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The ESS

AUGUST 5, 1954 10¢ publication. and reuse for required Permission

BISHOP HUNTER BISHOP REEVES DFMS. / of England of South Africa Church Episcopal the of Archives 2020.

DEAN D. C. DUNLOP BISHOP MOYES

Copyright of England of Australia

ANGLICAN CONGRESS LEADERS

HEY are among the dozen or more speakers who will T present various phases of the general theme, The Call of God and the Mission of the Anglican Communion. The Congress opened in Minneapolis August 4th and will be fully reported in our next number

ENTWHISTLES PLAN FOR CONVENTION SERVICES The WITNESS SERVICES In Leading Churches In Leading Churches For Christ and His Church CHURCH CATHEDRAL NEW CATHEDRAL CHRIST Church Sts., Hartford, Coon. (St. John the Divine) EDITORIAL BOARD Main & 112th St. & Amsterdam Sunday. 8 and 10:10 a.ni., Holy Com- WIrrhle B. SPOV'FOaD, Managing Editor; munion; 9:30, Church School; 11 a.m. Sun. HC 7, 8, 9, 10, 11; Cho. Mat. JOHN P. BRowNe, KENNETH R. FOsRaS, Morning Prayer; 8 p.m., Evening Prayer. 10:30; Ev 4; Ser 11, 4. Wkdys HC 7:30 Mon. 12 GOnnON C. Ga.&Anas, RenewsT Hiaxp- Weekdays: Holy Communion, (also 10 Wed., and Cho HO 8:45 Tues., Fri. and Sat., 8; Wed., 11; auRal, Gsimom H. MAcMuasyA, PAUL noon; HD); Mat 8:30; Ev 5. The daily Thurs., 9; Wed. Noonday Service, 12:15. Josaxaw H. Trrus, Columnnists; offices are choral exc. Mon. Moors JR., CrarnToa J. Kaw, Religion and the Mind; CHRIST CHURCH , Mass. REST, NEW YORK M~AssET H. "Sammian Ja., Living Liturgy. THE HEAVENLY Rev. Gardiner M. Day, Rector 5th Avenue at 90th Street Rev. Frederic B. Kellogg, Chaplain Rev. John Ellis Large, D.D. CoNrsarno Ens-roas: Frederick C. Grant, Sunday Services: 8, 9, 10 and 11 a.m. F. 0. Ayres Jr., L. W. Barton, D. H. Weekdays: Wednesday, 8 and 11 a.ms. publication. Sundays: Holy Conmnunion, 7:30 end 9 a. in.; Morning Service and Sermon, 11. Brown Jr., R. S. M. Ems-ich, T. P. Ferris, Thursdays, 7:30 am. Thursdays and Holy Days: Holy Comn. J. F. Fletcher, C. K. Gilbert, C. L. Glenn, and JOHN'S CATHEDRAL munson, 12. Wednesdays: Healing Serv- G. I. Hiller, A. C. Lichtenberger, C. S. ST. Denver, Colorado ice, 12. Daily: Morning Prayer, 9; Martin, R. C. Miller. E. L. Parsons, J. A. 5:30. Paul! Robes, Dean, Evening Prayer, Paul, Paul Roberta, V. D. Scudder, W. M. Very Rev. reuse Rev. Harry Watts, Canons CHURCH Sharp, W. B. Sperry, W. B. Spofford Jr., ST. BARTHOLOMEW'S Sundays: 7:30, 8:30, 9:30 and 11. for J. W. Suter, S. E. Sweet, S. A. Temple, Park Avenue and 51st Street p.m. recitals. W. N. Welsh. 4:30 Rev. Ansons Phelps Stokes, Jr., Rector Weekdays: Holy Communion, Wednes- 8 and 9:30 a.m. Holy Communion. day. 7:15; Thursday, 10:30. 10:30. 9:30 and 11a.m. Church School. Tees WrTrSess is published weekly from Holy Days: Holy Communion, required 11 a.m. Morning Service and .Sennon. September 15th to June 15th inclusive, CHRIST CHURCH 4 p.m. Evensong. Special Music. with the exception of the first week in Indianapolis, lId. Weekday: Holy Communion Tuesday at January end semi-monthly from June 15th Monument Circle, Downtown 10:30 a.m.; Wednesdays end Saints to September 15th by the Episcopal Church Rev. John P. Craine, D.D., Rector Days at 8 a.m.; Thursdays at 12:10 Publishing Co. on behalf of the Witness Rev. Messrs. F. P. Williams,

