie M. 500.00 500.00 16.46 Bucknell, Margaret C., Memorial 1,0 0 0 .0 0 1 , 000.00 32.96 Bueknell, William, Bible Fund for the Qngole Mission 2, 414.73 2 ,4 1 4 .7 3 79.51 Buker, Eva F. 294.76 294.76 9.71 Burgess, Frank, Memorial 10,000.00 10, 000.00 329.28 Burman Theological Seminary 2 ,0 0 0 .0 0 2 , 000.00 65.86 Bjrerly, A. J. 500.00 500.00 16 J 46 Calder, A. Russell 2, 924.05 2, 924.05 9 6 .2 8 Campbell, Catherine J. 175.00 175.00 5 .7 6 Carleton, Adora N., Manorial 700.00 700.00 23 .0 5 Carpenter, C. H. 12 , 831.73 12, 831.73 4 2 2.53 Carpenter, Mark, Scholarship 7,600.22 7 , 600.22 250.26 C h a n d le r, H elen Mar 5, 325.10 5. 325.10 175.35 Cheney, Joel 7 , 307.96 7 .3 0 7 .9 6 240.64 Clissold, Stella Joy, Memorial 1,182.11 1 ,1 82.11 38.92 Clough Memorial Endowment 16, 711.78 16 ,7 1 1 .7 8 550.30 Clough Memorial for Endowment of Beds 3, 450.00 3,4 5 0 .0 0 113.60 Edmands Ward 5, 000.00 5, 000.00 164.64 M ills Ward 3, 000.00 3, 000.00 98.78 Colby, Mary Low 1,0 0 0 .0 0 1 , 000.00 32.93 C o le s , M. D., LL.D., Abraham,Memorial 1,100.00 1 , 100.00 36.22 Coles and Ackerman Memorial 10,000.00 10, 000.00 329.28 Colver, Charles K., Memorial Student Aid and Book 1 , 725.00 1 , 725.00 56.80 Colver-Rosenberger, Educational i 6,44o.oo i 6,U4o.oo 5U1.35 Constantine, Eliza 15 , 565.80 400.00 15,9 6 5 .8 0 521.12 Crissey, Charles A. and Katherine B. 4 , 433.95 2 .0 0 4 ,4 3 5 .9 5 146.03 Cross, Dr. and Mrs. Thomas J .,Memorial 1,000.00 1 , 000.00 32.93 38

B alanoe Balanoe Income May 1 , 19to> In c re a s e April 50, 191+1 E arned

Curtis, Delia #200.00 #200.00 #6 .5 9 Cushing, Josiah N., Ifem orial 5, 025.00 5, 025.00 165,46 Daniels, Susan A. L* 200*00 200.00 6 ,9 9 Dean, William 1 , 000.00 1 , 000.00 3 2 .9 3 Deats Ifemorial Children's Home 16,935*59 1 6 ,9 3 5 .5 9 557.66 Desnison, Y iletta M. 13*56 #1,095.00 1 , 108.56 6.56 deGuisoard, Lucy Kerkham Benevolent Fund for Hospital Work 1 , 800,00 1 ,8 0 0 ,0 0 59,27 Dosine M issio n ary C ottage 8, 800.00 8 ,8 0 0 .0 0 289,77 Doane, Fannie, Hama 2^ . 520.20 2 4 ,5 2 0 ,2 0 8OO.85 Doane, Marguerite I. 9 ,9 0 5 .8 1 276,01 1 0 ,1 7 9 .8 2 550,00 Dunham, S abra 6* 4,812*15 4 . 812.15 158.45 Dussman, Ada 5, 000.00 5, 000,00 16U.64 Baohes, Josiah P, 1,000.00 1 ,0 0 0 ,0 0 32.93 Eaton, Fidelia D* 10, 255.15 10, 255.15 357.63 Eldredge, Trunan 1,000.00 1 ,0 0 0 .0 0 5 2 .9 3 Farley, R o b e rt G. 1 , 699.140 1.699,40 55.96 Farrington, Anna H., Fund Ho* 1 1 , 615.50 1 , 615.50 53-19 Rarrington, Anna H., Fund Ho. 2 1 , 652.98 1 , 652.98 5 U 43 Faye, Mary Daniels 8 1,17 8 1.17 2.67 Fessendon, lfrs. Emma Smith, Uamorial 870.00 870.00 28.65 Finney, Seymour 1 ,0 0 0 .0 0 1 ,0 0 0 .0 0 52.95 Fisk, T heron 1 , 872,70 1 , 872.70 61.66 Fletcher, Ephraim and Jael, Ifem orial 525.00 525.00 1 7 .2 9 Floyd, Bmnet H., Soholarship 500.00 500.00 1 6 ,4 6 Fountain, Josephine A., Manorial 200.00 200.00 6 .5 9 Fox, Daniel 500.00 500.00 16*46 French Mission 5 ,0 29,20 5 ,0 2 9 ,2 0 165,60 French, Dr* Winslow B* 8, 1+87.53 8 ,4 8 7 .5 5 279,48 G a te s , R uth L* 190.00 5.00 195.00 6,50 Goodrich Scholarship 100.00 100,00 5 .2 9 G rie b , Jane G* 704.25 704.25 2 5 .1 9 Hall, Mrs. Alton L. 2,000.00 2 ,0 0 0 ,0 0 65,86 Harper, Robert 500.00 500.00 1 6 .4 6 Harris, Judson Wade, Memorial 3, 000,00 5, 000.00 9 8 ,7 8 Harris, Rev* Norman 5*000,00 5, 000.00 164,64 Hastings, Louise, Uamorial Hospital 6 , 000.00 6 ,0 0 0 .0 0 197.57 Hastings, Wilson H*, Ifemorial 1 ,0 0 0 .0 0 1 ,0 0 0 .0 0 32.95 Hipp« John, JT*, Memorial 2, 500.00 2, 500.00 75.75 HoplriLnaon, Abbie S. Trust 25, 000.00 25, 000.00 825.21 Horton, Ruth E*, Memorial 250.00 250.00 8.25 Insein Seminary Fund 4 , 191.50 4 , 191.50 158,02 James, William 800.00 800.00 26.54 Jenkins, Horace, Eastern China Mission Theological School 4 , 000.00 4 , 000.00 1 5 1.7 1 Jones, B. E* 500.00 500.00 1 6 ,4 6 Judson Scholarship 558.75 558.75 1 7 .7 4 Karen Sohool Book 10,000,00 10,000.00 529.28 Karen Seminary Endowment 2 ,0 0 0 .0 0 2 ,0 0 0 .0 0 65.86 Kelly Scholarship 500,00 300.00 9 ,8 8 Killam, The Burton James, Ifemorial 1,000,00 1,000.00 5 2.95 Kimball, Edmund 2 1 ,000,00 2 1 ,0 0 0 .0 0 691,50 Kurtz, Jaoob 2 ,0 0 0 ,0 0 2 ,0 0 0 .0 0 65,86 Kurtz, M ary, Ifemorial 300.00 300.00 9 .8 8 Lamprey, Sarah A* 2, 047.1+8 2 ,0 4 7 .4 8 6 7 .4 2 39

Balance Balance Income ly 1 , 191*0 Increase April 30, 1941 Earned

Lamprey, W. A., Memorial #367,66 ♦367,66 ♦12.11 Leeds, George T., Shan Soholarahip 50.00 50.00 1.65 LeFevre, George and Anna Herr, Manorial 1,214.7.32 1, 247,32 41.07 Legacy "T" 2,210,50 2,210,30 72.78 Lindsley, Rachel K. 986,01 986,01 32,47 Loughridge Fund, The 15. 277,70 15, 277.70 503.08 Liu Chiu Island 5,000.00 5,ooo.oo 164.64 Loughridge and Milne Memorial • • • ♦2,000,00 2,000.00 ,18 McNaught Scripture 80,00 80.00 2,65 Ha Hnin E 1, 780.29 1, 780.29 58,62 Malcolm, Granville 10, 981. 91* 10, 981.94 361.62 Marshall, Ellen A* 91*9,00 9149.00 31.25 May, Margaret V. 2*30.00 430,00 14.16 Merrill, S. Enina 522,17 522.17 17.19 Mills, Ch&uncey L. 607,25 607,25 20.00 Missionaries' Home 10,00 10,00 .33 Moore, Penn Edward 153.37 153.37 5.05 Moulton, Greenleaf, Memorial 500,00 500,00 16.46 Hunger, Isador G., Literature 1,000.00 1,000.00 32.93 Munn, Charlotte E. 747,18 747,18 24*60 Nason, James 7,096.11 7,096,11 233,66 Native Preaohers 2,369.38 2,369,38 78,02 Newell, Mary A* M. 35^23 .41 35,423.41 1, 166.43 Nickerson, John H. 100,00 100,00 3.29 Olson, Mr. and Mrs* Swan 907.29 907.29 29.88 Ongole College Endowment 48,io4.oo 48,io 4.oo 1, 583.98 Orphan Work on the Ongole Field Endowment 4,500.00 4,500.00 148,18 Paige, Charles C. 500,00 500.00 16,46 Parmenter, Addie J. 432,50 432,50 14,24 Patten, Alice 12,363.23 12,363.23 407,10 Peok, Elisa A. 1,000.00 1,000,00 32.93 Permanent Fund 89, 318.95 89, 318,95 2, 941.01 Plumber Fund 100.00 100,00 3.29 Preston Institute Endowment 7,000.00 7,000,00 230,50 Prioe, J* D., Scholarship 538.75 538.75 17,74 Putnam, B., Memorial 2,450.00 2,450.00 80.67 Quimby, Alida 1,452.50 1,452.50 47.83 Banapetnam Seminary 26,325.93 26, 325.93 866,86 Randlett, Oran J. 250,00 250.00 8.2;5 Rangoon Baptist College Endowment 1,219.15 1, 219.15 40.14 Rangoon College 1,000.00 1,000.00 32.93 Reed, C. Howard, Memorial 4oo.oo 400.00 13.17 Roberts, Elizabeth 4,000.00 4,000.00 131.71 Sogers, Alexander W. 10,196.1? 10,196.12 335.73 Rosenberger, Susan Colver, Memorial 1,500.00 1,500.00 49.39 Ross, William E., Trust 700.00 700.00 23.05 Rowland, Prusia 263.95 263.95 8.69 Sargent, Edward P., Memorial 6,406.07 6,406.07 210. 9U Sawtelle, Elizabeth S. 200.00 200.00 6.59 Schoemaker, William R. 16,126.93 ♦2,486,57 18,613.50 592.62 Schulert, Edward 310.52 310.52 10.22 Shady Dell 10,850.00 10,850,00 357.27 Shafer, Sarah E. 500,00 500.00 16.46 Sherman, George J* 1,000.00 1,000.00 32.93 40

Balance Balanoe Income May 1 , 1940 Increase A p r il 30, 19l»l Earned

Smith, Samuel F. # 7 ,5 1 4 .3 2 # 7 ,5 1 4 .3 2 #247.43 Stevenson, Cora A. 200.00 200.00 6 .5 9 Stevenson, Judson S. and Ella F. 750.00 750.00 2I4.70 Stubbert, John R., Scholarship 1 , 000.00 1 , 000.00 32.93 Sturgeon, W.O. and H.C., Endowment 2 ,1 2 1 .5 3 2 , 121.53 69.86 Swart, John A. 4 ,6 1 1 .1 5 4 ,6 1 1 .1 5 15 1.a u Tage, James M. 790.35 790.35 26.02 Thompson, Rachel, Memorial 1 , 000.00 1 , 000.00 32.93 Toungoo Karen Normal Sohool 3, 306.11 3, 306.11 108.86 Townsend, Annie 1 , 200.00 1 , 200.00 39.51 T ru e, E . 380.00 38O.OO 12.51 Tull Memorial 250.00 250.00 8.23 University of Shanghai Endowment 500.00 500.00 ' 1 6 .4 6 Van Eps, A. T. 4 , 810.82 4 ,8 1 0 .8 2 158.41 Wade S c h o la rsh ip 1 , 626.15 1 , 626.15 53.55 Wallace, Dr. Barnett, Memorial 500.00 500.00 16J 46 Ward T ru s t 4 ,2 0 0 .0 0 4 , 200.00 136.30 Warne, Joseph A. 17 ,6 6 2 .1 3 17,6 6 2 .1 3 581.58 Warner, Ellen J. 1 ,2 7 7 .9 9 1 ,2 7 7 .9 9 42.08 Watrous, Prudenoe 500.00 500.00 16*46 Watts, Mary J. 2, 500.00 2 , 500.00 82.32 Weed, John 2, 500.00 2, 500.00 82.32 Wells, Susan E. 2 ,0 0 0 .0 0 2 ,0 0 0 .0 0 65.86 West, Rev. E. W. 252.58 2 5 2.58 8.32 Wetherby, Z illa h U. 2, 500.00 2 , 500.00 82.32 Whitaker Sisters - China 4 2 4.09 424.09 13.96 W hitaker S i s t e r s - Burma 179.17 17 9 .17 5 .90 Whitaker Sisters - Russia 1 ,7 6 0 .5 9 1 , 760.59 57.97 White, Elisha M. 1 4 ,9 0 8 .7 7 14 , 908.77 4 9 0 .9 2 W h ite, M rs. E lle n M. 1 ,0 0 0 .0 0 1,0 0 0 .0 0 32.93 Whiting, Martha 1 . 167.50 1 . 167.50 3 8 J j4 Whitney, Alfred B. and Theo- E. 2 ,0 ^ 4 .1 1 2 ,0 6 4 .1 1 6 7 .9 7 Wilson, Robert and Family 250.00 250.00 8.23 Woodworth, Mrs. Kate L. 1 ,0 0 0 .0 0 1,000.00 32.93

T o ta l #908,843.68 #6 ,6 6 2 .0 1 *915, 505.69 * 3 0 ,0 1 1 .7 8

CI&sb IT PERMANENT FUNDS - RESTRICTED AS TO INCOME RESTRICTED AS TO INVESTMENT

Balance Balance Income May 1, 19l|0 Decrease A p ril 30» 194l Earned

Coles and Ackerman Memorial #10,000.00 #10,000.00 #200.00 Coles, Emilie S. , Dormitory 810.00 810.00 82.67 Coles, Emilie S., Memorial 165,117.55 165,117.55 5.246*62 Constantine, Elisa 21,000.00 #1400.00 20, 600.00 1420.51 Pierce, Caroline, Memorial 106,61*8.35 106,648.35 3,626 Jj4 T r e a t, M. C. 452, 127.67 166.68 4 5 1. 960.99 40, 651.76 Warne, Joseph A. 1 . 050.00 1 #050*00 33 . 15.

T o ta l #756,753.57 #566.68 #756,186.89 # 50, 261.13 SCHEDULE IX DESIGNATED TEMPORARY FONDS Income B alance B alanoe E arned to May 1 , 1940 In c re a s e D ecrease A p ril 30, 1941 April 50, 1941 1 . FOR LAND, BUILDINGS, EQUIPMENT AND MAINTENANCE OF MISSION PROPERTY

Banta M&nteke Hospital Building, J.E.Geil #228.58 #228.58 Bezw&da U n iv e rs ity T h e o lo g ic a l Sem inary - Speoial Account 15 , 000.00 15 , 000.00 Coles Ifomorial and Estate Income * 5 3 .3 9 1 .8 6 1*2,1441.09 *34,704.21 6 1 ,1 2 8 .7 4 #1 .8 7 5 .0 0 Coles, J. Ackerman, Replacement 100, 000.00 100, 000.00 Coles, J. Acloerman, Revolving 25, 000.00 25, 000.00 F irst Baptist Church in Guntur, India 1 , 000.00 1,040 *00 2, 040.00 Jorhat Industrial School 3 ,2 3 2 .9 6 1 ,8 5 0 .7 9 2 ,3 4 9 .8 0 2 ,7 3 3 .9 5 Judson Fund: Burma t Training of Medical Students for work in or Mong Mong-3ana 2, 5814.00 81.00 84.00 2, 581.00 81.00 Building for Bukars - Mong Mong 1 .1 9 5 .7 2 1 ,1 9 5 .7 2 Levering, Frank, Sanitaria 2, 670.46 86.52 2 ,7 5 6 .9 8 86.52 Madimba Chur oh Building, P.A. MaoDiarmid 204.50 204.50 Nara Church 227.24 227. 21* Rowland, Henry and Ruthf Memorial 1 , 695.80 1 ,6 9 5 .8 0 Osaka D istrict Projects 1 , 165.00 1 ,1 6 5 .0 0 Phillips Memorial Church 1 . 161.35 88.90 1 ,2 5 0 .2 5 38.85 Preston Land Account 1 , 268.21 368.94 166.07 1 ,4 7 1 .0 8 Property Loan Fund 9 , 141.02 959.69 10,0 0 0 .7 1 Property at Nice, France 1 .0 0 1 .0 0 Property T itle Account 268.73 37.75 230.98 Purchase of Land for "West China University and Ereotion of Residence and Dorxaitory 248.68 248.68 Purchase of Property at Chaochowfu 836.1(0 836 J 4O Reserve for Mission Property 13 , 263.21 2 ,9 3 2 .8 3 5, 913.50 10,282.51* Restoration of Funds Account - Loan of Burman and Karen Theological Seminaries 5, 550.00 5 ,5 50.00 Rue de Lille Property 30, 000.00 30, 000.00 Suifu Hospital Equipment Aooount 11.0 6 11.0 6 University of Shanghai Reparation Aooount 2 9 ,5 1 6 .9 0 29 .5 1 6 .9 0 110.27 T g ,T 9 n a r Bal&noe Inoome Ä y l , 19I4D Increase a , Earned to 2. FOR MISSION WORK Deorease A p ril 30, 192(1 A p ril 30, I 9Ì4I