Permission p.m. Organ Recitals, Fridays, 1210. Advisory Board. E. L. Conner T'he Church is open daily for prayer. Sun.: H. C. 8, 12:15; 11, 1st S. Family 9:30; M. P. and Ser., 11. The subscription price is S4.00 a year; in Weekdays: H. C. daily 8 ex Wed. and CHURCH OF THE HOLY TRINITY DFMS. bundles for sale in parishes the magazine F. 7; H. D. 12:05. Noonday / 316 East 88th Street Prayers 12:05. New York City sells for 10c a copy, we will bill quarterly at 7c a copy. Entered as Second Class Office hours daily by appointment. The Rev. James A. Paul, Rector Matter, August 5, 1948, at the Post office Sundays: Holy Communion, 8; Church TEiNflY CHURCH Church at Tunkhannock, Pa., under the act of Miami, Fla. School, 9:30; Morning Service, 11; Eve- March 3, 1879. ning Prayer, 5. Rev. G. Irvinse Hiller, S.T.D., Rector Sunday Services: 8, 9:30 end 11 a.m. WVASI IINGTON' CATHEDRAL S ER VI CE S TRINITY CHURCH

Episcopal MOUNTr SAINT' ALBAN The Rit. Rev. Angus Dun, Bishop Broad and Third Streets In Leading Churches Columbus, Ohio the The Very Rev. Francis B. Sayre, Jr., Dean Rev. Robert W. Fa-y, D.D. of Sunday 8, 9:30, Holy Communion; 11, ST. STEPHEN'S CHURCH Rev. A. Freenman Traverse, Asst ser. (generally wyith MP, Lit or proces- sion) (1, S. HC); 4, Ev. Weekdays: Tenth Street, above Chestnut Sun. 8 HC; 11 MP; 1st Sun. HC; Fri. HIC, 7:30; Lot., 12; Ev., 4. Open daily, Philadelphia, Penna. 12 N HC; Evening. Weekday, Lenten 7 to 6. The Rev. Alfred W. Price, D.D., Rector Noon-Day, Special services announced.

Archives Rev. A. Atrenborough, B.D., Asst. Rector The Rev. Gustav C. Meckling, B.D., CHRIST CHURCH ST. PAUL'S 13 Vict Park B Minister to the Hard of Hearing Nashville, Tennessee

2020. ROCHESTR, N. Y. H1. Alexander Matthews, Mus.D., The Rev. Raymond Tuttle Ferris The evs. George L. Cadigau, Rector Organist 7:30 a.m., Holy Communion; 10 am., Sunday: 8, 9:30 and 11. Sunday: 9 end 11 am., 7:30 p.m. Family Service end Church School; 11 Holy Days: 11 Fri. 7. Weekdays: Tues., Wed., Thurs., Fri., a., Morning Prayer and Seron; 12:30-12:55 p.m. 5:30 p.m., Young People's Meeting.

Copyright ST. JAM ES' Services of Spiritual Healing, Thus., Thursdays and Saints' Days: HC 10oam. 1 17 N. Lafette 12:30 and 5:30 p.m. SouTir BEND, IND. OF ST. MICHAEL AND The Rev. William Paul Barnds, D. D., ,CHURCH CHRIST CHURCH IN ST. GEORGE Rector PHIL.ADELPHIA The Rev. Glen E. McCutcheon, Asst Saint Louis, Missouri Sunday: 8, 9:15, 11. Tues.: Holy Com- 2nd Street above Market The Rev. J. Francis Sant, Rector munion, 8:15. Thursday, Holy Coin Where the Protestant Episcopal Church was Founded The Rev. William Baxter munson 9:30. Friday, Holy Commun- Minister of Education ion, 7. Re". E. A. do Bord~enase, Rector Rev. Erik H. Allen, Assistant Sunday: 8, 9:25, I11a.m. High School, Sunday Services 9 and 11. 5:45 n.m.: Canttxbury Club, 6:30 p m. PRO-CATHEDRAL OF THE HOLY Noonday Prayers Weekdays. TRINITY ST. PAUL'S CATHEDRAL Church Open Daily 9 to 5. Shelton Square Paris, France 23, Avenue George V ST. PAUL'S CATHEDRAL Buffalo, New York Very Rev. Phitip F. McN airy, D.D., Dee. Services: 8:30, 10:30 (S.S.), 10:45 Oklahoma, City, Okla. Boulevard Rasnail Very Rev. Johsn S. Willey, Dean Canon Leslie D. Hallett Student and Artists Center Sunday: H. C. 8, 11 first S.; Church Canon Mitchell Heddad The Rt. Rev. J. 1. Blair Larned, Bishop School, 10:50; M. P. 11. Sun., 8, 9:30, 11; Mon., Fri., Sat., Weekday: H.C. 12:05; Tues., Thurs., H.C. 8 am, The Veery.Iiev. Stusrgis Lee Riddle, Dee,, Thurs. 10. Other services as prayers, sermon 12:05; Wed., H.C. 11 "A Church for All Americans" announced. a.m., Healing Service 12:05. 5, 1954 VOL. 41, NO: 41 The WITNESS AUGUST FOR CHRIST AND HIS CHURCH

Editorial and Publication Office, Eaton Road, Tunkhannock, Pa.

STORY OF THE WEEK the Assembly were urged also Urges Joint by Bishop Berggrav. Bishop Berggrav The Lutheran churchman said it is "intolerable that we Communion at Evanston should stress our unity in and then go each our publication. Christ ALSO WANTS TO AMEND THE THEOLOGICAL BASIS own way when Christ invites and OF THE WORLD COUNCIL OF CHURCHES us to take part in his perfect fellowship." reuse basis, such as approval of the Ile said the Churches have for * Bishop Eivind Berggrav, Apostles' or Nicene creed. what retired primate of the Church now "talked so long about If the World Council were a divides us, of Norway (Lutheran), expects unites us and what Church, it would need a creed, to get any fur- required that the Evanston Assembly that if we are since it is a council of will strongly support the pro- but ther, we must take a step." it needs only a com- "must posal by the Norwegian Church Churches That step, he stresed, mon basis, he said. to amend the World Council's be to the same Communion Permission theological basis. Bishop Berggrav said he be- table." The Norwegian churchman, lieves it would be a mistake to Bishop Berggrav deplored the bar delegates from Iron Cur- fact that a joint Communion DFMS. one of the six World Council / presidents, said in an interview tain countries from the Evans- service will not be held at a that his Church's proposal ton assembly-as some Ameri- Evanston. He proposed such year's meeting Church would strengthen the interna- cans have proposed. service at last com- tional agency. "The main question is not of the WCC's executive mittee, but received little sup- If amended, .the common their political opinions, but if port. Episcopal basis would read: they are really dedicated to he declared. "If they The program of the Assem- the "The World Council of Chur- Christ," of Holy of five services ches is composed of Churches are, and I feel they are, they bly lists to be held accord- which, according to Holy Scrip- should be admitted." Communion, ing to the Methodist rite on tures, confess Jesus Christ as The bishop said he is "abso-

Archives August 22; Anglican, August God and Saviour." sure" that Prof. Josef lutely 23; Lutheran, August 24; Or- At present, the Scriptures Hromadka, C z e c h theologian 2020. thodox, August 25; and Church the basis. who has been a leading church are not mentioned in of South India, August 29. the new order in The bishop estimated that apologist for In New York, a World Coun- Europe and Bishop 90 per cent of the Evanston Eastern cil official said that only the Copyright Berggrav's antagonist in sev- delegates might favor the Nor- Orthodox service will be com- Council debates, is wegian proposal, but he ex- eral World pletely closed. The Methodist man." plained that the change could "a Christian and Church of South India serv- not be finally enacted at Evans- Although the Eastern Euro- ices will be open to all dele- ton since it must be approved pean churchmen may make gates who" wish to participate, first by all the member Chur- some declarations in certain of the Anglican service to "bap- ches. However, the assembly the Evanston sectional meet- tized, communicant members" could recommend it for ap- ings, such as the one devoted of the WCC's member bodies, proval. to the "responsible society," and the Lutheran service to His one fear in this connec- the Norwegian bishop doubts "all who believe in his actual tion, Bishop Berggrav said, is that they will "constitute any presence and that we receive that some Churches might at- trouble as a whole." his true body and blood in tempt to add even more to the Joint Communion services at this sacrament."