Na*h?n» Blb*®» InooM Aooount nOS?* #1,691.68 Chandler, H.lw Mar, income Aooount #1,123.14 #884.05 181.02 173-46 #1,930.77 Francos E ., E state Income Aooount 35U.48 #1,203.89 #219.09 5 s ; í? p i^ b,rt• ib“ ri*1 ^ « - . 1 313.83 8.22 #1,422.98 Burma» #65.55 256.50 #8.22 Evangelistic Literature w e n Sohool Boole Fund, Income 800.00 2,932.67 800.00 Uerriara, I*ura Carson, Memorial 325.74 341.00 Missionary Work in China under L.C. Hvlber* 500.00 2,917.14 Ongole Tillage Sohool Fund 323.50 500.00 9,655.13 IU .50 323.50 2”“ B°«Pital Specifies - O.W.Tuttle 665.00 9, 151.68 Sana Bata Truck Replacement - H. Eriolcson 258.92 H a .50 Support of .* « „ Mbl. 258.92 166.95 166.95 Station* Sona Bata 350.00 Tondo Sohool Fund - Mission Treasurer 50.00 jtaivwBity of Shanghai Student Fund i,q '2. 359.I4I 300.00 feiTsrsity of1 Shanghai Studanfc Pim«i r * 49,175.30 , 2,359.1a 49,175.50 Aooo“ t “ •‘w - * 2,363.30 3, 000.00 lilraot Memorial Fimrt 340.82 10^ 56. 3!+ V o t a l ------— ------340.82 102.00 601.00 3/7,8^6.61 m M fe x 1 5 1.00 3* FOR SUPPORT OF MISSIONARIES 1^1,296.06 I S ? K 7 r

#886.01 #276.47 Medical Student Aid Fund # l , l 62.Ì48 235.OO 235.OO 3,963.35 3, 963.55 ^ ' i,t - 8"“»rt * Support J. A. Ahlquist 181. 46/ 1,752.00 1.752.00 #181.48/ Support J . W. Cook 362.77 5,389.53 5,097.55 65U.77 Support Stephen Goddard 17 0 .9 3 / 2,38*4.93 2.115.00 614.21 99.00 Support R. W. Holm 31.01 , 6I45.22 Support C. E. Hunter 6, 872.57 6,373.82 4,375.0* lT y . C. Thoms 900.00 1,522.72 1 , 268.12 # ll.téB .& * W.&.VT ' W . T ï t t r

Inoome Balanoe Balance Earned to May 1 , 1940 Inorease Decrease A pril 30, 19la April 30, 1941 4 . FOR OTHER OBJECTS

Atkins, Ernest, Personal #3Î40.82 #3t*0.82 Bacon Home - Proceeds of Sale #5, 500.00 3,500.00 Baker Memorial Fund, Bessie Louise, Inoome Aooount 74.16 30.95 IO5.II Chester, Alice Dr 264.12 264.12 #2.12 China Baptist Publication Society Prooeeds for L ite ra ry Work in China #1,1(29.28 #1,429.28 China Baptist Publication Society #1.00 #1.00 Doane, M arguerite T ., S pecial Inoome Account 43.38 74.04 1*2.50 74.92 Doane Missionary Cottage Rund, Inoome Aooount 2,767.89 286.65 3,0514.54 Dring, William 1,510.49 39.22 600.00 949.71 #39.22 Estes, E rrald V. 1,000.00 1,000.00 Fukuin Maru 1 , 500.86 1 , 500.86 Kimball, Ella F. 1,000.00 1,000.00 L iu , Herman C. E ., Memorial 351.51 351.51 Liu, Herman C. E., Memorial Scholarship 4, 300.00 14, 300.00 Liu, Berman C. E ., Memorial Scholarship, Inoome Aooount I 72.OO 172.00 Morse, William Reginald and Anna Crosse Morse, Memorial 4,200.69 4,200.69 Morse, William Reginald and Anna Crosse Morse, Memorial Inoome Account 45.16 45.16 Mortgage on Property for Bible Sohool and Theological Seminary in Tallinn, Reval, Estonia 1.00 1.00 Mortgage on Warsaw Baptist Church, Warsaw, Poland 1.00 1.00 Newell, Mary A. M., Income Aooount 9,791.62 178.aU 9, 612.78 Scott, Ernest K., Legacy 2,58l».00 81.00 8I4.OO 2,581.00 81.00 Whisler, Charles F. 9.720 3114.9U 10.035.38 14.9U T o tal ----- #^.rti47.3T • i r o 7 g . g r H g .3 Æ 3 T 3BHSÈÈZ 3 $"77 . Additions to Designated Temporary Funds (net profits from sales of In-veetments) #5.716.01 #5.716.01

Grand Total #383.000.89 #133,09*4.89 #77.083.55 #439.012.23 #2.779.ät

/ Deduotion 44

SCHEDULE X

Rates of Income Earned

X« Investmente of Permanent Funds« Unrestricted as to Investment! Average Investment for the Year *1, 665,058Jj.7 Income Earned during the Tear 55, 167.72 Rate of Income Earned 3.31 II* General Investments of Special Gift Agreements: Average Investment for the Tear #1,216,526.90 Inoaae Earned during the Year 1*2,813.1*7 Rate of Income Earned , 3^*7

B Reserve for Special Gift Agreements

Special G ift Agreements Reserve, May 1, 19i*0 *1, 220, 256.76 New Agreements w ritten to April 30, I 9I4I 142, 0)46.09 Adjustments Credited to Reserve 9, 6514.09 *1, 271,956.96 Agreements Matured to April 30» 19bl #75. 567.29 Adjustments on Matured Agreements I4.a i47. 3i* 80, 1014.65 *1 . 191, 51*2.33 Annuity Payments |1 1 2 #ai|S J|2 Annuity In-vestment Inoome - Net 1*2,2870(1 70, 561.01 Balance Reserve April 50» 191*1

Reserve for liatured Speoial G ift Agreements

Reserve for the Equalisation of liatured Speoial Gift Agreements, Ifay 1, 19l*0 *29, 797.63 Special G ift Agreements Matured to April 30, 19l*l, designated for a particular object within the Regular Budget l,8 5 l* .ll Income on Invested Reserve 6 .8 6 *3Y,'658'.'6o' Less Speoial Charges against Reserve 325.80 *31,331.80 Transferred to Budget Inoome 20.000*00

Balance Reserve April 30. 191*1 *11.3314*60

Reserve for Legaoy Equalisation

Reserve for the Equalisation of Income from Legacies May 1 , 19I4O *128,21(1 J a Legacies Received to April JO, 191*1 814,631.11* Inoome on Invested Reserve 1,195*1*1* Special Credits to Reserve 1(00.00

Less Speoial Charges Against Reserve I4.00 #2ii4^é3.99 45

Transferred to Budget Income *14-5,000.00 Legacies Designated for Permanent Funds 7,876»32 Legacies Designated for Specific and Other Purposes 1 I4,301.3*4 ♦67.177.66

Balance Reserve April 30, 19*41 ♦ll47.286.33

Reserve for Designated Matured Special Gift Agreements and Legacies

Reserve Designated for Medical Work in China, May 1, 19*j0 #8,139.1|6 Released for Designated Purposes 1.76*4.10

Balance Designated for Medical Work in China, April 30# 19*41 #6.375.56

Matured Special Gift Agreements and Legacy Reserve Assets

Investmente **45, 361.09 Advance on Aooount of Prospective Legacies 932.11 Uninvested Cash US?

Balance of Reserve for Equalisation of Income from Matured Special Gift Agreements, April 30, 19*41 # l l , 33ii..8o Balance of Reserve for Equalisation of Income from Legaoies, April 30, 19*41 li47. 286.33 Balance of Reserve for Designated Matured Special Gift Agreements and Legacies 6,3 7 5 .3 6 Unadjusted Estates 960.58 *'i65;&?.o? 46

SCHEDULE ZI APPROVED BUDGET FOR 19t|l>19t|2 IBCQUE

Regular Budgets Souroee Out» 1 de Donations i Inoane from Investments $270,000.00 Appropriated> From Legacies 50*000.00 From Designated Temporary Funds 23*000.00 Other Sources 20,500.00

Total Inoane Sources Outside Donations #365.500.00 Regular Donations: Designated *227.320.00 Undesigrated 260.200.00 Total Regular Donations 507.520.00

Total Inoaae Regular Budget #873,020.00

Specific Budget - per Contra 100,000.00 ♦973.030.00 47

SCHEDUU3 XI

APPROVED BUDGET FOR 19^1-19^2

APPROPRIATIONS

Regular Budget* Foreign Fields Appropriations: Salaries of Missionariess On F ie ld # 2 6 3 ^ 8 ^ 5 On Furlough 80,050.85 ♦3^3^99.30 Less(Estimated Savings in Exchange on Salaries 15, 000.00 *328,1^9.30 Passages of Missionaries to and from the Field 85,982.00 Work o f M issionaries and Sati-ve Agencies 102,659.99 Care of Property- 19,988«Vi* Work and Workers in Europe 15,000.00 Retired Missionaries and Widows 113 ^ 8 7 .8 6 Hew Missionary Appointees 9. 000.00 Homes for Missionaries and Missionaries' Children 9. 720.00 Foreign Missions Conference and Other Cooperative Agencies 4.288.00 "Missions" and Literature for Missionaries 800.00 Visitation of Mission Fields 2.000.00

Less < Special Transfer from Foreign Exchange Reserve 10, 000.00

Total Foreign Fields Appropriations *681^^26.09 Home Expenditures: Foreign Department Administration *29, 610.33 Home Department Administration 1*2, 983X 3 Treasury Department Administration 1*9,090.

Retired Officers and Pension Premiums 7, 200.00

Total Home Expenditures 128,884.10 I n te r e s t 3.500.00 Total Foreign Fields and Home Appropriations *813,810.19 Reserve Fund 22,189.81 Special Contingent Reserve 1.500.00 Total Regular Budget *837,500.00 Specific Budget - per Contra: Land, Buildings, and Equipment *30,000.00 G eneral Work 45. 000.00 Support of Missionaries 25. 000.00 Total Speolfle Budget 100,000.00

Total Appropriations *937, 500.00 Surplus to be applied to reduction of accumulated deficit 35. 520.00 *973.020.00

FIELDS AND STATIONS ALONG KINGDOM HIGHWAYS

ALONG KINGDOM HIGHWAYS 79

FIELDS AND STATIONS

W ith the Names of Missionaries Assigned to Each for the Fiscal Year Ending April 30, 1941

Reference signs used in the list: * Representing the Woman’s American Baptist Foreign Mission Society, t On furlough. t Not under full missionary appointment.

I. THE BURMA MISSION

Begun 1814

1. BA SSE IN (Bas'-sene) 1862 Karen Theological Seminary Work for Burmans D. W. Graham Mrs. D. W. Graham W. L. Keyser Mrs. W. L. Keyser 6. KENGTUNG (Keng-tóòng') 1901 Work for Pwo Karens Work for Lahus and Shans (In charge of C. L. Conrad at Rangoon) R. B. Buker Mrs. R. B. Buker Pwo Karen School Louise Hastings Memorial Hospital Work for Sgaw Karens tR. S. Buker, M.D. Sgaw Karen High School t Mrs. R. S. Buker, R.N.

2. BHAMO (Ba-mo) 1877 7. KUTKAI Work for Kachins Work for Kachins f * Miss Gertrude R. Anderson t J. M. England Bible School t Mrs. J. M. England G. A. Sword Mrs. G. A. Sword 3. HAKKA (Ha ka) 1899 8. LOIKAW (Loi-ka) 1899 Work for Chins Karen and Medical Work F. O. Nelson (at Tiddim) Mrs. F. O. Nelson (at Tiddim) t C. U. Strait, Th.D. 9. t Mrs. C. U. Strait, R.N. Work for Shans Hospital 4. HENZADA (Hen'-za-da) 1853 H. C. Gibbens, M.D. Work for Burmans Mrs. H. C. Gibbens Girls’ School 10. MANDALAY (Màn'-dà-lày) 1886 Work for Karens Work for Burmans * Miss Marian H. Reifsneider 5. IN SE IN (In'-sane) 1889 Girls’ High School Burman Theological Seminary t * Miss F. Alice Thayer t C. C. Hobbs t * Miss Lucy F. Wiatt t Mrs. C. C. Hobbs * Miss Dorothy E. Wiley Willis and Orlinda Pierce Baptist Divin­ ity School Kelly High School C. E. Chaney, D.D. Mrs. C. E. Chaney 11. M AUBIN (Mà-56-bin) 1879 Work for Karens Burman Woman's Bible School E. T. Fletcher * Miss Beatrice A. Pond Mrs. E. T. Fletcher 80 AMERICAN BAPTIST FOREIGN MISSION SOCIETY

Pwo Karen School Agricultural Extension * Miss Rebecca J. Anderson (In charge of W. H. Cummings) 18. PANGW AI 12. MAYMYO (Ma-me-o) 1900 J. H. Telford, Ph.D. Work for Burmans and Other Races t Mrs. J. H. Telford Girls’ School * Miss Laura E. Johnson 19. PEGU (Pe-gu) 1887 Work for Burmans 13. M EIKTILA (Make'-ti-la) 1890 t M. C. Parish Work for Burmans t Mrs. M. C. Parish Girls' School 14. MONG MONG and BANA * Miss Mary L. Parish (M ong Mong) (Ba-na) 1919 20. PROME (Prome) 1854 Work for Lahus and Other Hill Tribes Harold M. Young (at Pang Yang) Work for Burmans Mrs. Harold M. Young (at Pang Girls’ High School Yang) * Miss Rachel H. Seagrave M. Vincent Young Mrs. M. Vincent Young 21. PYAPO N (Pya-pone) 1911 15. M OULM EIN (incl. Thaton) Work for Burmans (Mall-mane) 1827 22. PYINMANA (Pin-ma-na) 1905 Work for Burmans and Mons Work for Burmans (incl. Pyinmana Agri­ W. M. Blanchard, Th.M. (Lan­ cultural School) guage Study) B. C. Case Mrs. W. M. Blanchard (Language Wm, H. Cummings (at Namkham) Study) Mrs. Wm. H. Cummings (at Namk­ * Miss Selma M. Maxville, R.N. ham) C. R. Horton Judson High School for Boys Mrs. C. R. Horton P. R. Hackett, Principal t j . M. Smith Mrs. P. R. Hackett f Mrs. J. M. Smith Morton Lane High and Normal School t * Miss Ruth F. Christopherson 23. RANGOON (Ran-goon) 1813 (See Note) Work for Karens E. C. Condict, D.D., Mission Sec­ retary Karen High School t Mrs. E. C. Condict * Miss Cecelia L. Johnson Mission Press Ellen Mitchell Memorial Hospital L. A. Crain, Acting Mission Treas­ * Miss Mildred M. Dixon, R.N. urer * Miss Martha J. Gifford, M.D. Mrs. L. A. Crain * Miss Anna B. Grey, M.D. Literary Work t * Miss Grace R. Seagrave, M.D. Judson College Work for Indians L. B. Allen, A.M. Mrs. L. B. Allen, A.B. Work for English-Speaking Peoples t J. Russell Andrus, Ph.D. English Girls’ High School t Mrs. J. Russell Andrus, A.B. * Miss Mona Ecco Hunt t J. G. Beckerley, A.B. * Miss Helen L. Tufts t Mrs. J. G. Beckerley F. G. Dickason, A.M. Mrs. F. G. Dickason, R.N. 16. M YITKYINA (Myl'-che-na) 1894 tG. E. Gates, A.M., Ph.D. Work for Kachins t Mrs. G. E. Gates, A.M. * Miss Lucy P. Bonney (at Sumpra- O. N. Hillman, A.M., Ph.D. bum) * Miss Helen K. Hunt, A.M. L. A. Dudrow G. S. Jury, Ph.D. Mrs. L. A. Dudrow Mrs. G. S. Jury, A.B. S. H. Rickard, A.B. Mrs. S. H. Rickard 17. NAM KHAM (Nam-kham) 1893 t * Miss Marian E. Shivers, M.S. Work for Kachins and Shans D. O. Smith, A.M. Mrs. D. O. Smith, Ph.B. Robert Harper Memorial Hospital t H. Whittington, Ph.D. G. S. Seagrave, M.D. t Mrs. H. Whittington, M.S. Mrs. G. S. Seagrave * Miss E. Eloise Whitwer, A.M.

N ote. Work was begun in Rangoon in 1813, although the American Baptist Foreign Mission Society was not organized until 1814. ALONG KINGDOM HIGHWAYS 81

Cushing High School and Baptist English Boys’ School High School * Miss Mary D. Thomas H. G. Tegenfeldt Mrs. H. G. Tegenfeldt 28. TAVOY (Ta-voy') 1828 Work for Burmans Work for Burmans * Miss Dorothy E. Rich (Evangelis­ t M. L. Streeter tic Work) t Mrs. M. L. Streeter Kemmendine Girls’ High School Work for Karens * Miss Mary I. Laughlin W. D. Sutton Mrs. W. D. Sutton Work for Indians Pwo Karen Bible Training School ¡9. THARRAW ADDY (Thar-ra-wad'- C. L. Conrad di) 1889 Mrs. C. L. Conrad Work for Karens Pegu Karen High School ' 30. THAYETMYO (Tha-yet-myo) Karen Woman’s Bible School 1887 t * Miss Marion A. Beebe * Miss Charity C. Carman Work for Chins (In charge of E. C. Condict, D.D., Work for English-Speaking Peoples at Rangoon) 24. SAGAING (Sa-gine) 1888 31. THONZE (Thon-ze) 1855 Work for Burmans Work for Burmans 25. SANDOW AY (San'-do-way) 1888 Work for Chins and Burmans Middle School * Miss Carrie E. Hesseltine 26. (a) SHW EGYIN (Sway-jyin) 1853 (b) NYAUNGLEBIN (Nong-la-bin) 32. TOUNGOO (Toung-oo) 1853 Work for Karens Work for Burmans Karen High School Work for B-jue Karens * Miss Hattie V. Petheram C. L. Klein Mrs. C. L. Klein, R.N. 27. TAUNGGYI (Toung-je) 1910 Work for Shans Work for Paku Karens H. I. Marshall, D.D. Huldah Mix Girls’ High School Mrs. H. I. Marshall * Miss F. Faith Hatch Paku Karen High School School for Missionaries’ Children Mrs. J. H. Cope Bixby Memorial School Miss Frances M. Ryder * Miss Inez R. Crain

II. THE ASSAM MISSION Begun 1836 33. GAUHATI (Gou-hat'-ti) 1843 Girls’ Middle English School Miss Marion Burnham, Mission t * Miss Ethel E. Nichols Treasurer and Mission Secretary t * Miss Hazel E. Smith Woman’s Jubilee Hospital Work for Assamese, Garos and Kacharis * Miss Millie M. Marvin, R.N. M. Forbes * Miss Alice L. Randall, M.D. rs. T. M. Forbes * Miss Edna M. Stever, R.N. V. H. Sword, Th.D. Mrs. V. H. Sword 34. GOLAGHAT (Go-la-ghat') 1898 Work for Assamese and Immigrant Peoples Hostel for Students at Cotton College R. W. Holm * Miss Carolyn A. Gleich Mrs. R. W. Holm, R.N. 82 AMERICAN BAPTIST FOREIGN MISSION SOCIETY

Ridgeway School 39. NORTH LAKHIM PUR (Lak-im- * Miss Maza R. Evans poor) 1895 * Miss Marion J. Tait Work for Immigrant Peoples (In charge of J. W. Cook at Jor­ hat) 35. IM PU R (Im'-pöör) 1893 (See Note a) 40. NOWGONG (Now-gong) 1841 Work for Nagas (incl. Naga Training Work for Assamese and Mikirs School) tW . R. Hutton B. I. Anderson t Mrs. W. R. Hutton Mrs. B. I. Anderson (In charge of Miss E. Ruth Paul and J. M. Forbes at Gauhati)

36. JORHAT (Jor-hat) 1903 Girls’ Training School Gale Memorial Bible School * Miss Elizabeth E. Hay ■ * Miss E. Ruth Paul * Miss E. Victoria Christenson

Jorhat Christian Schools 41. SADIYA (Sä-de-yä) 1906 J. W. Cook Work for Immigrant Peoples and Abors Mrs. J. W. Cook Selander C. E. Hunter rs. J. Selander Willis F. Pierce Memorial Hospital 42. SIBSAGAR (Sib-saw'-gor) (irci. * Miss Almyra E. Eastlund, R.N. Dibrugarh) 1841 * Miss Elna G. Forssell, R.N. O. W. Hasselblad, M.D. (In charge of R. W. Holm at Mrs. O. W. Hasselblad Gologhat) (See Note c)

37. KANGPOKPI (Käng-pök'-pi) 1919 43. TU RA (Töö-ra) 1876 (See Note b) Work for Gar os Work for Nagas and Kukis F. W. Harding, D.D. Mrs. J. A. Ahlquist Mrs. F. W. Harding E. E. Brock A. F. Merrill t Mrs. E. E. Brock Mrs. A. F. Merrill Girls’ Middle English School 38. KOHIM A (Kô-hë'-ma) 1879 * Miss Fern M. Rold * Miss Ruth H. Teasdale Work for Nagas G. W. Suppléé Hospital Mrs. G. W. Suppléé * Miss A. Verna Blakely, R.N. + J. E. Tanquist t E. Sheldon Downs, M.D. t Mrs. J. E. Tanquist t Mrs. E. Sheldon Downs, R.N.

N ote a. Work was begun at Molung in 1876, and was transferred to Impur in 1893. N ote b. Work was begun at Ukhrul in 1896, and was transferred to Kangpokpi in 1919. N ote c. The first station opened in Assam was Sadiya (1836). This was given up in 1839, being reopened in 1906. The oldest station in Assam in continuous oper­ ation is Sibsagar.

III. THE SOUTH INDIA MISSION Begun 1836 44. ALLUR (Ul-löör) 1873 46. BAPATLA (Bà-püt'-lâ) 1883 (In charge of E. B. Davis at Ka- _ , ... , ... . . va]j) General Work and Normal Training School 45. ATMAKUR (At-mä-köör') 1893 (In charge of E. B. Davis at Ka- Varney vali) Mrs. W. D. Varney ALONG KINGDOM HIGHWAYS 83

47. CUMBUM (Kum-bum) 1882 57. M ARKAPUR (Mär-kä-pöör) 1895 General Work and Rural Teachers' Train­ L. S. Pratt ing School Mrs. L. S. Pratt F. G. Christenson 58. NALGONDA (Nül-gön'-dä) 1890 48. DONAKONDA (D6-na-kon-da) C. E. Frykenberg 1903 Mrs. C. E. Frykenberg P. S. Curtis Mrs. P. S. Curtis 59. NANDYAL (Nün-dl-äl') (In charge of W. J. Longley at 49. GURZALLA (Goor-za'-la) 1895 Kurnool)

50. HANUM AK O NDA (Hun-oo-ma- 60. NAR SA R A VU PETT (När-sä-rä'- kon'-da) 1879 vü-pet) 1883 t C. R. Manley, M.D. E. Erickson, Mission Secretary t Mrs. C. R. Manley Mrs. E. Erickson * Miss Hallie Lee Stoudenmire Central Boarding School Victoria Memorial Hospital * Miss Ursula Dresser (Evangelistic S. Carman, M.D. Work) l lIrs. r J. S. Carman * Miss Lena A. Keans * Miss Sadie Robbins, R.N. * Miss Harriet Barrington, R.N. 61. NELLORE (Nel-lore') 1840 (In charge of Dr. Lena A. Benja­ 51. JANGAON (Jün-gän) 1901 min) Preston Institute Coles-Ackerman Memorial High School C. Rutherford Mrs. C. Rutherford, R.N. A. T. Fishman, Ph.D. Mrs. A. T. Fishman 52. KANIGIRI (Kün-ï-gï-rï) 1892 Higher Elementary and Kindergarten Training and Practicing School J. C. Martin Mrs. J. C. Martin Girls’ High School t * Miss Olive E. Jones 53. KAVALI (Kâ'-va-lï) 1893 * Miss Ruth V. Thurmond * Miss Julia E. Bent Gurley Memorial Woman’s Bible School t * Miss E. Grace Bullard E. B. Davis * Miss Genevra M. Brunner Mrs. E. B. Davis * Miss Margarita F. Moran t L. E. Rowland t Mrs. L. E. Rowland Hospital t * Miss Lena A. Benjamin, M.D. * Miss Helen M. Benjamin, R.N. 54. KURNOOL (Kür'-nööl) 1875 * Miss Elsie M. Larson, R.N. t W. J. Longley * Miss Elsie M. Morris, M.D. f Mrs. W. J. Longley A. M. Boggs, D.D. 62. ONGOLE (On-gole') 1866 Mrs. A. M. Boggs t Thorleif Wathne Coles Memorial High School t Mrs. Thorleif Wathne B. J. Rockwood T. V. Witter Mrs. B. J. Rockwood Mrs. T. V. Witter Clough Memorial Hospital 55. M ADIRA (Mü'-dï-râ) 1905 A. G. Boggs, M.D. T. P. Klahsen Mrs. A. G. Boggs Mrs. J. P. Klahsen * Miss Sigrid C. Johnson, R.N. * Miss S. Maud McDaniel, R.N.

56. MADRAS (Mä-dräs') 1878 High School * Miss Susan C. Ferguson (Under Indian Management) W. L. Ferguson, D.D., Mission Treasurer Harriett Clough Memorial Training School t B. M. Johnson * Miss Helen L. Bailey t ]Mrs. B. M. Johnson Women's Union Christian College 63. PO DILI (Pö'-dl-li) 1894 (In charge of T. V. Witter at St. Christopher’s Training College Ongole) 84 AMERICAN BAPTIST FOREIGN MISSION SOCIETY

64. RAM APATNAM (Ra-ma-put'- 66. SOORIAPETT (Sôô-rî-à-pët') 1900 num) 1869 A. Penner rs. J. A. Penner Ramapatnam Theological Seminary F. P. Manley, D.D. 67. UDAYAGIRI (Oô'-dà-yâ-gï-ri) Mrs. F. P. Manley 1885 * Miss Florence E. Rowland (In charge of E. B. Davis at Ka- (Evangelistic Work) vali) Ramapatnam. Nursing Home 68. VELLORE * Miss Jennie L. Reilly, R.N. Woman’s Union Medical College 69. VINUKONDA (Vin-öö-kön'-dä) 65. SECUNDERABAD (Sê-kün'-dër- 1883 ä-bäd) 1875 (In charge of P. S. Curtis at Don- (In charge of A. M. Boggs at akonda) Kurnool) * Miss Melissa E. Morrow

N ote. The South India Mission was begun in 1836 at Vizagapatnam, whence the work was removed in 1837 to Nellore. Madras was reopened in 1878.

IV. THE BENGAL-ORISSA MISSION Begun 1836 70. BALASORE (Bal-a-sore) 1838 Girls’ School W. S. Dunn * Miss Grace I. Hill Mrs. W. S. Dunn * Miss Naomi H. Knapp H. I. Frost (Evangelistic Work) Mrs. H. I. Frost 72. JAMSHEDPUR (Jäm-shed-pöör) Boys’ High and Technical School 1919 t J. G. Gilson, Principal 73. JHARGRAM t Mrs. J. G. Gilson (In charge of H. I. Frost) t A. A. Berg f Mrs. A. A. Berg, R.N. Girls’ High School 74. KHARGPUR (Kar-ag-poor) 1902 * Miss Lillian M. Brueckmann (Work for women) English Church * Miss Ethel M. Cronkite E. C. Brush, Mission Treasurer and Mission Secretary Sinclair Orphanage Mrs. E. C. Brush Work for Koras A. Howard 71. BHIM PORE (Beem-pore') 1873 ÜIrs. r J. A. Howard Work for Santals 75. M IDNAPORE (Mid-nä-pöre) 1844 P. W. Geary (Language Study) (See Note a) Mrs. P. W. Geary (Language Study) C. C. Roadarmel Girls' High School Mrs. C. C. Roadarmel * Miss Ruth Daniels

Santal High School 76. SANTIPO RE (Sän-ti-pöre) 1865 t H. C. Long, Principal W. C. Osgood t Mrs. H. C. Long Mrs. W. C. Osgood

N ote. The Bengal-Orissa Mission was begun in 1836 at Cuttack, Orissa, in con­ nection with the English Baptist Mission. Sambalpur, the first station, was opened in 1837, but on account of its unhealthfulness the work was transferred in 1838 to Balasore, and this became the first permanent station of the Free Baptist Mission. Upon the union of the Baptist and Free Baptist denominations in October, 1911, the administrative oversight of the Bengal-Orissa field and foreign mission funds of the General Conference of Free Baptists was transferred to the American Baptist Foreign Mission Society. N ote a. Work was begun temporarily at Midnapore in 1844, permanently in 1863. ALONG KINGDOM HIGHWAYS 85

THE CHINA MISSIONS Begun 1836

V. EAST CHINA 77. HANGCHOW (Hang-chou) 1889 Riverside Academy E. H. Clayton t * Miss Florence A. Webster * Miss Mildred Proctor Mrs. E. H. Clayton (Religious Education Work) Union Girls' School Sclwol for Christian Homemakers * Miss Ellen J. Peterson Sing-mo and Monyi School Wayland Academy (at Shanghai) * Miss Mary Cressey Miss Lea Blanche Edgar 82. SHANGHAI (Shang-hl) 1907 78. HUCHOW (Hoo'-chou) 1888 General Work t * Miss Orma A. Melton E. H. Cressy, D.D., Secretary China Christian Education Association Memorial Mothercraft School (Temporarily at Chengtu, West § Miss Mary I. Jones China) Mrs. E. H. Cressy (Temporarily at Chengtu, West China) 79. K IN H W A (Kin-wha) 1883 L. C. Hylbert, D.D., Mission Secretary P. Davies Mrs. L. C. Hylbert rs. J. P. Davies t W. R. Taylor t Mrs. W. R. Taylor Cheng M ei Girls? School E. S. Burket, D.D., Acting Mis­ t * Miss Linnea A. Nelson sion Treasurer * Miss Ruth Mather t Mrs. E. S. Burket Pickford Memorial Hospital University of Shanghai * Miss Esther I. Salzman, R. N. S. S. Beath, A.M. (Language Study) t Mrs. S. S. Beath * Miss Ruth H. Bugbee S. J. Goddard, A.B. 80. NANK ING (Nan-klng) 1911 t Mrs. S. J. Goddard Victor Hanson, Ph.B., A.M. University of Nankins—College of Agri­ t Mrs. Victor Hanson culture and Forestry t * Miss Elizabeth Knabe, A.M. (Temporarily at Chengtu, West China) t Miss Annie E. Root B. A. Slocum Woman’s Christian Medical College Mrs. B. A. Slocum * Miss Josephine C. Lawney, M.D. Ginling College 83. SHAOH ING (Shou-sing) 1869 81. NINGPO (Ning-po) 1843 t A. I. Nasmith t Mrs. A. I. Nasmith P. A. Collyer (Language Study— A. F. Ufford Philippine Islands) Mrs. A. F. Ufford Mrs. P. A. Collyer (Language Study—Philippine Islands) Christian Co-operative School § * Miss Gertrude M. Waterman * Miss Gertrude F. McCulloch (Language Study) * Miss Viola C. Hill Riverbend Christian Middle School (Religious Education Work) t H. R. S. Benjamin Yuih Kwang School t Mrs. H. R. S. Benjamin The Christian Hospital Hwa Mei Hospital t * Miss Mildred L. Bowers, R.N. * Miss Willie P. Harris, R.N. R. E. Stannard, M.D. Harold Thomas, M.D. Mrs. R. E. Stannard Mrs. Harold Thomas t * Miss Myrtle M. Whited, R.N. § Industrial Work § Temporarily in Shanghai. 86 AMERICAN BAPTIST FOREIGN MISSION SOCIETY

VI. SOUTH CHINA

84. CHAOCHOWFU (Chou-chou-föö) 89. SWATOW (Swa-tou) 1860 1894 (See Note) General Work 85. CHAOYANG (Chow-yang) 1905 Miss Beatrice A. Ericson C. M. Capen Kak Kuang Academy Mrs. C. M. Capen R. T. Capen Hospital Mrs. R. T. Capen * Miss Mabelle R. Culley 86. HOPO (Hó-pó) 1907 * Miss Louise M. Giffin K. G. Hobart, Ph.D., Mission A. S. Adams Secretary Mrs. A. S. Adams t Mrs. K. G. Hobart Swatow Christian Institute 87. KIT YANG (Kit-yäng) 1896 t B. L. Baker E. H. Giedt, Ph.D. t Mrs. B. L. Baker t Mrs. E. H. Giedt * Miss Enid P. Johnson * Miss Fannie Northcott, R.N. Bixby Memorial General Hospital W. E. Braisted, M.D. Woman’s Bible Training School * Miss Dorothy M. Campbell, R.N. * Miss Dorothy A. Hare * Miss Marguerite E. Everham, M.D. (Evangelistic Work) t * Miss Clara C. Leach, M.D. * Miss Elsie M. Kittlitz * Miss Edna D. Smith (Evangelistic Work) 88. M EIH SIEN 1890 Scott Thresher Memorial Hospital Kaying Academy * Miss Velva V. Brown, M.D. Kwong Yit Girls’ School * Miss Marion Bell, R.N. * Miss Louise Campbell t * Miss Anna E. Foster 90. UNGKUNG (Ung-kung) 1892 * Miss Alice M. Giffin Mrs. B. H. Luebeck N ote. Work was begun in Macao i 1836. In 1842 this was transferred to Hongkong and thence in 1860 to Swatow.

VII. WEST CHINA

91. CHENGTU (Cheng-töö) 1909 92. KIATING (Jä-ding) 1894 General Work * Miss Beulah E. Bassett * Mrs. Anna M. Salquist, Mission M. O. Brininstool Secretary Mrs. M. O. Brininstool, R.N.

Union Normal School for Young Women 93. S U IF U (Swa-f5o) 1889 * Miss Minnie _ M. Argetsinger General Work (Evangelistic Work) * Miss L. Emma Brodbeck (Evangelistic Work) West China Union University J. C. Jensen * Miss Sara B. Downer, A.M. Mrs. J. C. Jensen t D. S. Dye, B.S., A.M. R. W. Schaefer (Language Study) t Mrs. D. S. Dye, A.B. Mrs. R. W. Schaefer (Language D. C. Graham, Ph.D. Study) Mrs. D. C. Graham, A.B. Girls’ Senior Middle School J. S. Kennard, Ph.D. Mrs. J. S. Kennard t * Miss Lettie G. Archer J. E. Lenox, M.D. * Miss Astrid M. Peterson Mrs. J. E. Lenox, M.D. t J. E. Moncrieff, B.S., A.M. Hospital t Mrs. J. E. Moncrieff t * Miss Myrtle C. Denison, R.N. D. L. Phelps, Ph.D. C. E. Tompkins, M.D. Mrs. D. L. Phelps, A.B. Mrs. C. E. Tompkins ALONG KINGDOM HIGHWAYS 87

Hospital for Women and Children Baptist Girls' School # Mjss L. Jennie Crawford, R.N. * Miss Marion I. Criswell, M.D. * Miss Ada L. Nelson

94. YAAN (Yan-gan) 1894 Briton Corlies Memorial Hospital (Formerly Yachow) R. L. Crook, M.D. F. N. Smith t Mrs. F. N. Smith Mrs. R. L. Crook C. G. Vichert * Miss Esther Nelson, R.N. Mrs. C. G. Vichert t * Miss Frances J. Therolf, R.N.