THE WITNESS - AUGUST 5, 1954 Three In effect, according to Coun- Communion table, not the dif- go on a pilgrimage to Fari- cil spokesman, this means that ferent Churches. According to bault, a notable and historic for the first time at the Luther, he observed, the per- center of the Episcopal Church, Assembly, services of Holy son officiating is of less im- where they will be entertained Communion will be open. portance, "it is the gift and by the bishops and cathedral Bishop Berggrav said that the Word itself which is deci- staff and by the heads of Shat- the strongest opponents of a sive and central." tuck and St. Mary's Hall. joint Communion service are Asserting that Lutheran op- Archdeacon Samuel Kau Yan the Orthodox Church members position to joint Communion is Lee of Hong Kong will be the of the World Council, and that "neither Lutheran nor Chris- preacher at Evensong next "we had better take the step tian," Bishop Berggrav added: Sunday at St. Mark's Cathedral without them." "We have one Bible, one bap- at 4 o'clock, and the service (Considerable opposition has tism, one Christ, one God and will be followed by suppers in also been expressed from time Father of all mankind, how the homes of church people in to time in Lutheran and Angli- can we then defend to exhibit St. Paul and White Bear Lake. can circles.) our division for the world and The Norwegian leader At eight o'clock the mass publication. for ourselves, when we refuse stressed that it is Christ him- to enter together into the holy meeting of missionary wit- and ness self who is "the host" at the place to which he invites us ?" will be held at the St. Paul Auditorium, with Bishop How- reuse ells of Lagos, Bishop de Mel for of Kurunagala and Bishop Gor- Angihcan Congress Delegates don of Alaska the speakers. Next Monday evening dele- required Gather in Minneapolis gates and their wives will at- tend a dinner at the Minikahda Club, with overseas delegates * The Archbishop of Canter- The group leaders are Permission Canon the guests of the diocese of bury and Presiding Bishop Wedel of Washington; Bishop Minnesota. Henry Knox Sherrill are the Louttit of Florida; Bishop Pea. Tuesday evening the bishops DFMS. speakers at the service which body / of Central New York; attending will be the guests at opens the Anglican Congress Bishop Dixon of Montreal ; a dinner at the Minneapolis in Minneapolis, August 4th. Canon Hartford of Ireland; Club given by Bishop Keeler Church The first session of the Con- Bishop Stear of Canada; Dean and Bishop Kellogg. This will gress will be held the follow- Booth of Australia; Bishop be preceded by a supper at ing day at the Hennepin Ave- Mortimer of England; Bishop the home of West at Episcopal nue Methodist Church, two Jones of North Wales; Bishop Lake Minnetonka which will be the blocks from St. Mark's Cathe- Evans of Canada; Bishop Hig- followed by a performance of of dral where Morning Prayer is gins of Rhode Island; Bishop Gilbert and Sullivan's "Yeoman said daily at 7:15 and Holy Lash of India; Bishop Nishi of of the Guard" given by the Communion celebrated daily at Japan; Canon Warren of Eng- Canterbury Players of the Uni- Archives 7:30. The speaker at the first land; Bishop Bardsley of Eng- versity of Minnesota. It is session is Bishop Wand of Lon- land; Bishop Knowles of the expected that 1,000 persons 2020. don on the position of the West Indies; Canon Herklots will witness the performance. Anglican of England; Bishop Craske of Communion in history The final general session of England; Bishop Lichtenberger and doctrine. the Congress will be held the

Copyright of Missouri; Clark Kuebler of Sessions are to be held daily afternoon of the 13th, for the Wisconsin. Chairman of the through August 13, with ad- presentation of reports for final group leaders is Bishop Bayne dresses by distinguished lead- action. ers of the Anglican Church. of Olympia. Group meetings are also to be A reception is being held at The closing service will be held that evening at the Cathe- held daily for discussion of the the Institute of Art the eve- with Archbishop Barton four topics being considered; ning of the 5th, and the fol- dral giving the address. Our Vocation; Our Worship; lowing evening a dinner is of Ireland Our Message; Our Work. Dele- being held for the people of The Archbishop of Canter- gates have been appointed to the diocese of Minnesota at bury will broadcast over a na- chair the twenty discussion which the Archbishop of Can- tionwide hookup on the 11th. groups and they will present terbury a n d the Presiding A luncheon will be given by the findings of the groups to Bishop will speak. Bishop Keeler to the members the entire Congress. On Saturday delegates will of the English Speaking Union.

THE WITNESS - AUGUST 5, 1954- The archbishop will be speak- man Catholics and Jews. The the official ing to a largely non-Anglican conference center of address will be on the air that the Episcopal audience since the membership Church, was evening, emanating from New somehow or other consists not only of Anglicans spied upon so York over the Columbia net- that a report of the meeting but also other Protestants, Ro- is work at 10:30. produced from the files of the Department of Justice at a pub- lic hearing several years later. Department of Justice Uses SOCIAL WORKERS Seabury House Report CONVENTION * Over 2,000 representatives * In November, 1951, a con- it, are striving toward certain from 41 nations attended the ference was held at Seabury reforms. I know where that conference of social work, June House, sponsored by the Church question comes 27 - July 2, in Toronto. publication. from. I am Congress and chaired by the astonished and outraged that Anglican delegates held a and rector of Trinity Church, Bos- there should be in your posses- corporate communion, w i t h ton, the Rev. Theodore Ferris. sion, matter from a closed reli- Lester B. Granger, director of reuse The subject was "Christianity gious meeting that was called the Urban League, the speaker for and Communism" and in order for a frank and thorough dis- at a breakfast that followed. that there might be full free- cussion of the problems pre- He told his fellow Churchmen dom of discussion on this se- sented by the relationship of that "Peace, and thank God for required rious subject, every one present Christianity to the philosophy it, will never be assured until was asked to agree to refrain of Communism. There was to the social order is accepted by from any public comment on be no press release; no pub- an overwhelming majority of the conference and to leave the Permission licity." the world's people as being publication of any findings in It developed later in the hear- worthy of perpetuation and de- the hands of the Church Con- ing that the meeting referred fense. This state has certainly DFMS. gress and its president, Dr. / to was the not been reached with respect Ferris. one held at Seabury House in which Mr. Melish had to two-thirds of the world's There is currently being held been invited to people. Their need is not con- Church participate. in New York a hearing under fined to material lacks, but also the McCarran Act to determine The line of questioning by includes thirst for self-realiza- whether the National Council the lawyer of the Department tion. There is a strong and

Episcopal for American Soviet Friend- of Justice indicated that some persistent coincidence of the

the ship should register as an agent person attending the confer- need of peoples with their of of a foreign government. Testi- ence at Seabury House, official coloration. fying for the Council was the conference center of the Epis- "The three principal centers Rev. William H. Melish, for.- copal Church, in violation of of racial developments in the Archives mer president of the organiza- mutual pledges, sent informa- world today are the United tion, who had to take the tion about what took place, States, South Africa and Asia. 2020. pounding of two lawyers of the either to the FBI or the De- We can exert little direct influ- Department of Justice who, in partment of Justice. Ho w ence on countries other than their cross-examination, 1 a i d much of the conference discus- our own, but we can exert a Copyright bare his whole life. sion was included in the report powerful influence in our own On July 15th one of the law- or how many participants were centers." yers asked Melish: "Did you mentioned by name, there was, Encouraging signs of prog- say in November, 1951, that of course, no way of telling. ress within the last twelve Communism a n d Christianity Nor is it known whether the years were noted by Granger both strive for the same re- informant was an FBI "plant" in the employment trend since forms ?" or a participant of the confer- 1940, the reforms in the armed "Each according to its own ence, clergyman or layman. forces, the increased protection lights and philosophy, yes," What is clear is that a re- in the ballot, the extension of Mr. Melish replied. "I think sponsible Church organization, equal public service, and the the Christian Church and the the Church Congress, holding a elimination of segregated edu- Communist movement, as I see serious private discussion in cation.

TH WITNESS - AUGUST 5. 1954 Five SPEAKERS BARRED powers," he said. "If Kenya, FROM U. S. in the person of a moderate like Murumbi, cannot expect a * The American Friends sympathetic h e a r i n g from Service Committee states that Americans, it may look else- two speakers from abroad where - perhaps to Soviet scheduled to participate in sum- Russia. mer Quaker institutes on inter- "If persons invited by an national relations were n o t organization with the expe- able to appear because of long rience and persistence of the delays in handling their visa American Friends Service Com- applications. mittee have trouble getting The two are Joseph Murumbi, visas, how much more difficult African leader who has been does the unsponsored individ- barred by the British from. his ual find it to get a hearing?" native Kenya, and Tom Wardle, English writer for a pacifist NATIONAL COUNCIL publication. weekly, who has done social PAYMENTS

and work in the Union of South Africa. * Slightly more than two reuse James , director of and a quarter million dollars for the Quaker institutes, criti- had been received by the Na- cized the "timidity" of U. S. tional Council for the first six officials. "We feel Americans months of 1954 . Total expec- required should have access to all points tations for the entire year are of view, and that they are com- $4,854,953. petent to weigh them and make up their own minds," he said. Permission Mr. Bristol said that both Murumbi and Wardle had ap- plied for visas early last win- STAINED GLASS DFMS. / ter. Their speaking engage- ments had been scheduled for