VIII. THE JAPAN MISSION Begun 1873 95. H IM EJI (Hï-mâ-jx) 1907 Misaki Tabernacle Hinomoto Girls’ School William Axling, D.D. Mrs. William Axling t M. D. Farnum 96. INLAND SEA 1899 t Mrs. M. D. Farnum

97. MORIOKA (Mö-n-o-ka) 1887 Union Seminary Woman's Christian College 98. OSAKA (Oh'-sâ-kà) 1892 t J. A. Foote, D.D. Waseda University—Scott Hall t Mrs. J. A. Foote t H. B. Benninghoff, D.D. î Mrs. H. B. Benninghoff Mead Christian Social Center * Miss Margaret E. Cuddeback 101. YOKOHAMA (Yö-kö-hä'-ma) 1872 Kanto Gakuin (Mabie College) 99. SEN D A I (Sën-di) 1882 R. H. Fisher, Mission Secretary Ella O. Patrick Home School Mrs. R. H. Fisher * Miss Alice C. Bixby t D. C. Holtom, Ph.D. t * Miss. Mary D. Jesse t Mrs. D. C. Holtom Miss Elma R. Tharp 100. TOKYO (Tö'-kyö) 1874 W. F. Topping t Mrs. W. F. Topping General Work * Miss Thomasine Allen Mary L. Colby School, Kanagawa (at Kuji) * Miss Winifred M. Acock J. F. Gressitt, Mission Treasurer t * Miss Margaret L. Crain Î Mrs. J. F. Gressitt t * Miss Lora M. Patten

IX. THE BELGIAN CONGO MISSION Transferred to Society from Livingstone Inland Mission in 1884 102. BANZA M ANTEKE (Mân-të'-ke) 105. LEOPOLDVILLE (Reopened 1870 1929) * Miss Mary Bonar G. W. Carpenter, Ph.D., Educa­ T. E. Geil tional Adviser Mrs. J. E. Geil Mrs. G. W. Carpenter * Miss Lena Youngsman, R.N. t E. G. Hall t Mrs. E. G. Hall 103. KIKONGO (Ki-kön-gö) 1928 t H. J. Watkins * Miss Agnes H. Anderson, R.N. t Mrs. H. J. Watkins t B. W. Armstrong t Mrs. B. W. Armstrong * Miss Grace M. M. Cooper 106. MOANZA (Mo-an'-za) C. E. Smith t Ernest Atkins Mrs. C. E. Smith t Mrs. Ernest Atkins L. A. Brown 104. K IM PESE (Kïm-pës-sï) 1908 Mrs. L. A. Brown École de Pasteurs et d’instituteurs * Miss Ruth E. Dickey U. A. Lanoue * Miss Esther J. Ehnbom, R.N. Mrs. U. A. Lanoue, R.N. t M. S. Engwall, Ph.D. * Miss Catharine L. Mabie, M.D. t Mrs. M. S. Engwall 88 AMERICAN BAPTIST FOREIGN MISSION SOCIETY

107. SONA BATA (Söna Bä-ta') 1890 108. TONDO (Tön'-dö) 1894 * Miss Vendía I. Anderson H. D. Brown Henry Erickson, Acting Mission Mrs. H. D. Brown Treasurer t * Miss Marguerite Eldredge Mrs. Henry Erickson P. A. MacDiarmid, Mission Sec­ 109. VANGA (Vän'-gä) 1913 retary Mrs. P. A. MacDiarmid W. F. Robbins Mrs. W . F. Robbins Hospital t * Miss Eva M. Shepard t H. M. Freas, M.D. t Mrs. H. M. Freas Hospital * Miss Emily E. Satterberg, R.N. * Miss Alice O. Jorgenson, R.N. * Miss Mildred G. Tice, R.N. A. C. Osterholm, M.D. G. W . Tuttle, M.D. Mrs. A. C. Osterholm Mrs. G. W. Tuttle t * Miss Dorothea Witt, M.D.

X. THE PHILIPPINE ISLANDS MISSION Begun 1900 110. BACOLOD (Bä-kö'-lod) Negros Baptist Student Center (Na-gros) Island 1901 ' * Miss Leonette M. Warburton * Miss Olive Buchner (at Antique) Central Philippine College t * Miss May A. Coggins H. W. Munger (at Fabrica) Mrs. A. E. Bigelow Mrs. H. W. Munger (at Fabrica) J. H. Covell Mrs. J. H. Covell 111. CAPIZ (Cäp'-es) Panay Island Miss Ruth L. Harris, Mission 1903 Treasurer t Miss Bertha A. Houger E. F. Rounds F. H. Rose, A.M., D.D. Mrs. E. F. Rounds Mrs. F. H. Rose R. Fred Chambers, A.B., M.A. Emmanuel Hospital .Mrs. Fred Chambers, M.D. (at Iloilo Mission Hospital) * Miss Jennie C. Adams, R.N. F. W. Meyer, M.D. School of Theology (Baptist Missionary Mrs. F. W. Meyer Training School) Home School * Miss Dorothy A. Dowell, B.S.E., Principal t * Miss Areola I. Pettit t * Miss Signe A. Erickson, M.A. 112. ILOILO (E-ló-è-15) incl. Iloilo Mission Hospital Jaro (Ha-ro) Panay Island 1900 * Miss Flora G. Ernst, R.N. S. S. Feldman, Mission Secretary H. S. Waters, M.D. Mrs. S. S. Feldman Mrs. H. S. Waters, R.N.

EUROPE The Society maintains co-operative relationships with autonomous Baptist organi­ zations in eight countries in Europe as follows: Belgium, Czechoslovakia, Denmark, Estonia, France, Latvia, Lithuania, Norway, and Poland, this arrangement having been made in accordance with decisions of the General Baptist Convention in London in July, 1920. In view of present war developments the Society finds it increasingly difficult to maintain a close fellowship with European Baptists. Special Representative for Europe: Rev. W. O. Lewis, D.D. ALONG KINGDOM HIGHWAYS

RETIRED OR NOT IN ACTIVE SERVICE Mrs. J. R. Bailey E. Hoisted, M.D. Mrs. P. R. Bakeman Mrs. E. Hoisted J. M. Baker A. J. Hubert C. H. Barlow, M.D. Mrs. A. J. Hubert Mrs. C. H. Barlow Mrs. G. J. Huizinga S. D. Bawden Henry Huizinga, Ph.D. Mrs. S. D. Bawden Mrs. Henry Huizinga W. F. Beaman Mrs. G. A. Huntley Wheeler Boggess Mrs. Truman Johnson Mrs. Wheeler Boggess Mrs. G. D. Josif S. A. D. Boggs Mrs. G. H. Kampfer Mrs. S. A. D. Boggs Mrs. C. S. Keen Mrs. W. E. Boggs Mrs. H. A. Kemp C. E. Bousfield, M.D. Mrs. J. C. King Mrs. C. E. Bousfield H. W. Kirby, M.D. A. C. Bowers Mrs. H. W. Kirby Mrs. A. C. Bowers Frank Kurtz Mrs. F. J. Bradshaw J. V. Latimer, D.D. Zo D. Browne Mrs. J. V. Latimer Mrs. Zo D. Browne J. T. Latta Mrs. Walter Bushell Mrs. J. T. Latta Mrs. J. M. Carvell Mrs. G. W. Lewis Mrs. Arthur Christopher R. B. Longwell Mrs. Joseph Clark Mrs. R. B. Longwell H. P. Cochrane, D.D. Mrs. Eric Lund Mrs. F. D. Crawley F. P. Lynch, M.D. Mrs. L. W. Cronkhite C. F. MacKenzie, M.D. J. E. Cummings, D.D. C. R. Marsh Mrs. J. E. Cummings Mrs. C. R. Marsh Mrs. A. H. Curtis Mrs. L. E. Martin J. A. Curtis, D.D. Mrs. M. C. Mason A. C. Darrow, D.D. John McGuire, D.D. Mrs. A. C. Darrow P. C. Metzger W. S. Davis Mrs. P. C. Metzger Mrs. J. L. Dearing Thomas Moody, D.D. Mrs. W. F. Dowd Mrs. S. E. Moon William Dring Mrs. P. E. Moore Mrs. William Dring Mrs. W. R. Morse H. E. Dudley Mrs. L. H. Mosier Mrs. H. E. Dudley H. R. Murphy, M.D. W. L. Ferguson, D.D. Mrs. H. R. Murphy Mrs. W. L. Ferguson Mrs. John Newcomb John Firth Mrs. C. A. Nichols Mrs. C. H. D. Fisher H. J. Openshaw, D.D. Mrs. E. N. Fletcher Mrs. H. J. Openshaw Mrs. J. M. Foster Mrs. Hjalmar Ostrom Mrs. Peter Frederickson W. C. Owen Mrs. G. J. Geis Mrs. W. C. Owen Mrs, D. C. Gilmore Mrs. J. H. Oxrieder Mrs. C. B. Glenesk Mrs. John Packer Mrs. J. R. Goddard A. H. Page F. W. Goddard, M.D. Mrs. A. H. Page Mrs. F. W. Goddard Mrs. W. B. Parshley Ernest Grigg Mrs. Joseph Paul Mrs. A. F. Groesbeck William Pettigrew F. P. Haggard, D.D. A. C. Phelps J Mrs. F. P. Haggard Mrs. A. C. Phelps Mrs. Robert Haliday Mrs. J. T. Proctor Mrs. S. W. Hamblen J. C. Richardson, Ph.D. Mrs. G. H. Hamlen Mrs. S. W. Rivenburg A. C. Hanna Mrs. E. B. Roach Mrs. A. C. Hanna W. E. Rodgers Mrs. Ola Hanson Mrs. W. E. Rodgers E. N. Harris, D.D. L. B. Rogers Mrs. E. N. Harris Mrs. L. B. Rogers Mrs. C. H. Harvey Wallace St. John, Ph.D. Miss Olive A. Hastings Mrs. Wallace St. John Jacob Heinrichs, D.D. H. E. Safford Mrs. Jacob Heinrichs Mrs. H. E. Safford Mrs. A. H. Henderson E. O. Schugren Mrs. C. H. Heptonstall Mrs. E. O. Schugren S. V. Hollingworth Mrs. J. H. Scott Mrs. S. V. Hollingworth Mrs. A. E. Seagrave Mrs. T. D. Holmes E. E. Silliman 90 AMERICAN BAPTIST FOREIGN MISSION SOCIETY

Mrs. E. E. Silliman Joseph Taylor, D.D. Miss Anna H. Smith Mrs. Joseph Taylor Mrs. H. W. Smith Mrs. H. H. Tilbe L. C. Smith Mrs. J. S. Timpany Mrs. L. C. Smith Henry Topping Mrs. J. L. Snyder Mrs. Henry Topping Mrs. Jacob Speicher A. J. Tuttle, D.D. L. W. Spring Mrs. A. J. Tuttle Mrs. L. W. Spring Cornelius Unruh F. W. Stait, D.D. Mrs. Cornelius Unruh W. A. Stanton, D.D. Mrs. W . O. Valentine Mrs. W. A. Stanton G. H. Waters F. W. Steadman Mrs. G. H. Waters Mrs. F. W. Steadman A. J. Weeks S. W. Stenger Mrs. A. J. Weeks Mrs. S. W. Stenger Mrs. Robert Wellwood Mrs. E. O. Stevens F. J. White, D.D. H. F. Stuart, Ed.D. Mrs. F. J. White Mrs. H. F. Stuart W. E. Wiatt, D.D. Mrs. F. P. Sutherland Mrs. W. E. Wiatt O. L. Swanson, D.D. Mrs. W. E. Witter Mrs. O. L. Swanson Mrs. William Wynd Mrs. W. S. Sweet DEATHS J. A. Ahlquist, M.D. W. E. Hopkins Mrs. W. B. Boggs G. A. Huntley, M.D. F. J. Bradshaw B. H. Luebeck, Ph.D. E. W. Clement, D.D. Mrs. John McGuire Mrs. J. E. Clougli S. E. Moon E. S. Corson, M.D. Mrs. J. C. Richardson Mrs. J. A. Curtis J. W . Stenger, M.D. M. D. Eubank, M.D. C. H. Tilden A. F. Groesbeck, D.D. Mrs. E. Tribolet S. W . Hamblen William Wynd Mrs. C. K. Harrington

RESIGNATIONS AND WITHDRAWALS T. E. Bubeck $ W . A. H om ing Mrs. T. E. Bubeck Miss Elizabeth M. Taylor Roger Cummings W. C. Thomas Mrs. Roger Cummings Mrs. W. C. Thomas V. W . Dyer $ L. W. Trueblood Mrs. V. W. Dyer j Mrs. L. W. Trueblood

MISSIONARIES UNDER APPOINTMENT * Miss Dorothy C. Asplund ’ Miss Ann R. McConnell * Miss Nina C. Bowers Roland G. Metzger * Miss Alicia R. Bishop Miss Lillian Smith * Miss Seater-Margaret Drever (Fiancée, Roland G. Metzger) * Miss Dorothy G. Gates, M.D. Raymond M. Stover Robert G. Johnson Mrs. Raymond M. Stover Miss Elizabeth L. Kortum ‘ Miss Elizabeth M. Taylor (Fiancee, Robert G. Johnson) FACTS AND FIGURES OF KINGDOM HIGHWAYS

STATISTICS BY-LAWS MINUTES

ALONG KINGDOM HIGHWAYS 93

STATISTICS REFERENCE SIGNS AND NOTES

General N ote. Figures in parentheses are not included in the totals of the stations (e. g., entries under the heading “Physicians and Nurses” are not included in the total missionaries), as they are counted under other heads. All statistics are for the calendar year ending December 31, 1940, except as noted. * Statistics for 1939. t Statistics for 1938. t Statistics for 1937. (a) Exchange was figured at 2.70 to 1 in 1937; 2.80 to 1 in 1938; 3.25 to 1 in 1939 and 1940. (b) Includes Mandalay, Rangoon, and Tavoy. (c) Across the border in Yunnan Province, China. (d) Medical statistics include work in leper colonies. (e) Exchange was figured at 3.30 to 1 in 1937; 6.00 to 1 in 1938; 10 to 1 in 1939; 14 to 1 in 1940. (f) Due to war conditions it has been impossible to secure reports from some stations. Where this is the case, latest figures available have been used. (g) Statistics for the East China Mission are not available; figures are for the calendar year 1939. (h) Chaochowfu report included with Ungkung. (i) Exchange was figured at 3.50 to 1 in 1936, 1937, and 1938; 4 to 1 in 1939 and 1940. (j) Statistics for the Japan Mission are not available; figures are for the calendar year 1938. (k) Exchange was figured at 29 to 1 in 1937, 1938, 1939; and 38 to 1 in 1940. (1) 143 men teachers also evangelistic workers. (m) 323 men teachers also evangelistic workers. (n) 134 men teachers also evangelistic workers. (o) 170 men teachers also evangelistic workers. (p) 122 men teachers also evangelistic workers. (q) 280 men teachers also evangelistic workers. (r) Exchange was figured at 2.00 to 1 in 1938, 1939, and 1940. 94 THE BURMA MISSION—Table 1 THE BURMA MISSION—Table 2 95 Missionaries

WORK AND STATIONS

£¿3 £ a t« ü a a

1 Baptist Mission Press ______2 Judson College______2 3 Cushing High School, Rangoon . 1 4 Burman Theol. Sem. and Woman’s Bible Sch., Insein.. 1 5 Karen Theol. Seminary, Insein—. 1 6 Willis and Orlinda Pierce Bap. Div. Sch. (English), Insein— 7 Karen Worn. Bible Sch., Rangoon 8 Pwo Karen B. T. S., Rangoon__ 9 Pyinmana Agricultural School __ 10 Robert Harper Memorial Hos­ pital, Namkham ______(1) 11 Burmans 12 Bassein ______13 Henzada ______14 Mandalay (incl. Mogok) 15 Maymyo (incl. Indian work)__ 16 Meiktila (incl. Myingyan) ____ 1 17 Moulmein (inel. Thaton) _____ — ;(i) 18 Pegu ______1 19 Prome ______20 Pyapon ______21 Pyinmana ______22 Rangoon ______! (l)i 23 Sagaing ______24 Tavoy (incl. Indian work)___ 25 Thonze-Zigon ______1 |— i— ! (1 ) 26 Toungoo ______i:— !— | (l) ...... t 8 ______27 Totals, Burmans ______(5) (1)! (6) (13) . . (1) (9) (30): (55) j (24) (89)1(234). Öi 28 Chinese (All Burma), (b ) ______29 Chins 30 Haka—Tiddim ______(1) — - 10!. 31 Sandoway ______4L 4; 3____ j______32 Thayetmyo ______t4 t4:. f!3 t5 ------33 Toungoo ______tl - +l: 34 Totals, Chins ______¡(2) (2) (1) (4) (28) (19) . 35 English-speaking Peoples (IS) (9) m i : : : : : : : : 36 Maymyo ______37 Moulmein ______38 Rangoon ______5 14'IIIIIiIIIICII 39 Totals, Eng.-speak. Peoples.. (2) (2) 40 Indians (5) (25)------!______41 Mandalay ______1 _ 42 Moulmein ______3 II I 0 2 ____ 43 Rangoon ______4 3, 3 44 Totals, Indians ______12! 13______45 K a chins (4)1 (7) (3) (19)1 (15)!______46 Bhamo ______1 1 ___ 21! 7 1 71 47 Kutkai—Namkhain ______1 26! __ 8 ! 17 48 Myitkyina ______1 3 35 15;______l i „ . 12| 7 3 34 9!------!— 49 Totals, Kachins ______(3) (2) 50 Karens (41) | (31) (7) (140) (5 0 )_____ 51 Bassein—Pwo ______18 52 Bassein—Sgaw ______10 91____!__ 66 143 98!...... 53 Henzada—Sgaw ______24 54 Loikaw—Sgaw ______79 72!_____I___ 6 26 3 Si_____!___ 55 Maubin—Pwo ______(1) 7, 28 4: 4 56 Moulmein—Sgaw ______~! (1) 18 70 57 Shwegyin—Sgaw (incl. 29 Nyaunglebin) ______( ) 58 Tavoy—Sgaw ...... 1 14 43 33 34 63 59 Tharrawaddy—Sgaw ______11 4! 56 13 43 7i 46 60 Toungoo—Bwe ______1 13 62 l| 61 Toungoo—Paku ______1 13 2 13 42 5' 29 62 Totals, Karens ______(4) (3) 01 ) 63 Lahu and Wa (»> (203) (555) (153) (511) (410) 64 Mong Mong and Bana (e) ____ 2 4 15 102 65 Pangwai ______1 - 5 — 1 2 10 49 - j 25 66 Pang Yang ______*7 67 Totals, Lahu and W a ______(3i) *10 — "( 6) (32) (161) — I l f (30) (2) "(1) 68 Mons (Talaings) Moulmein_____ 4 3 69 Shans 5 "~6 70 Kengtung (d) ______4 3 1 1 33 71 Loilem ______2 3 . 72 Namkhain ______5 3 1 73 Taunggyi ______1 10 5 ------2 ___ — i (2 ) 2 5 16 22 1 74 Totals, Shans ...... (2)(1) (3) (2) (2) (d ; (2) (8 ) 75 School lor Miss. Children______o (17) (34) (31) "(2) (34) — i (2) 2 76 Missionaries on Furlough ______(6) (3) (11) (7):(2) (2) (9) (27) 77 Totals for Burma Mission ------28 14 j 4P! 34j(6) (4) (43) n o 358 8521 190 91ß' 807 8< 25' U 10 96 THE BURMA MISSION—Table 3 THE BURMA MISSION—Table 4 97 Educational Statistics