Church the first week in June. The Quaker official noted that this was not the first time such "diplomatic delays" had oc- Episcopal curred. However, he said, in the every case the governments of had finally testified to the bona fide nature of the Quaker guests by admitting them. Archives Last spring, Stuart Morris, a British peace worker invited 2020. to lecture by the Quakers, was granted a visa but refused ad- mission on arriving in New Copyright York, and detained at Ellis Island for 10 days. An appeals board and the Attorney Gen- eral ordered him admitted after WIllIAM MORRIS the incident attracted nation- wide attention. Great Peter Street Mr. Bristol stressed that speakers from free Asia have Westminster S.WJ been admitted without ques- , ENGLAND tion, but that speakers on American Representative Africa failed to win visas. Ossirt Church Furniture Co. "The United States seems JANESVILLE, WISCONSIN sensitive to pressure by colonial

TH WITNEss - AUGUST 5, 1954 EDITORIALS

pro-Communist, a statement by the State De- Uninvited Guests partment declared: "Freedom of religion has always been basic to our way of life. Clearly the spiritual THIS is a big month for the Churches. As this number reaches our readers there will foundation on which this nation rests is too be gathered in Minneapolis representatives of strong to be adversely affected by any pro- 325 dioceses of the Anglican Communion Communist activities in which this small group throughout the world. They gather to deepen of delegates from Communist-dominated areas publication. our essential unity by witnessing to our com- might attempt to engage." and faith and by conferring on matters of mon Whether freedom of religion is today suffi- reuse common interest-the directive given to the ciently basic to our American way of life to for Congress by the Lambeth Conference in 1948. enable us to treat these eleven Churchmen as Following immediately is the second Assem- honored guests remains to be seen. Elsewhere in this number is the story of a private con- required bly of the World Council of Churches which opens in Evanston August 15. Here Christians ference held at Seabury House under auspices from most of the nations gather to strengthen of the Church Congress, under the chairman- the Fellowship, in spite of the many influences ship of the Rev. Theodore P. Ferris, a report Permission that separate them-cultural, social, political, of which somehow or other found its way into economic and racial, as well as theological and the files of either the FBI or the Department

DFMS. of Justice. Thus our boasted freedom of

/ ecclesiastical. religion is today flouted to the point where a The central theme is "Christ the Hope of responsible Church organization, holding a pri-

Church attention on the the World," thus focussing vate discussion on a serious religious topic in greatest need of the world today. As the the official conference center of the Episcopal preliminary report on this main theme points Church, is spied upon and material now pro-

Episcopal out, all sorts of secular hopes are offered today; duced from the Department of Justice files and science, democratic the humanism, nationalism, used in a public hearing. An incredible episode, of communism. Above all these hopes, the report the witness wrote the Presiding Bishop, which sets the hope which has its ground in God and "smacks too much of police state tactics, pro- the assurance of his Kingdom. The Evanston cedures and atmosphere to be accepted without Archives Assembly will seek to reawaken that hope and blunt protest." point out what it means to this and coming

2020. That there will be informers, official or generations. otherwise, at the Evanston Assembly can be Among the hundreds of delegates will be taken for granted. That's where we are in the

Copyright eleven Churchmen from Czechoslovakia and U. S. with our freedom of religion. They will Hungary, probably the best known of whom is doubtless be in Minneapolis also to record and the Rev. Joseph Hromadka of the Czech file anything "out of line" uttered by the Arch- Brethren who made an outstanding contribu- bishops of Canterbury, York and Ireland and tion at the first Assembly held in Amsterdam our other distinguished guests from all parts in 1948. Their entry into the U. S. was ap- of the world. We only hope that awareness of proved on July 19 by Herbert Brownell Jr., their presence will not so hamstring frank attorney general, on recommendation of the discussion that the purposes for which these State Department only after a representative historic meetings are held are in any degree of the World Council appealed to President lost. Eisenhower and Secretary of State John Foster Full reports of Minneapolis and Evanston Dulles. will appear in our issue of August 19 and Declaring that these eleven men might be subsequent numbers.