Pupils Pupils Pupils IS S

WORK AND STATIONS ■4 S 00 <3 &1 3 Ö Sw 03m 'O « j S Ä S3 P4^ ÖOS

Baptist Mission Press ______:____ 1____ Judson College ------361 160 Cushing High School, Rangoon 171 Bunn an Theol. Sem. and Woman’s Bible Seh., Insein. Karen Theol. Seminary, Insein _ Willis and Orlinda Pierce Bap. Div. Seh. (English), Insein - Karen Worn. Bib. Sch., Rangoon Pwo Karen B. T. S., Rangoon — Pyinmana Agricultural School.. *64 Robert Harper Memorial Hos­ pital, Namkham ______Burmans Bassein ______6 205 6 Henzada ______3 171 4 42e Mandalay (incl. Mogok) _____ 180 1 40 2 215 Maymyo (incl. Indian work) _ 1 14 2 243 Meiktila (incl. Myingyan) ----- 100 24 1 59 1 121 Moulmein (incl. Thaton)_____ 76 165 4 247 11 1026 Pegu ------_ 1 56 2 157 Prome ______1 43 4 202 Pyapon ______2 71 4 206 Pyinmana ______*71. *1 *68 *10 *357 Rangoon ------85!. 1 104 5 483 Sagaing — ------1 26 2 128 Tavoy (incl. Indian w ork)___ 1 260 1 161 Thonze—Zigon ______1 30 5 235 Toungoo ------U 1 +120 t4 +332 Totals, Burmans ______(10) (474) (368) (2) (77) (26)! (1514) (63) (4890) Chinese (All Burma), (b) ------l! 35 Chins Haka—Tiddim ______Sandoway ______Tliayetmyo ...... — ... +12 $237 Toungoo ______+2* +59 Totals, Chins______(2) (175) (14): (290) English-speaking Peoples Maymyo ______Moulmein ______1! 22 1 42 1 110 Rangoon ______1 96 9 lj 113 2 202 Totals, Eng.-speak. Peoples. (2)! (96) (3 1 ) (2 ); (155) (3)! (312) Indians Mandalay ______43 Moulmein ______37! 106 Rangoon ______503 190 Totals, Indians ______(503) (190) (1), (37); (2); (149) Kachins Bhamo ______1 111 38 2291 Kutkai—Namkham ______1 140 33 1046 Myitkyina ______12! 9! 1 3; i ; 70 18! 800 T otals, Kachins ------(18)| (13)!(1) (3) (3) (321) (89) (4197) Karens Bassein—Pwo ______7oj 63:______! 1 103 lj 197 Bassein—Sgaw ______154! 14 1094 149 4910 Henzada—Sgaw ______291 1 65 87 3592 Loikaw—Sgaw ______1 31 9 514 Maubin—Pwo ______1 62 1 118 Moulmein—Sgaw ______50: 8 326 35 1706 Shwegyin—Sgaw (incl. Nyaunglebin) ______5 335 39 1653 Tavoy—Sgaw ______55 29,. 7 278 60 2724 Tharrawaddy—Sgaw ______152 111!. 0 765 51 3444 Toungoo—Bwe ______1 261 29 745 Toungoo—Paku ______1 44 4 396 31 904 Totals, Karens ______(11) (598) (367) (49) (3718) (492) (20573) Lahu and Wa Mong Mong and Bana (b ) ___ 1 101 45 570 Pangwai ______1 220 45 681 Pang Yang ______Totals, Lahu and W a ______(2) (321) (90) (1251) Mons (Talaings) Moulmein____ 1 40 7 5/5 Shans Kengtung (d ) ______1 4 2 117 Loilem ______:_ 1 179 Namkham ______1 43 5 414 Taunggyi ______2 92 41:. 3 199 6 613 Totals, Shans ______(4) (3 ) (2): (92) (4i); (6) (425) (13) (1144) School for Miss. Children _____ :...... Missionaries on Furlough ______II” 77 Totals for Burma Mission : 301 j 160; 2026 1010 4i 93 6877 775 33597 911 (625) 44574 $182820^242986 3l 20) 57121 68179 , 3879! $44276 $18659 $52230 $39914 $7019( $32335 $131498,77 98 THE ASSAM MISSION—Table 1 THE ASSAM MISSION—Table 2 99 Missionaries Native Workers Church Statistics P h y ­ P reach e rs I sicians Medical | w T eachers a n d Assis­ Church Members 'So Pupils N urses tants 839 0 WORK AND STATIONS S to % ! a® a I ® ; £ * _ ft n cs ft ! « 3 £ '5 « 83 •H 00 £ s -go s e 1 too 8 ? ! I S i f-l S* 'S a 73 ■o o I «2 ë s •O n 'S j a | s I IS : a 1 5 'S ’a 3 2 « 0 Male Doo ! Ü 03 O o C fi & P m Men * O 78 A bors 791 Sadiya ______! 80 Assamese and Immigrant 6 ______20 1 95 Peoples 1 81 Gauhati ______2 7;(1) 6 ____ 10 ______(8) 1------82 G o la g h a t ______II. — 1 2 . . . 9 (7) 15 59! 571 14 450 83 J o r h a t ______I 1 18 2 30 13 81 (81) 78 11 221 188Í) 1565: 3454Í 52 2557 — I 1 3 (13; ... 84 Jorhat Christian Schools ' 2 1 2 8 (2) 2 .------0 7!) 40i 125 2 238 X 22 - 1 ------■______85 N o rth L a k h im p u r ______19 . 1 4 5 _____ 8G, Nowgong ______3 J12 ____ +13 ______+ 55 }(55) "":Sö +5 ¡1732 ” Î3Ô "" ":90<"> 871 Sadiya ______I 6 1 __ 351 — 1 19 (19) 18 1 76 ! 516 977| 14 790 88 j S ib sa g a r . ______o 5 ____ 8 3! 3'J (35) 27; 12 138. 1304 14 401 JLi 4;______6; ___ i 119 . 89; Totals, Assamese and Im­ 1 47 (47) 24; 23 1012 855 1867 - ...... migrant Peoples _____ (1) (6) (12) (2) (4) (8) (25) 90 G a ro s !)i (53) (4) (78)! (49)1 (1) (14) (2 ) (250) (246) (214) (52) (619) ( 8) ______(10030) (120) (5342) (45) (22) . . . . 91 Gauhati ______92 T u ra ____ m i _ZZIIZI II 37 ------47 i 1 (8) 40 . 142' (104) 949 972. 1921 25, 1375 ” i 3 3 (1 ) (2) 9 n \ *29 93 Totals, Garos ______(2 ) ------162 ! 19 *376 >(370) *297 *180 j *17631 *219] *9110 *25| *12 (1) (3) (3)!(D (2) (9) (5): (66) 94 K ach aris ------(209) (20) (3) (384) (384) (337) (180) (142) ’(104). (19552) (244)|(10485) (25); (12) 95. G o a lp a ra ______96j Gauhati (Mongoldai) ______14 ------! 2 1 12 1110; 5 239 971 Totals, Kaeharis 2 ------! 27; 3 55 (55) 35801 27 929 98jM ikirs (1 6 )------(29) (4) (67) (55) (277) . (4090)I (32)! (1168) 991 Nowgong ____ i i 100 X ag as 2 j ___ (2) 4 5 ____ 2 17 (17) 17 35 (14) 307; 620' 1G 285 101 Kangpokpi 100 3 102; K ohim a ______H I +74 +4 +49 +5 f67 +(32) +168 ______13802 f3887: +7G89! +92 15440 101 4 103 Im p u r ______*17 ------*23 *82 *(58) *70 *12 ______*1829 *1799: *3028' *02 *3968 102 104| T o ta ls , N ag a s ...... H I ” (1) 2 *5 ------1 *80 *4 200 ‘(110) *140 *5 1010 . 12135 12860 249ÎJ5 *115 *18635 103 " ( l ) i i n i n (1) (9) (96) (4)1(152) (349) ( ) (378)¡ (17) (1010) . (269) (28043) 104 10j Missionaries on Furlough _ (2 ) 1 ( 1 ) .- (0) (1) 200 (36312)' (2) (9) 105 I !

100: Totals for Assam Mission I 12 18 (3) (5) (13) 47 21 230 8 476 : 82 1 18 13 1068 (902) 1016 253 2685 (12G) 3 4 ____¡106

THE SOUTH INDIA MISSION—Table 1 THE SOUTH INDIA MISSION—Table 2

10 A llur ______: ! 10S A tm a k u r ______1 ", 2: 14 : 3I 12 j 37 19 (3 )j 19’ 21 123 655 524 1179 ‘ 15 358 . 107 10!) R a p a tla ______H _I I l i r — 6¡______: +1 !. 6 [ 7 3, ( l ) 1 3; 11' 35 252 124 376 i 5 115 .108 110 oumhuni mini | ¡”~i — j 16 ______: 103 !”"2s i 142 8 (8 ) 401 27 232 (2) 5700 500] 11307 49; 2127 .109 — ! 0 ) 1 54 5]_____ 80 72 96 ( 2 ) 3591 3027 6018; 20 1050 111 D o n a k o n d a ______~"j' 9; 4 ¡ 32 8 . .110 112 G u rzalla ______11111111__ i 2 321 4 301 37 . 111 461 (41) 74 10 82, (3) 3850 2950 6806 52! 1078 . I l l 113 +2 +6; +7 ¡ t34 +13 +(13) tl3 +35 . +3492 +1400 +4892 +12 +628 . 112 Hanumakonda ______I__I~' 2 ( ) +14: +5 . 114 J a n g a o n ______' " T v 2 (2); 1 12: 4: 12; 4 44 7| (4) 4 13 [ "Î26 '(18) 1009 507 1576; 25 667 . 113 I lf K anigiri ______I I I I I ” ! — (D ‘ 2 12; 10 I.' 6 . 45 4 (4) 4i 171 45 (17) 424 351 775; 13 429 . 114 l i t I t ___ 1 57; 18, 90 31I (31) 1 90 i 49 3969 3253 7222! 1 142 . 115 K av ali ______n i l " I 2!__ 7 7;. 117 2 Í — - I ' l I I I 6 1 0 8: i: 8,. 36 8; (8) 6 1! 125 1293 919 2212! 9! 564 . 116 Kumool (incl. Nandya))" . 3 __ 3 j ____ I lf M a d ira ______— ( 1) 6 3! 12 4 80 56 . 161 16; (16) 14 55! 296 3618 3418 7036! *57! *2086 .117 1 _ 1 __ 16! (16) 80 96 11! M a d ra s ______I ____' 7! 11' 10 47 s - 83 46 4866i 30 335 . 118 1 __ Í 1' — 4 43 4: (4) 3 2 56 ” ’593 468 1061| 14 874 . 119 12( M a rk a p u r ______I_~ 1 __ ! 4 4 £ 23 14! *(14) 44 (24) . 121 N alg o n d a ______"""."I "I" 1 _I 6 3 1 40 56 55 201 3418 2175 5593! 52: 2561 120 12Í 7 23 21 59 16 (16) i| 30 211 .4000 2215 6215; 14 263 . 121 Narsaravupett (incl "Sattena” " i ÿ 3 palle and Guntur) ... 2 __ 1 £ N ellore ______(1) 4 25 11 67 21'_ 128 531 (53) 39 79 538 ______7337 4843 12I80I 70 2555 122 i:::\ S i ( 2 ) 12' O ngole ______n _ (4) 10 2: “7 8 33 2 5 . 89 11; (4) 8 21 7 2 ______622 613 1235! 43 998 42i.__ 123 2 1 3;(D (1) 9 6: 1, 560 20! (22) 1371 130: 3871 (125) 7999 6175 141741 24.', 6347 124 12; P o d n i ______i i n in n I 37 39 295 172 3j------12t Ramapatnam ______1111111.-1.1 _i 7 11 3 76 27 . __ 1 126 321 (26) *62 20 74! (13) 2438 1650 4094. 40 1152 125 — 2 ir. Theological Seminary ______;i I (1) 1 .— 5 . 18 r>i (l) 16 J______526 467 !)93 0 340 126 1 (!) 1 — ! 1 12É Secunderabad ______II __ "I_ 127 12£ Sooriapett ______1 1 1 1 1 1 1 '____ , i " _ 3 3 " Ï, ;> 2|I 12 3; (2)1 1 ” ~8 ' ” 2 o ¡ n n i n ” "2Öl" "” l&i 4 81 ¡128 13C U d ay ag iri ______I 1 26 4 21 2 i; 4 59 io ! (i)! i 27 70!______1 87 !129 131 V ellore ______2 1 4 . 1 11 3 j I. 2 j 1 22 5| (5); 11 0 12,___ ” 927 033 1560 9 130 132 V inu k o n d a ______1—1111111111 131 13c Missionaries on Furlough I 4 10 " 6 ’"¡8 12 I "2Ö ""(20) "'"33 ” 5 ó ' "2025 5095 132 (4) (1) (5) (3)j(2) III "(Ì) (13) ! 133

I 134 Totals for South India Mission. 19 4 22 221(5) (7)|(10) 67 352 i 170; 993 10 321 7 10 (47) 2110 375' (313) 660 840 3039: (199) ______109952 812 25714 72 42 — 134 101 100 THE ASSAM MISSION—Table 3 THE ASSAM MISSION—Table 4 Native Contributions Educational Statistics Medical Statistics

Pupils Pupils Pupils

g S p o «S , tí WORK AND STATIONS 03 — ■Oôô ¡3 2 OJO«' § o ■g® £ O S ’S i f Ü Z g -Sgg 0QÄ ■ w “ ja" — bo Xi li s* ® o M O ¡SI— u ? ® ; 'S« Ih*3 ® a s a ao£¡ •S o IS i-i ; h >o a +> n 'S« a> m i s ® “ 0 ^ 3 O H o o o Ëiua'S «B a £ p m O Ph EHiS (a) : (a) (a) (a) : (a) (a) ! (a) Abors $28 $30 ------?4l' $9 Sadiya ______Assamese and Immigrant > Peoples , j 336 ! 81 564 4505| *157; $7889, $5234 2 5 1 . ' *11' 81 Gauhati ______;____ 22 73 2 180 275 261 - $ 970, 82 82 Golaghat ______— j_____ j____ 6 4 ;... 131 25 805 j 1060 1034!. 167; *154 30; 441 83 174 *864 *11143 ’ ’*311 i *10225 ; *5983 ” 901 83 *1 ’ *23 3 105 150 172 ¡ 1 0 1 ------101 84 84 Jorhat Christian Schools —;____ i____ 148 1 103 1 331 329 1762,. J578 Î114;_____ "Ü96- {888 85 85 North Lakhimpur ______I_____!____ Î339 Î339 £; ŸÔ Î 1 3 í(6 ) 233 . 154, 387 86 86 Nowgong ------2 2721 362 Í85¡' 'Ï662 292 ”212_____ 331 8351 87 87 Sadiya ______10 333 " (i) 333 7 4 ------172 240 j 88 88 Sibsagar . ______Ï;' jj¡ 1 120 212 173 89 Totals, Assamese and Im­ (4204)1 89 (15648) 468 (18114) (11217) (1444) (929) (1G5) (1660) migrant Peoples______(2) (45) (4) (148) (84) (6)| (469) (57) (2247) 1 (71) (9 ) (3060) (4319) (2021) (2) (3 ) (1428) Ì 90 90 Garos 324 782 _____ 75 1181 91 1119 91 Gauhati ______3 139 11851 39 1324 169 *601 *1634 965 _____ *1077 3670 92 92 Tura ______*11 751 *170 4631 112 858 *625 ” *9620 ” *71 *1105 3843 *182 >(128) (71) (1105) (601) (1958) (1747) ------(1152) (4857) 93 93 Totals, Garos ______(14): (890) (206) (5028)1 ¡(221) (128) (5955) (281) (1977) (625) (9620) 94 94 Kacharis 103 8 5 _____ 154 342 95 95 Goalpara ------16 1 47 2 63 21 1054; 163_____ 169 1380 96 96 Gauhati (Mongoldai) ______77 148 34 28 663 29 697 (1157) (248)------: (323) (1728) 97 97 Totals, Kacharis ______(50) (29) (710) (31) (760) (148) 98 98 Mikirs 48'. 291 77 99 Nowgong ______331 33 100 100 Nagas | +429 +43 +965 101 +536 +1; +186 +1257 +89 +501 +493 101 Kangpokpi ______j____ +165 t33 +590 E +3 1(33) +755 *772 *119 *286 *1177 102 102 Kohima ______!____ *97 *18 *2701 *367 *19 *(3) *399 *5200: *2538 *769 *8507 103 103 Impur ______*262 *61 *2368! *03 *(31) *2630 *277 *1 *20 (10649) 104 (2952) (89) (900) (277) (C465); (3086) (1098) 104 Totals, Nagas ______;____ ( 5 2 4 ) (112) (3228)I : (117) (07) (3752) (813) (1) (2) (206) 105 105 Missionaries on Furlough !_____

$12095 $11100 $60401 $165, $4309; $21614¡106 106 Totals for Assam Mission 148 84 27 1933 407 11336 (209) 13650 $4698; $4959 6 2259 28220 628 $20119

THE SOUTH INDIA MISSION—Table 3 THE SOUTH INDIA MISSION—Table 4 (a) (a) j (a) (a) (a) i j (a) (a) (a) i (a) t $185'______j----- $7 $192 ¡107 107 Allur ______1 101 8 341 4421 $140; $85£ 3 jlOS 108 3 ______¡.I__ Atmakur ______+1 +20 +i +2 0 . Ì +3( 375 $213;___ 188 77610!) 109 Bapatla ______1 1 142 . 72 59 2274 61 (58) 24881 174; 3627 343 ______343,110 110 1 Cumbum ______1 57 107 17 683 19 847 172 17H 371 120,----- 5491111 111 Donakonda ______X 50 45 1830 46 (45) 1880! I 132C +161______!_____ I. tlOl'112 112 Gurzalla ____ . . . ______+12 +377 +12 + (12) +377 +7 +58S 733 113 4767! 315 $7500i $5711 517 191 $05; 132! 113 Hanumakonda ______i 10 17 10 108 18 402 29 (10) 537 194 3 1578 44 119 114 114 Jangaon ______2 18 86 40 1 107 9 219 18 392 638 57 202115 115 Kanigiri ______145______I------i ------2 156 1 113 3 269 555 154 165;------!. 319116 116 Kavali ______1 2 110 1575 2246 289 3 399 825------j ------j ” 60 8851117 117 Kumool (incl. Nandyal) _. 1 124 20 1 85 2 3 3 9 58 2569 62 (55) 3137 1688 2350 118 118 Madira ______1 148 41 744 42 892 735 30 1400)119 119 Madras ______944; 426j------1 1 175 9 560 10 735 830 1290 8 4 ______40 124120 120 Markapur ______::::: ------:::::::: ::::: 1 83 1183 53i *231 I—:: 28 29 1266 1 8 ______31 49121 121 Nalgonda ______::::: 5 159 5 159 9 2 ______122 Narsaravupett (inel. Sattena- 722 ______!. 21 743:122 palle and Guntur)______X 235 43 1751 44 (43) 1986 2109 170; 48 908|123 123 Nellore ______... 3 o 3 2 4242 ___i 2133 4841 291 7796, 4123 683 T 47 351 203 426 145 10 1214 9856 2704; 2363, 32; 534; 5033124 124 Ongole ______o 19 26 2 142 75 4 365 235 9554 10181 2957 12757 1 2871 10602 1223 9901 8126 243 (128) 31 332; 136 74;______I------j 37 111 125 125 Podili ______“ X 154 51 1899 2053 92 3064 1 1143 52 (49) I 1342, 126 135 82 1 731 290.12« 126 Ramapatnam ______------— 2 134 4 121 6 255 12 411 3 144 3497 !______127 127 Theological Seminary ______— 1 72 321______; 19 340 128 128 Secunderabad ______5 67 5 67 i 232 129 (1) 1325 963 109 _____ ; 123 , 129 Sooriapett ______16 192 X 22 X 94 18 308 168 1 _ 530 1 181130 1347 89i; 167 1 4 ------130 Udayagiri ...... X 43 4 213 5 " ( 3 ) 256 603 1 _ 198 . . . j ______131 131 Vellore ______; 471; 62;. 18; 551132 132 Vinukonda _____ 81 838 (31) 838 _!______¡133 133 Missionaries on Furlough .

134 Totals for South India i i $9586 $3471 j $390, $1397: $14844134 Mission ______.. 4 29 90 10 834 306 33 ; 425! 26 3006 689 26266 764 (435), 31070 $19907i $39078 7534 27522 1970 $28731; $19220 102 AMERICAN BAPTIST FOREIGN MISSION SOCIETY ALONG KINGDOM HIGHWAYS 103

THE BENGAL-ORISSA MISSION—Table 1

Missionaries Native Workers THE BENGAL-ORISSA MISSION—Table 2 1 Phy­ Church Statistics sicians Medical Preachers Teachers and Assis­

tants Nurses Church Members Pupils

WORK AND STATIONS

T* r

00 e Men, Men, Ordained Men, Unordainec (Including Wido Single Single Women Married Married Women Physicians Ordained Teachers Total Missionaries Unordained Bible Women Men

Women i i Men Women I Number I of Line ë a 1 p 1 13a Bengalis Church Church Buildings Schools and and Chapels Other Other Places of Worship During Year Added from Male Female Theological Sem. Bible and Training Schools Colleges Number of Lines I Workers Self-supporting T otal Total Native Organized Churches Churches Entirely College College Trained Added by Baptism Sunday Schools Sunday School Enrollment Women Men 136 Workers Khargpur (incl. English ! work) ______2 9 4 1 1 2 1 ■ 137 Midnapore — _ _ 1 (1) 1 1 12 135 138 Totals, Bengalis ______(2) (2) (l) (1) (5) (9) (lì (91 (lì (12) 4 3 (2) 3 5 14 279 225 504 5 389 136 139 Oriyas (5) 14 1 (1) 1 69 67 136 4 208 137 140 Balasore ______9 1 (3) 8 3 7 3 33 15 (5) (18) (4) (3) (4) (5) (14) (640) (9) (597) 138 141 Jamshedpur (incl. English 139 work) . ______1 (11) 61 9 (1) 5 5 31 (21) 340 361 701 17 496 140 142 Santipore (incl. Salgodia) __ 1 1 ----- 2 1 5 6 20 1 l 2 143 —- 1 1 1 Totals, Oriyas ______(3) (Ï) (4) "(2) "(3) (10) (5) (12) (53) (20) (l) (i) 3 (1) 2 160 102 262 5 113 141 144 Cl) 1 42 7 (2) 5 4 6 220 245 465 8 287 1 142 145 Bhimpore ______3 ! 3 2 (3) 8 2 5 12 10 (ID (104) (19) (4) (12) (9) (38) (1428) (30) (896) 143 146 Jhargram (incl. Kora work) 1 _ 1 9 3 12 4 106 1 144 14V Totals, Santäls ______30 1 1 1 7 142 213 355 3 145 (4) __ (4)| (2) _ _ (3) (10) (3) (14) (9) (118) (11) a ) (5) (1) (4) 216 148 Missionaries on Furlough ___ (2) tu (3); (1) (6) 126 16 11 16 109 389 421 810 18 285 146 (5) (156) (17) (1) (12) (17) (116) (4) (1165) (21) (501) 147 148 149 Totals for Bengal-Orissa Mis­ i sion ______q i' loi 5 (7) 25 10 27 20 172 43 1 3 1 1 i (21) 278 40 (8, 28 31 168 (25) 3233 60 1994 -- 149 THE CHINA MISSIONS (f)—Table 1 THE CHINA MISSIONS (£)—Table 2 150 East China (g) 151 Hangchow ______l' l! 2 (211 4 1 1 ! : 1 j 152 Huchow ______■ i (1) 2 5 4 1 I 150 153 Kinhwa ____ - 2 2 3 2 214 227 441 2! 234 151 1 __ : (1)1! (2) 5 2! S: 3! 201 5 S1 10, 9 4 ; (1) 154 Nanking ______1 3 (1) 10 5 (1) 51 12 398 268 666 2 102 152 155 University of Nanking .■ 1 ]L: 2 (6) 65 9 (1) 5 9 270 228 498 3 216 153 •! (1) 1 156 Ginling College ______------— L ------.... 154 157 i Ningpo ______- 1 2 3 6 (2) 12 7 6 4 155 (1) 'j (4) ! 61 34 10• n ! 16: 1 i 158 Shanghai ______4-----: 4| 1 (1) 9 3 1 6 13 34; ----- 1---- L... i 156 159! University of Shanghai 3! 31 3 1 ! (38) 150 10 (1) 10 24 611 673 1284 8 706 i 157 • "(6) 0 1 160 Shaohing ______2 1 3 3 5 ,6 2 (27) 57 2(2) 3 249 185 434 1 106 158 (1) (1) (2) 9 251 9 7; 12 10 1 ! 161 Missionaries on Furlough .. (2) («1 (7)! (7) (2) (5) 159 162 Totals for East China ... (8) (8) (16) (20) ‘ (8) (4) (18) (52) (22) (21) (17) (119)j (82) (26)j(33)j(35)| (¿j 160 163 South China 161 164 Chaochowfu (h) ______(98) (361) (38) (7) (33) (66) (4713) (26) (2103) 1 162 165 Chaoyang 1 163 .--- X___ 2 Zl 1 / *4 j 166 Hopo ______1 l . 2 ----I 5 2 12 4 1 2 2 - 164 167 Kityang _ __ _ 1 (3) 4 31 2 45 *22 *(4) *21 *9 *89 *503 *634 *1137 *11 *606 165 (1) — - C 42 14 2 6. 4 1 30 168 Meihsien (Kaying) ______l -L.1 ;l ---- (3) 3 3! 1 5 (1) 6(1) 8 21 (7) 2061 194 400 6 385 166 169 Swatow ______3I— 3 10 4’ 21 (13) 106 34 (3) 31 20 97 1052! 1273 2325 16 1129 167 ~(ij (2), (8) 16 13; 31 40 2 7 2 - - i (29) 170 Ungkung (h) ______\ 1 3! 23, 1| 25 7 lì 2 ___ 1 } 57 5 (1) 2 4 43 (9) 209 477 686 2 156 _ ------168 171 Missionaries on Furlough ._! IIT(3): (2) ___ 1 (21 (6) 120 25 (7) 44 4 113 912 1665 2577 26 1830 51 169 11) (1) (6) (6) 63 26 172 Totals for South China .. (6) (1) j (6) ■ (17) (4) (3) (30) (16) (98) (27) (155) (90) 1 ((J) (17) (8) (4) (6) 28 5 56 (2) 559 784 1343 18 1070 170 173 West China (11) 171 (55) 174 Chengtu ______2 2 1 Q 0! j ! (421) (118) (22) (134) (42) (419) (18) ------(8468) (79) (5176) (1) (51) ------172 175 West China Union Univer­ ! 173 1 1 3 x 4 sity ______3 3 6 1 (2) (61 13 7 4 208 128 336 176 174 17« Kiating ______2’ 1 1 1 !__ i 3 4 4 1 177 Suifu (Ipin) ______2 - (2) 2 1 "Ï 3 6 "(2) ‘ (2) (2): 12 6 5 ' “ 29, 23 "~ 7 ' ” 7 ""2 178 Taan (Yachow) ______2 1 3 3 (1) 8 1 5 4 20 (11) 492: 299 791 4 135 . 176 (1) (2) (Di 9 4 4 33 10 3 2 1 (19) 1 1 179 Missionaries on Furlough (2) (3) (3) (2) (3)! (8) 84 20 73 (59) 8921 311 1203 8 694 . 177 180 Totals for West China __ (8) (5) (13) (13) ’ (5) (39) (13) 57 1 12 3 11 (1) 691 172 863 4 240 X 18 .178 (4) (9) (2) (14) (13) (67) (36) (7) (7) (9 )j (3) . 179 1 (35) (158) (4) (19) (31) (104) (71) (3193) (19) (1245) (2) (22) (1) 180 181 Totals for China Missions__ 22 14 35 50 (12) (11) (38) 121 40 133 57 341 208 39 57 j 52 j 1:; 1 " I (183) 940 160 (29) 186 139 623 (89) 16374 124 8524 3 22 51 1 181 104 AMERICAN BAPTIST FOREIGN MISSION SOCIETY ALONG KINGDOM HIGHWAYS 105

THE BENGAL-ORISSA MISSION—Table 3 THE BENGAL-ORISSA MISSION—Table 4 Educational Statistics i Medical Statistics Native Contributions i Pupils j Pupils Pupils

WORK AND STATIONS

BS o o flr: I à ^ .2 o ’ 0'S s -s X to « ! §■ s s § 5 S ¡ II 1* - fea 03 3 WO SQ « P* g g* WS ’c.B’S ¿i « tu “ 1-5 » 5 ¡1 ~ C3 — *a S s s Sog; Men Women Medical and Medical and Nurses Training Training Schools and and High Schools M en Women Normal Schools Boys Girls Pupils Vocational Schoc Pupils and and Kindergarten j j Number of Line Grammar Grammar School; Primary Schools >0Q Pupils «ü-! h o S «-fc’Q 0¡2 Sä ! o h s S ’SS i ê s OP4 fß l fr fr6fr frœ-3 fr Sm ¡3 135 Bengalis I 130 Khargpur (incl. English Ca) (a) (a) : (a) (a) (a) (a) (a) (a ) w o r k )______135 13/ Midnapore ______15 138 ---- 70 72 81 1. 15 $4 $1026 $1248 136 Totals, Bengalis ... (70) 139 Oriyas (1) (2) (J¿) (2) (9G) 4 . 223 249 15 331 137 140 j Bulasore ...... 2 (5). (238) (1369) (1275) (67) (237) (1579) 138 141 Jamshedpur (incl. English 6 316 139 work) ______(1) 746 3762 4132 212 28 113 353 140 142 Santipore (incl. Salgodia) — 143* 1067 205 1272141 Totals, Oriyas______(2) (.ud) 144 Santals w (ábü) (12) (625) 8 (1) 467 493 1 4580 144 5 $325 9 483 142 145, Bhiinpore _____ (19)¡ (2) (1213) (4150) (4625) — CD (4580) (583) (6) (1423) (33) (325) (327) (2108) 143 ------1 95 144 346: Jhargram (incl. Kora work) _ Q 2 14/ 306 1572 1270 66 87 25 112 145 Totals, Santals _____ ._ a ) (03) 148 Missionaries on Furlough (2) (148) (87) (3509) 881 (82) 3474 33 3709 59 106 41 206 146 (92) (82) (3780) (1605) (4979) (1) "( 66) (11) (146) (106) (66) (318) 147 __ ! 1 t 148 149,Totals for Bengal-Orissa 1 ' Mission _ _ i 101 4230 i 1 116 (84)| 5231 $8453 4580 $17 $2844 $206 $4005 149 THE CHINA MISSIONS (f)—Table 3 THE CHINA MISSIONS (f)—Table 4 150 Elast China (g) 1 j 15j Hangchow ______------_ 1_ j _ 1 (e) (e) (e) (e) (e) (e) (e) (e) (e) I 152 Huehow ______. -LLL 150 $36 $10 S46Í151 loo Jimnwa ____ 1 ------j Ij 12. 30; 2 154 .Nanking 195 88 . . . — .... ------1 1 206 108 9 117 152 1 153 loo University of Nanking 1 4 531 $2565 2 2316 26060 1306 $9554 $7385 101 32 133 150 G inline Colletre 154 157 155 Ningpo ______! i 58! 3 C59 273 i Ï 65 158 Shanghai ______1 6 955 1 _____ 156 ;------j 2 317 145j 1 87 312 11 1 159 University of Shanghai I" _ I— - ! 1 2010 10313 2 2303 89083 644 18494 12474 381 54! 435 157 4 861 2140 , 311 400 158 J.UU DliaUlillJg _____ i — 46 1 301 155 ! 1 89 161 Missionaries on Furlough ____ 1 299 159 li<0 T71_X. i-tu;______I.... 3 861 4462 1 1 1642 40512 550 14068 13502 460 $128 34 622 160 ivtaw iui .aasi« v/Uiiia____ “ (3) (12) (134) (1532) (661) 163 South China (8) (2; (152) (9) (1772) 161 (22) (4263) (19480) (6261) (155655) (2500) C49.nfi'i (sasfrn (1397) (128) (228) (17531 ¡1R2 164 Chaochowfu (h) __ ------(3) (5) 165 Chaoyang __ 163 2 131 J.*11 u< 0 164 16C Hopo __ 1 _ 3 » i 167 ■ Kityang ______2 104 j 6 369 16 (16) 806 224 *537 *50 i *587! 165 1 16 1 305! 57 I 1 2101 21 985 9 476 296 ” i Ï 405 11630 68 962 372 100 $85 349 ! 534 166 168! Meihsien (Kaying) j------. 2 169! 6371 236 2 416 24 (22) 1574 1603 $55 1 2 1261 25370 305 4657 3045 871 48 800 106 ; 1825 167 Swatow ...... 9 2 239! 170; 139 2: 370 13 1448 4 1289 1558 114 146 12 103 2G11C8 Ungkung (h) ______1 120 20 171, Missionaries on Furlough — 1 6 217 j 12 553 19 (10) 2256 2106 1 1 479 25538 143 2469 1975 698 214 115 1027 109 19 (16) 910 306 25 1 922 j 7971 90 1416 799 391 14 19 303 727 170 172, Totals for South China (3 )! (1) (28) (1301) (452) 173 West China <•> (13) (1032) (68) (4446) ...... 171 174 Chengtu ______! ! (91) (64) (7311) (6093) (194) (4) (4) (3067) (70509) (606) (9504) (6191) (2743) (159) (1382) (677) ' (4961) 172 1 ------j 4 1 175: West China Union UnT 15 ------j 2 124 ! 173 5 147 29 124 50 21 ! 195 174 ! versity ______58 5 17G; Kiating ______(1) 6 7 ; __ 1 130 79 399 1175 11 2 178 Yaan (Yaehow) ...... 1 303 220; 2 571 2 72 22 5 271176 3 1 261,____ !... ; 398! 177 179 Missionaries on Furlough I.I 3 233 6 609 ’ “ 7 ---- 1177 1954 111 1 1 1352 19330 446 3323 2890 135 10 212 180 Totals for West China 11 1128 668 70 1 1 576 5449 252 1309 1404 75 65 54 194:178 ’ (58)¡~'(5)!"~(1)j (4) ’ (14) ” (4) '(631) (224) ( l j Il79 | "(15)| '(5 ) '(8Ô4j;“ '(iÔj ■'(805) (24) ---- (2582) (2730) (580) (2) (2) (1928) (24779) (698) (4632) (4294) (356) (125) (41) (292) (814) 180 ¡ j 1 181 Totals for China Missions 58 5¡ 7 17 176 18 3464; 1337 1671 18 1836i SI 7023 ] ! 3i 137 (64) 14156 $28303 $774 9 11 11256 250943 3804 $56252 $43846 $4496 $284 $1551 $1197 $7528 181 106 AMERICAN BAPTIST FOREIGN MISSION SOCIETY ALONG KINGDOM HIGHWAYS 107