THE WITNESS - AUGUST 5, 1954 Seven THE REV. SAMUEL ENTWHISTLE Planning for General Convention By Thomas V. Barrett

"Where ?" gulped Samuel Entwhistle. '"THERE must be some mistake," said the -- Rev. Samuel Entwhistle obscurely "In Bali," Isabel explained, "at the General through a mouthful of scrambled egg, as he Convention." fixed one eye on. the morning paper. "What makes you think we're going?" "I cooked them the way I always do," ob- "Why, Samuel, you always get elected ; at jected his wife, Isabel, looking sleepily least you have the last three times. You said belligerent. if you got elected again 1 could go with you." "Not the egg. This." Samuel rapped a "But my dear, I thought we were going to publication. finger on the paper. "It says the General Houston . .. or maybe Chicago. But BALI !" Convention is going to be held in Bali." and "But Samuel," objected his wife. "It "Oh, how wonderful," Isabel exclaimed, wak- wouldn't be any fun in Houston. It's so hot. ing into full consciousness. "Isn't that where reuse And you know what Chicago's like. Nothing Dorothy Lamiour made that movie ?" for but railroad stations."~ "What movie ?" Samuel asked, his intelligence "They've got the Edgewater Beach Hotel," diverted momentarily. Samuel protested. "Or used to have. I re- required "I don't remember the name. It had lots of member back in...' color and dancing." "Don't get off the subject. I wouldn't think Samuel pulled his mind back to reality. of letting you go to Bali alone." Permission "No doubt it's good for a movie but how can Samuel lifted his eyes to the ceiling in clear- they have the Convention way out there ?" He eyed innocence. "My dear, I won't be alone. picked up the paper and began to read in DFMS. You can't possibly have a General Convention / earnest. with one clergyman."~ "Where is Bali ?" asked Isabel. "You know what I mean. I simply couldn't Church "Somewhere in the ocean; way out that bear to have you so far away. And all those way." Samuel gestured vaguely toward the native girls in sarongs. Pretty ones." front door while Isabel toyed with her coffee "Are you speaking of the girls, or the Episcopal spoon patiently. sarongs? I remember that picture, come to the "Well, it's an island, whichever ocean it's in. think of it. Dorothy Lamour wore a sarong. of I'm sure of that." She put down the spoon and The natives wore grass skirts." peered into the depths of the coffee. "I thought you remembered," Isabel said "It's a perfectly splendid idea, when you

Archives icily. stop and think about it," she said coming out "Well, anyway, I don't want to go to Bali. I

2020. of her reverie. "Just think. We can have don't think they mean it. And I couldn't pos- breakfast on the beach at sunrise, and pick sibly take you . .. unless you stow away in a our own pineapples for lunch, and have man- life-boat. Do you know what it would cost ?"

Copyright goes, and persimmons and things after dinner ''No, do you?'' while we watch the moonlight, limpid on the "A thousand dollars. For you to pick pine- ocean under the southern skies." apples." Samuel Entwhistle put down his paper and "Maybe we could go steerage." squinted at his wife. She was gazing with a A sliver of a smile broke off one corner of transfixed expression into the sugar bowl. Samuel's mouth. "Have you been to that drug store library "My dear, be realistic. Did you ever hear again ?" he asked accusingly. of an Episcopalian traveling steerage ?" "Isn't it a coincidence," said Isabel, "that I'm "We could fly, and not eat so much food." just finishing reading 'Tropical Fury.' It's not "You know I don't like to fly, unless I have nearly as lurid as it sounds. All about native to." life on a South Sea island. Very descriptive. "Well," Isabel giggled. "You can go steer- I'm sure I'll feel at home immediately." age, and I'll fly." She got up to clear the table.