THE JAPAN MISSION (j)—Table 1 THE JAPAN MISSION (j)—Table 2 Missionaries Native Workers Phy­ sicians Medical Preachers Teachers and Assis­ Nurses tants

WORK AND STATIONS ¡is i m

3 a ' 3 I 215 7 331 l82|Himeji ______0 4 ______!------82 I 33! ( 1 0 ) 22 (i), 7 361 183! Inland Sea ______0 ------101 116: 217 ( 4 ) : 1 7 5 -__ ; 245 394 5 350 ___ 184 184!Kobe ______3 ( 2 ) 14!) ( 1 ) (i 54 111 1 57 ___ 185 1851 Kyoto ______1 1 ______57 1 ( 1 ) 5 230 186 186 Mito ______0 4 ______!______1(14 96. 197 ( 4 ) 8 ( 1 ); 2:!li 217 453 7 719 187 187!Morioka ______1 0 r> ( 2 ) 6 ______j ------( 2 ) 260! 256 516 8 762 188 188! Osaka ______1 ! 1 l 3 20 :;2 7 ( 4 ) 7 ------( 1 4 ) 240 480 8 889 1 189 189; Sendai ______1_ 2 2 2 1 ______4 ( 3 ) 4 4 ______240 ( 2 3 ) 3 6 302 311 613 13 795 190 190 Tokyo ______1 4 1 9 32! l' 7 6 6 (•r>) 1 0 ______( 4 0 ) 449, 750 7, 548 1 1 9 1 191 Yokohama ______!____ i 3 3 2 7 j. 4 ( 2 ) 6 ______; ------3011 ( 2 7 ) 41 1081 53 161 1 171 1 1 9 2 192 Kanto Gakuin (Mabie College) 1 2 3; 1 7 ('4 8 ) :■(> ---- ( 1 ) 1 ------_.._lor, 19S Missionaries on Furlough (4) — : (6) (3) (13) ------

4107 69 5213 194 Totals for Japan Mission (13) 18 140 T"T (173) Oil 3 9 (22)

THE BELGIAN CONGO MISSION—Table 1 THE BELGIAN CONGO MISSION—Table 2

32!)5 5279; 1 360 ______195 195 Banza Manteke (1) ______1 1 2 4 4 148 21 4 1 9 3 5 12! 120 1 98 ______1984 ki) ------; 171 4754 8527 1 389 ______196 19i Kikongo (m) ______1 1 2 2 ¡(D 6 9 10 ------351 2 372 13 (3) 268, (139) 3773 197 Kimpese—Ecole de Pasteurs l! 257 4 57 8 3 ___ 197 et d’instituteurs ______1 1 1 m !ro (1) 3 3 3 2 Oc 2 2 2 71- (21) 2;>8 19? Leopoldville ______2 " 1 3 6 2 2 8 4 - — ------16 0 ) 250 ______199 199 Moanza (n) ...______2 1 3 2 8 17 178 3 6 "” 3 131 290 ______2572 5144 1 ” J (ïj 208 17 11013 387 ______200 200 Sona Bata (o ) ______3 1 4 3 d ì 11 12 2 182 4 1 9 210 39 " '(2 ) 18! 181 546, (182) 4267 6746: 1108 l184U O iA OQlfi 0 620 _ . 201 201 Tondo (p) ______1 1 1 3 8 144 5 1 158 8 (3) 5‘ 103 1!« (109) -» 7145 .1 20:* Vanga (q) ______1 “Ï 2 3 (2) (i) — 7 12 2 317 1 — “ Ï2 348 12 (12) r? 305 392 ______------______¡203 203 Missionaries on Furlough _____ (3) (3) (6) (3) (2) (15)

204 Totals ior Belgian Congo Í 4 57! 88 — - 204 7, 1 10 -J 851 1956 (451) ------40480 12 ; Mission ______12 6 17 14 (4) (7) (i) 48 39 37 4 1331 24 ---- 1491 96 (21) ! :n04 1 ! H 1 “1

THE PHILIPPINE ISLANDS MISSION--Table 1 THE PHILIPPINE ISLANDS MISSION—Table 2

205 Bacolod (incl. Occ. Negros *3090 205 1 *37 *13 *4000! *57 Province) ______1 2 4 5 8 7 2 *14 (2) 36 *41 *(40) *1439! *26 *609 206 20c Papiz ______1 13 12 *(25) *19 *5 1! 2 ! 2|(1) (1) (i) 6 5 3 5 1 5 7 5 (1) 56 *26 *3540 *120 *3547 207 207 Iloilo ______1 1 2 2,(2) (2) 6 *9 *18 *10 +5 3 10 32 16 103 *45 *(36) *41 *7 (i) (4) (17) 07 130 9 398 208 208 Central Philippine College___ 1 2 I 1 3 5!__! (8) 11 1 "’"20 6 (27) 27 1 (1) __ *346 *2 0 *549 209 200 San Jose ______*1 *2 *10 *5 210 210 Missionaries on Furlough _____ :::::: í T * > \ ::: '(3) '(¡j :::::::::::::::::::: :::::::: ---- ;1 i

211 Totals tor Philippine Islands 9455; 8199 Mission ______5 3 8' n caí rawim 27 21 30 22 23 30 10 15 45 28 (34) 224 123 (102) 102 30 17 (17) ! ALONG KINGDOM HIGHWAYS 109 108 AMERICAN BAPTIST FOREIGN MISSION SOCIETY

THE JAPAN MISSION (j)—Table 4 THE JAPAN MISSION (j)—Table 3 Medical Statistics Native Contributions Educational Statistics

Pupils Pupils Pupils ob O 2Æ »- bJD ■S3 oflS 53 O £ o .WORK AND STATIONS ÖS O s a 3 5 ft 8 8 BÏ3 2 « S'S .2 o S 2 S 03 3 'O « SW ■is*! |S ¡Z¡-° ÖCO S o 1 « œ bo 2 m «ta ! 1 el1-c A2 §2° S¿¿.g a s ; «¿3 fcl tí o S m feia fe-o a 'S § £ o gW SM §1 >aa H i O b » o o 'S *3 Ï M S5S fttBu 5 « BO »2 ^ 02 OU ET11—1 5« I« H O ) ! «Zi ±TgUA 1 182 79S 24 lOñ 1 1 1 283 137 5085 _U<) 5901 1 2 605 2766 196 5 9 1 113 264 5780 ¡197 /*4Qfk 750 553 197 Kimpese—Ecole de Pasteurs 7 421 l|1 1 339 o4oU 158;198 1 158 1 45 2 231 366 — 1 _ 1 R7 0 / 1 CHI ------36 ' 218 64 157 108 1 50 1 65 3 251 17415i 7818 16 1 1 1079 7256 93 7821200 1

SUMMARY OF STATISTICS—Table 2 SUMMARY OF STATISTICS—Table 1

■S : WORK AND STATIONS bfl ; j5

643 31302 7Ì 144 145 1 212 688 45418 3| 70 34 21s 212 Totals for Burma 812 25714 2! 72 42 -- 214 213 Totals for Assam ______60 1994 _ __ _ 215 214 Totals ior South India . 124 8524 3 22 51 1 216 215 Totals ior Bengal-Orissa 69 5213 lj 6 3 217 210 Totals ior China (f-g) . . . 12 3194 4 57 88 -- 218 217 Totals for Japan (j) ___ 218 Totals lo r Belgian Congo 232 8199 2; 15 6 1 219 219 Totals for Philippine Islands 2640 129558 22 386 366 6 220 220 Totals lor Non-Christian Lands, 1940 ______1112| 47 154 2639 132140 22 399 397 6 221 2857 136069 24 366 458 8 222 221 Do. for 1939 ____ 112 1 1 1 ! 54 100 169 (37) (41) 2836 138955 22 348 389 8 223 222 Do. for 1938 ______112 117 , 55 166 170, (74) 2787 132269 23 387 328i 8 224 223 Do. for 1937 ______122 123! 55 174! 170| 2872; 121172 27 420 438; 7 225 224 Do. for 1936 ______123 1281 61! 182; 174 225 Do. for 1935 ______124 139 64;i94 190 SUMMARY OF STATISTICS—Table 4______SUMMARY OF STATISTICS—Table 3 Native Contributions Educational Statistics

Pupils Pupils Pupils

p o WORK AND STATIONS ä ° T3 o S3 Si I OOQ ! ' *3 « a gM e» 5-0 J a & ¡z; es *7019 $32335'$131498 ‘ 2ol 5712 68179 l 1 911 (625) 44574 !$182820 $242986 3 12095 11100 6040 165 4309 21614 5 212 Totals for Burma______361 1601 2 5 105 29 2026 1010 4 144 93 6877 775 33597 13650 4698 4959 4 6| 2259 28220 3471! 390 i 1397i 14844i 443, (209) 8 7534 27522 1970 28731 19220 9586 213 Totals for Assam ______1 ____ 1 2 _J 45 4 148 84 _ __ 27 1933 407! 11336 764 (435) 31070 19907 39078 5 2844 206 325 630 4005 ! 26266 _ 4580 649 17 1197, 7528i 214 1 4 291 90 10 834 306 33 425 26 3006 689 116 (84) j 5231 8453 10973 — 3804 56252 43846 4496 284! 1551 215 Tritala for 'Rfine'ftl-OrlflSft 1 4 190 102 3 123 8 586 101 4230 28303 774 9 11256 250943 16639 250! 30836! 137 (64) 14156 ...I 17480 1397 890 13947 216 Totals for China (f-g) 58 7 17 j 176 18 3464 1337 3 167 18 1836 87 7023 5589 69786 705 — 6588 591 176 7354 ! 5I , 56 (41) 5096 65017 1599 15505 10121 217Totals for Japan (j ^ 1 306 53 - ____ I. 5 1168 1340 10 1133 37 1583 1195 (719) 37798 438 7 218 Totals for Belgian Congo — ! 1 "si 17 1; 45 1 50 7 999 1181 36491 10509 2528 2363 789 16189 ! 2 2; 4873 7483 2121 56362 58781 219 Totals for Philippine j ! ! 00 (21) 1974 50636 ------Islands ______j 313 179 2 103 3 211 190 1 112 21 845 $111300; $69673 $11813 $41082j$233868 ! 469424 14001 $223291 $163629 220 Totals for Non-Christian 3652 (2198) 154042 $365041 $299475 30 65 36730 Lands, 1940 ______j 1038 397 18 102 536 74 8086 4369 54 2042 180 15349 3298 121371 $114778 $64075 $6552 $413811$226786 37014 421633 16170 $154776 3600 (1717) 153402 $345401 $278285 31 211133 164498 141876 68860 6632j 46772, 264140 221 820 137: 162 12900! 3273 123367 32 30870 303936 14515 782971 6814 55620; 285501 Do. for 1939 ...... -__ I "268 18 523 08, 7763 4466 51 2362 3839 (1636) 156072 558168 288008 10860 211801 167872 144770 222: Do. for 1938 ______! 1542 609 17 133 460 71 7088 4207 38 1872 156 13264! 3525 126073 573535 315223 33 29429 309594 69468! 6469! 53115; 274806 224 4185 (1906) 160953 287303 10182 185695 147513 142754 223 Do. for 1937 ______1531 503 17 1071 427, 74 7157 4105 58 2605 180 13639 3826 130142 554503 319643 84 25908 71909 7628! 44846 244401 225 4326 (2361) 162538 341044 11101 176206 124304 125505 224 Do. for 1936 ______1481 502 17 109 385 75 7126 3675 66 2852 186 14202, 3951 131514 4341 (1612) 172648 547011. 30771C 81 24727 225 Do. for 1935 ______982 301 22 9l! 378i 76! 6565 3259 80 3366 206 14899 3924! 141534 i 112 AMERICAN BAPTIST FOREIGN MISSION SOCIETY

Statistics for Europe*

The Society co-operates with the work of Baptists in the fol­ lowing countries:

Countries Churches Members Belgium ...... 4 158 Czechoslovakia ...... 29 3,156 Denmark ...... 34 6,427 Estonia ...... 51 7,508 France ...... 21 965 Latvia ...... 108 11,931 Lithuania ...... 11 547 Norway ...... 54 7,217 Poland ...... 87 7,015

* B.W .A.— 1941. BY-LAWS As Adopted at Annual Meeting, 1910, and Subsequently Amended AMERICAN BAPTIST FOREIGN MISSION SOCIETY

P r e a m b l e This corporation, organized and existing under the laws of the states of Pennsyl­ vania, Massachusetts, and New York, for the purpose of diffusing the knowledge of the religion of Jesus Christ by means of missions throughout the world, has, pursuant to the power bestowed on it by the several states of Pennsylvania, Massachusetts and New York, adopted the following by-laws:

ARTICLE I M e m b e r s h i p S e c t i o n 1. The membership of the Society shall be composed as follows: (a) Of all persons who are now life members or honorary life members. (b) Of annual members appointed by Baptist churches. Any church may appoint one delegate, and one additional delegate for every 100 members, but no church shall be entitled to appoint more than ten delegates. (c) Of all missionaries of the Society during their terms of service. (d) Of all accredited delegates to each annual meeting of the Northern Baptist Con­ vention. (e) Of the officers of the Society and the members of its Board of Managers. S ec. 2. No member shall be entitled to more than one vote.

ARTICLE II O f f i c e r s S e c t i o n 1. The officers of the Society shall be a President, a First Vice-president, a Second Vice-president, a Treasurer, a Recording Secretary, and one or more admin­ istrative Secretaries. The President, the Vice-presidents, the Recording Secretary and the Treasurer shall be elected by ballot at each annual meeting. The adminis­ trative Secretary or Secretaries shall be elected by the Board of Managers. S ec. 2. The President shall preside at all meetings of the Society; in the case of his absence or inability to serve, his duties shall be performed by the Vice-president in attendance who is first in numerical order. Sec. 3. The Treasurer, the Secretaries and such officers as the Board of Managers may appoint, shall be subject to the directions of the Board, and shall discharge such duties as may be defined by its regulations and rules of order. Sec. 4. The Treasurer shall give such security for the faithful performance of his duties as the Board of Managers may direct. S ec. 5. Each officer elected at the annual meeting shall serve from the close of the annual meeting at which he is elected, to the close of the next annual meeting, and until his successor is elected. ARTICLE III Boaru of M anagers S e c t i o n 1. The Board of Managers shall consist of the President of the Society and twenty-seven persons elected by ballot at an annual meeting. At the meeting at which these by-laws shall be adopted, one-third of the managers shall be elected for 113 114 AMERICAN BAPTIST FOREIGN MISSION SOCIETY

one year, one-third for two years, and one-third for three years, to the end that thereafter, as nearly as practicable, one-third of the whole number of managers shall be elected at each subsequent annual meeting to fill the vacancies caused by the expiration of terms of office. As many more shall be elected also, as shall be necessary to fill any vacancies in unexpired terms. Sxc. 2. No person shall be elected to serve in this capacity after having so served for nine consecutive years until one year after the expiration of such service. This provision shall not apply in the case of members serving on the investment committee of the Board. At least one of each newly elected class shall be a person not pre­ viously a member of the Board. Sxc. 3. The Board of Managers shall meet at the principal office of the Society to organize as soon as practicable after the annual meeting. Sxc. 4. The Board of Managers shall have the management of the affairs of the Society; shall have the power to elect its own Chairman and Recording Secretary and to appoint or elect one or more administrative Secretaries of the Society and such additional officers and agents, and such committees as to it may seem proper, and to define the powers and duties of each; to appoint its own meetings; to adopt such regulations and rules as to it may seem proper, including those for the control and disposition of the real and personal property of the Society, the sale, leasing or mortgaging thereof, provided they are not inconsistent with its Act of Incorporation or its by-laws; to fill all vacancies in the Board of Managers and in any office of the Society until the next meeting of the Society; to establish such agencies and to appoint and remove such agents and missionaries as to it may seem proper by a three-fifths vote of all members present and voting at the meeting when said vote is taken; it being understood, however, that in case of missionaries of the Society, an absolute majority of the Board shall be necessary for suspension and a two- thirds majority of the whole Board for dismissal; to fix the compensation of officers, agents and missionaries; to direct and instruct them concerning their respective duties; to make all appropriations of money; and at the annual meeting of the Society, and at the first session of each annual meeting of the Northern Baptist Convention, to present a printed or written full and detailed report of the proceedings of the Society and of. its work during the year. Sxc. 5. The Board of Managers shall appoint annually one of its members, whose term does not expire with the current year, to act as an additional member of the Committee on Nominations, without the right to vote.

ARTICLE IV

E ligibility to Appointm ent All officers, all members of the Board of Managers and all missionaries must be members of Baptist churches.

ARTICLE V A nnual a n d Othxk Meetings The Society shall meet annually on the third Wednesday in May, unless for some special reason another time shall be fixed by the Board of Managers in conference with the Executive Committee of the Northern Baptist Convention and with repre­ sentatives of its other co-operating organizations. The meeting shall be held where the annua] meeting of the Northern Baptist Convention shall be held. Special meet­ ings may be held at any time and place upon the call of the Board of Managers.

ARTICLE VI

Rxlations w ith N orthern Baptist Convention

S e c t i o n 1. With a view to unification in general denominational matters, the Northern Baptist Convention at each election may present nominations for officers and for the Board of Managers. ALONG KINGDOM HIGHWAYS 115

Sxc. 2. The persons elected each year as the Committee on Nominations of the Northern Baptist Convention, shall be for that year the Committee of this Society on Nominations for its officers and members of Its Board of Managers to be then elected. Sxc. 3. The Annual Report of this Society, as soon as it shall be prepared, shall be forwarded to the officer or committee of the Northern Baptist Convention authorized to receive it. ARTICLE VII B allots and Votes by States S e c t i o n 1. On all ballots for officers and for members of t h e Board of Managers there shall be reserved a space after the name of the nominee for each office, and after the names of the nominees for t h e Board of Managers, in which spaces may be inserted the name or names of any other person or persons to be voted for, as the case may be. Sxc. 2. (a) When any motion is pending before the Society, its consideration may be temporarily suspended by a motion that a vote on the subject shall be taken by the delegations from the States, and such a motion shall be deemed carried when supported by one-fifth of the delegates voting; and upon the report of the result by States, a motion to concur shall be in order; and in case it shall be decided in the affirmative, the matter shall be deemed settled, but if the Society votes not to concur, the matter shall be dismissed from further consideration at that meeting of the Society. (b) On a vote by States, each State shall be entitled to as many votes as it has State Conventions and an additional vote for every ten thousand members of Baptist churches within each State Convention in affiliation with the Northern Baptist Convention. If in any State there be no State Convention in affiliation with the Northern Baptist Convention, but there be in such twenty-five Baptist churches which contribute money for said Society, said State shall be entitled to one vote and an additional vote for every ten thousand members of such contributing churches. (c) The vote of each delegation from a State shall be determined by the majority of its delegates voting. (d) A motion to vote by States shall be in order at any time while a motion is pending, shall not be debatable, and shall not close debate on the original motion. (e) The statement of the number of votes to which each State shall be entitled, prepared by the Statistical Secretary of the Convention and approved by the Executive Committee thereof, shall be authoritative for this Society.

ARTICLE VIII

A m e n d m e n t s These by-laws may be amended by a two-thirds vote of the members present and voting at any annual meeting of the Society, provided written notice of the proposed amendment shall have been given at the preceding annual meeting of the Society, or such amendment shall be recommended by the Board of Managers.

R e s o l u t io n G o v e r n in g P r o c e d u r e i n a V o t e b y S t a t e s Resolved, Whenever a vote by States is ordered, as provided in the by-laws, either of two undebatable motions shall be in order: (1) That the debate now close, that the Society recess for fifteen minutes to allow the delegates from the territory of each State Convention to meet in their designated places on the floor of the Society to take the vote, and that at the close of the recess the vote be reported to the Secretary, recorded, and announced, or (2) That the vote by States be reported, recorded, and announced at a certain hour at some future session of the Society, that the delegates from the territory of each State Convention meet at the close of this session of the Society, in their designated 116 AMERICAN BAPTIST FOREIGN MISSION SOCIETY places on the floor, and either then and there take their votes, or provide (or further discussion within the delegations at their convenience at some other time and place, before the hour of reporting the vote as above provided. In case the second of these motions should prevail, debate on the main question may continue at the pleasure of the Society, but a motion to close the debate shall be in order at any time. When the vote by States has been reported, recorded, and announced, the motion to concur, provided for in the by-laws, shall follow immediately without the intervention of any other business and without discussion. ALONG KINGDOM HIGHWAYS 117

MINUTES OF THE ONE-HUNDRED-TWENTY- SEVENTH ANNUAL MEETING

W ichita, Kansas, May 24, 1941 The American Baptist Foreign Mission Society, in pursuance to a call issued by the Recording Secretary and published in the denominational press, convened in Wichita, Kansas, May 24, 1941, for its one-hundred-twenty-seventh annual meeting, the session being held as heretofore in connection with the meetings of the Northern Baptist Convention. The meeting was called to order by the First Vice-President, Rev. F. L. Gilson, of Nebraska, at 9.45 a. m. On motion of the Secretary, it was Voted: That the minutes of the one-hundred-twenty-sixth annual meet­ ing of the Society held May 25, 1940, in Atlantic City, N ew Jersey, as printed on pages 159-160 in the Annual Report of the Society for 1940, be approved. The Secretary called attention to the fact that the Annual Re­ port of the Society had been presented by A. L. Miller, of Massa­ chusetts, Chairman of the Board of Managers, and, on motion of Rev. V. L. Shontz, of Illinois, had been received. The following report of the Committee on Nominations was presented by the presiding officer:

O f f ic e r s President, Rev. G. A. Hagstrom, St. Paul, Minn. First Vice-President, C. W. Crofoot, Niagara Falls, N. Y. Second Vice-President, Mrs. E. R. McCarthy, St. Louis, Mo. Recording Secretary, D. M. Albaugh, New York, N. Y. Treasurer, Forrest Smith, New York, N. Y.

Board of Managers Term expiring 1943 H. S. Butterweck, New York, N. Y.

Term expiring 1944 Pres. E. J. Anderson, Redlands, Mrs. W. R. Pankey, St. Louis, Mo. Calif. Mrs. E. B. Pease, Glasgow, Mont. O. G. Judd, New York, N. Y. Rev. E. Y. Pierce, Minneapolis, Prof. K. S. Latourette, New Haven, Minn. Conn. Rev. V. L. Shontz, Springfield, 111. Rev. E. A. Love, Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Dean Peter Stianson, Chicago, 111. 118 AMERICAN BAPTIST FOREIGN MISSION SOCIETY

The ballots were distributed. On motion of Rev. J. W. Brougher, of California, it was

V oted: That the report of the Committee on Nominations be received and that the Recording Secretary be authorized to cast the ballot on behalf of the Society.

The Recording Secretary cast the ballot. On report of the Recording Secretary that he had cast the ballot, the presiding officer declared the persons nominated by the Convention Committee on Nominations, which was also the Nominating Committee of the Society, duly elected to their re­ spective positions as officers of the Society and members of the Board of Managers. The Society adjourned at 10.00 a. m. R a n d o l p h L. H o w a r d , Acting Recording Secretary.

The program of the Northern Baptist Convention which con­ vened in Wichita, Kansas, May 20-25, 1941, included sessions in which foreign mission work and problems were presented. For the purpose of recording all activities of the Society the proceed­ ings in which the work of the Society had a distinctive part are herein incorporated. The first session of the “Town Meeting” was held Tuesday afternoon, May 20, with Dr. Bernard C. Clausen, of Pittsburgh, Pa., former member of the Board of Managers, in charge. The topic for the day was “Are Foreign Missions on the Way Out?” Two members of the Board delivered addresses: Dr. J. W. Brad­ bury on “If So, Why So?” and Dr. A. C. Thomas on “Is the Open Door Still Open?” The addresses were followed by an hour of audience participation. Preceding the presentation of the Woman’s Society Seventieth Anniversary Pageant, “A Constant Pageant of Triumph in Christ,” on Wednesday evening, May 21, Dr. Richard S. Buker addressed the Convention on “Our Heritage Below the Burma Road.” During the Thursday forenoon session Dr. A. L. Miller, Chair­ man of the Board of Managers, reviewed the annual report of the Society, calling particular attention to the present depleted foreign missionary staff. ALONG KINGDOM HIGHWAYS 119

At 8.00 o’clock on Friday and Saturday mornings, May 23-24, Foreign Secretary R. L. Howard led the mission study class using the books, “A Christian Imperative,” by Roswell P. Barnes, and “The Seed and the Soil,” by Richard Terrill Baker. A joint commission service for newly appointed missionaries was conducted by the home and foreign mission societies on Friday evening, May 23. Home Secretary J. R. Wilson stated that Mrs. W. Maurice Blanchard had been appointed and had sailed to Burma with her husband prior to the Northern Baptist Convention. He introduced Mr. Robert Gustave Johnson, stating that he and his fiancée, Miss Elizabeth Luella Kortum, had been appointed and were expecting to go to Burma in the near future. Dr. Wilson next presented Mr. Roland Gordon Metzger and his fiancée, Miss Lillian Anna Marie Smith, who will go to Belgian Congo to take up the work laid down by his parents, Rev. and Mrs. P. C. Metzger, at the time of their retirement. Dr. Wilson announced that Dr. and Mrs. Raymond M. Stover had been ap­ pointed and designated to South India but that they could not attend the Convention. Roland Metzger addressed the Conven­ tion on behalf of the newly appointed missionaries. Rev. G. M. Derbyshire, of Oakland, Calif, delivered the charge to the new missionaries and offered the dedicatory prayer. On Saturday evening, May 25, Mrs. B. W. Armstrong ad­ dressed the Convention on “The Gospel in the Congo.” At the Sunday morning Bible Hour for Men, Rev. W. J. Longley, of South India, was the speaker. The latter half of the Sunday afternoon program was given over to fellowship with Japanese Christians. Dr. William Axling, of Japan, after a brief address, introduced Mr. Soichi Saito and Toyohiko Kagawa. 120 AMERICAN BAPTIST FOREIGN MISSION SOCIETY

STATEMENT CONCERNING CO-OPERATION At the Northern Baptist Convention in 1940, the Budget Com­ mittee of the Convention suggested that the two foreign mission societies consider again the question of closer co-operation look­ ing toward the possibility of merger. A small joint committee was accordingly appointed and immediately faced the fact that other committees had been working on this same question con­ tinuously since 1934. A final report was made to the Boards of the two societies in joint session in April, 1941, at which time the following statement and vote were recorded in the minutes of both societies: The joint committee of the two Boards studying merger, which had been instructed to bring a report of what has already been accomplished in the closer working relationship between the Boards and societies since merger was considered in 1934, and to bring in recommendations for such affiliation, reported fully on conferences and meetings held since the February 3 meeting and presented to the Boards the plan of a united board of thirty- nine members which the committee of the four national societies joined in presenting to representatives of the Finance and Budget committees of the Northern Baptist Convention on March 28. The Boards carefully considered this report, and after discus­ sion in which many members of both Boards participated, it was

Voted: That the Boards wish to record recognition of the great and most satisfactory progress which has been made in co-operation, co­ ordination, and simplification in closer relationships between the boards of the American Baptist Foreign Mission Society and the Woman’s American Baptist Foreign Mission Society since 1934 and their intention to continue the studies leading to further co-ordination of the activities of both boards; That as the problems of world need unquestionably require our un­ divided concentration and united support for the duration of the critical experiences through our foreign fields, we consider possible changes of organization entirely secondary at this time; That we respectively dedicate ourselves to harmony of effort and economy of operation during this period of emergency; That in view of the world situation we decline for the present to recommend the united board suggested by the committee believing that the interests of the foreign fields can be best preserved by the present plan of organization. ALONG KINGDOM HIGHWAYS 121

In reporting this action to the Northern Baptist Convention, in May 1941, Dr. Alton Miller, Chairman of the Board of Man­ agers of the American Baptist Foreign Mission Society, called attention to the following facts:

For several years the meetings of the two Boards have been held simultaneously. At each of these meetings there have been one or more joint sessions at which time matters of major policies have been discussed. The officers of the two Boards meet in joint officers’ council to clear matters of major policy as well as details of common interest affecting the work of both societies. The Foreign Departments work in closest co-operation. Policies are adopted and field programs outlined after an exchange of information. Administration on the field is in the hands of the Reference Committee which is made up of one-third from the Woman’s Society missionaries and two-thirds from the General Society. This committee allocates all missionaries: medical, educational, and evangelistic. This means that there is a free exchange of staff between the two societies. Furthermore, there is a complete flexibility in the use of property on the field. At home in a period of crisis or emergency, all correspondence related to the crisis is placed in the hands of one of the Foreign Secretaries. A further step in co-operation in Medical Staff is anticipated during this coming year when it is hoped that the two societies will support a single medical family. The work of the two Treasury Departments also, is closely integrated. On each field there is one Mission Treasurer for the two societies. All foreign field accounting is cared for through the Treasurer of the General Society. The two societies use the same form for their financial report. During this last year the Woman’s Society appointed the Invest­ ment Committee of the General Society as its Investment Committee. While much can still be done in co-ordinating the efforts of the Home Departments, progress has already been made in that direction. There is a joint publicity committee. All matters concerning denominational pro­ gram and policy are discussed. Last year the two societies published All Kindreds and Tongues, a handbook of missionary information, also several leaflets and folders. ,T „ —New York, N. Y.

ALONG KINGDOM HIGHWAYS 123

OFFICERS 1941-1942

PRESIDENT SECOND VICE-PRESIDENT G. A. HAGSTROM, D.D. m r s . e . r . McCa r t h y Minnesota Missouri

FIRST VICE-PRESIDENT RECORDING SECRETARY C. W . CROFOOT DAN A M. ALBAUGH New York New York TREASURER FORREST SMITH New York

HOME SECRETARY FOREIGN SECRETARY JESSE R. WILSON, D.D. J . W. DECKER, D.D.

ASSOCIATE SECRETARY FOREIGN SECRETARY WALFRED DANIELSON RANDOLPH L. HOWARD, D.D.

ASSOCIATE SECRETARY BUDGET SECRETARY LOUIS P. JENSEN DANA M. ALBAUGH

BOARD OF MANAGERS

Chairman, A. L. M i l l e r , Ph.D. Recording Secretary, Dana M. Albaugh

G. A. HAGSTROM, D.D., St. Paul, Minn., President of the Society

CLASS I. TERM EXIRES 1942 Charles Durden, D.D., Pasadena, Calif. A. L. Miller, Ph.D., Boston, Mass. W. G Everson, D.D. McMinnville, Ore. Rev. L G. Roddy, Boise, Idaho Rev. A. H. Haslam, Toledo, Ohio . „ ,, S. D. Huff, D.D., Sioux City, Iowa A- C- Thomas, D.D., Fall River, Mass. D. B. MacQueen, D.D., Rochester, N. Y. Rev. T. T. Wylie, D.D., Kalamazoo, Mich.

CLASS II. TERM E X PIRES 1943 C. S. Aldrich, Troy, N. Y. Gordon Poteat, D.D., Chester, Pa. J. W. Bradbury, D.D., New York, N. Y. E. H. Pruden, Ph.D., D.D., Washington, H. S. Butterweck, New York, N. Y. D. C. H. W. Cole, Beverly, Mass. T. R. St John, New York, N. Y. P. B. Griffith, Grand Forks, N. Dak. Sydney Wilmot, New York, N. Y.

CLASS III. TERM EXPIRES 1944 E. J. Anderson, Ph.D., Redlands, Calif. Mrs. W. R. Pankey, St. Louis, Mo. O. G. Judd, Brooklyn, N. Y. Mrs. E. B. Pease, Glasgow, Mont. K. S. Latourette, Ph.D., D.D., New E. V. Pierce, D.D., Minneapolis, Minn. Haven, Conn. V. L. Shontz, D.D., Springfield,' 111. Rev. E. A. Love, Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Dean Peter Stianson, Chicago, 111. 124 AMERICAN BAPTIST FOREIGN MISSION SOCIETY

GENERAL AGENT Council on Finance and Promotion of the Northern Baptist Convention 152 Madison Ave., New York, N. Y. Rev. E. F. Adams, D.D., General Director of Promotion

REGIONAL REPRESENTATIVES

Eastern States— Rev. Paul H. Conrad, 152 Madison Ave., New York, N. Y. Central States—Rev. Edwin A. Bell, 203 N. Wabash Ave., Chicago, Illinois Western States—Rev. J. A. Cooper, D.D., 624 McCornick Bldg., Salt Lake City, Utah

STATE PROMOTION DIRECTORS Arizona—Rev. J. M. Newsom, 407 First National Bank Building, Phoenix California, N.—Rev. C. W. Gawthrop, 83 McAllister St., Room 201, San Francisco California, S.—Rev. R. A. Jensen, D.D., 354 S. Spring St., Los Angeles Colorado—Rev. William A. Phillips, 611 Colorado Building, Denver Connecticut—Rev. W. S. Terrell, 455 Main St., Hartford Delaware—Mrs. Albert Edge, 1900 N. Monroe St., Wilmington District of Columbia—Dr. Rufus W. Weaver, 715 Eighth St., N. W., Washington Idaho— (See Utah) Illinois—Rev. R. G. Schell, 424-426 Reisch Building, Springfield Indiana—Rev. T. J. Parsons, 1729 N. Illinois St., Indianapolis Iowa—Rev. B. H. Ward, 902 Valley Bank Building, Des Moines Kansas—Rev. G. W. Wise, 310 Crawford Building, Topeka Maine—Rev. J. S. Pendleton, 311-313 Savings Bank Building, Waterville Massachusetts—Rev. Isaac Higginbotham, 508 Ford Building, Boston Michigan—Rev. R. T. Andem, 472 Hollister Building, Lansing Minnesota—Rev. R. E. Nelson, 529 Second Ave., S. Minneapolis Missouri— 1107 McGee St., Kansas City Montana— (See Utah) Nebraska— (See Iowa) Nevada— (See California, N.) New Hampshire—Rev. C. Raymond Chappell, 22 Amherst St., Room 304, Manchester New Jersey—C. E. Goodall, D.D., 158 Washington St., Newark New York—Rev. H. B. Lundgren, 433 S. Salina St., Syracuse New York Metropolitan Baptist Board of Promotion—C. H. Sears, D.D., Rev. R. D. Williamson, 152 Madison Ave., New York North Dakota—Rev. R. W. Hodges, 62y2 Broadway, Fargo Ohio—Rev. Paul Judson Morris, Granville Oregon—Rev. F. W. Starring, 925 Terminal Sales Building, Portland Pennsylvania—Rev. G. R. Merriam, 1703 Chestnut St., Philadelphia Rhode Island—Rev. William Reid, 404 Lauderdale Building, Providence South Dakota—Rev. John L. Barton, D.D., 250 Boyce Greely Building, Sioux Falls Utah—Rev. R. P. Douglass, 624 McCornick Building, Salt Lake City Vermont—Rev. Homer C. Bryant, 215 Shelburne Rd., Burlington Washington—W. A. Shanks, D. D., 509 Ranke Building, Seattle West Virginia—Rev. Hugh D. Pickett, 903 Market St., Parkersburg Wisconsin—Rev. E. G. Roth, 1717 W. Wells St., Milwaukee ^Yygming— Rev. H. A. Bolle, 2519 House St,, Cheyenrje