Eigh~t THE WITNESS - AUGUST 5, 1954 "The whole thing's pretty mysterious," Sam- "Into the Island of Bali, rode the four-hundred." uel mused. "It says here it will be a great "Do you spell it r-o-w-e-d?" inquired Isabel thing for the missionary work. But perhaps sweetly. they'd rather have the extra money, and we The Rev. Samuel Entwhistle had a busy day, could have the Convention in Central Park." and it was late that night before the matter "That wouldn't be half the fun," Isabel entered his mind again. He was just about to pointed out, on her way to the kitchen. go to the kitchen for a pre-bedtime snack when "Hey, bring back the coffee," Mr. Entwhistle Isabel who had been intensely silent over called. Tropical Fury, suddenly looked up with a "Don't they pay your expenses if you're bright and eager face. elected?" asked his wife, obediently returning "Samuel," she exclaimed. "I've got a won- the coffee pot. derful idea. It just came to me." "Well, usually I guess . . . I think we have "What ?" Samuel yawned. *'twohundred dollars in the diocesan budget for "Instead of going to Bali, why not rent a publication. travel of delegates. Two hundred dollars for steamship, and hold the Convention on board. and four delegates won't get them to the Mississippi 'Convention Cruise' we could call it." from here. Maybe we could vote by air mail." "Is this an idea to keep the Convention free reuse "Don't try to be funny so early in the morn- of grass-skirts ?" for ing," Isabel retorted. "You can always have a "Well, not really. But it would be more fun, special campaign and raise more money." wouldn't it? And not as expensive. We could required "Another campaign ?" Samuel fumed, "We've just cruise around the Gulf Stream, or the had four already this year. One for the na- Great Lakes, or maybe the Bay of Fundy." tional Church, one for the parish house, one "They're quite a ways apart," Samuel for the mission at Goose Creek Hollow, and better settle for Lake Permission yawned again. "You'd one for the memorial to Bishop Junkett." Winnepesaukie. Want a glass of milk?" "Who's Bishop Junkett?" "No. Yes. Samuel be serious. I bet the DFMS. / "Never mind. It's a good thing this diocese national Church hasn't thought of it. It's doesn't allow women to serve on vestries." simply a beautiful idea. Instead of wasting "You don't have to be rude about it. You

Church all that time sailing to Bali, just hold the must have got out of the wrong side of the Convention while we're sailing." bed." a little romantic," Samuel rumi- "How can we get any lay delegates to a con- "It seems Episcopal nated, his imagination struggling through the vention in Bali?" the mists of fatigue. "You mean just sail around ask me. I'm not on the vestry."

of "Don't in a circle? Or back and forth between New "Well, I mean we don't pay for the expenses York and Hoboken. Like a ferry?" of the laymen. The only laymen that can go frowned over Archives will be retired owners of railroads, steamship "Well .. . "Isabel Entwhistle lines, and . . . and . .. " the obstacle. "I think the most practical thing

2020. "I know lots of bankers who could afford it," would be to sail from New York up to Nova Isabel added happily. "Besides I'm sure the Scotia and back. It would be cool .. . or if national Church will find a way." they really prefer the west, we could sail Copyright "I don't see why they couldn't have made it around Puget Sound. They say it's very Bermuda," Samuel grumbled, getting up from beautiful." the table. "I've always wanted to see Ber- "I can imagine," said Samuel in a scathing muda." tone. "The crew of the U.S.S. President Roose- "Personally, I'd like to go to Zanzibar," velt being engaged to sail around Puget Sound Isabel said. "The name always sounds so for two weeks." beautiful. Zanzibar." "Oh, but we don't need any crew," Isabel "Well, good-bye my dear. I must get to the trilled merrily, "That's the beauty of the idea. office. The chances are we won't have to worry We just rent the boat and furnish the crew." about it. I doubt if I'm elected. And any- "Wonderful." Samuel leaned weakly against way, 'Ours not to question why; ours but to a book shelf. do or die'." He walked to the front door, "After all," Isabel continued breathlessly. turned, grinned, and made a heroic gesture. "You know how versatile the clergy are. And

THE WITNESS - AUGUST 5, 1954 Nine we could elect only the lay delegates who were handling the luggage and things," Isabel willing to work on the ship. I wonder why giggled. the national Church hasn't thought of it." "And the Altar Guilds can set the tables in "My pet," said Samuel lovingly, sinking into the dining room." a chair, "I think you've got something." Isabel corrected him. "Saloon, they call it on shipboard," she said. "Of course I have." Isabel smiled proudly. "It occurs to me," Samuel said, "that we "We've got it almost all worked out, except must have in the Church an organization for the bar," Samuel said. "Well," Isabel said tentatively, "How about competent to fulfill each task aboard ship. For the Deacons?" instance," his eyes glistened with fancy, "The "They don't take Deacons to General Con- Woman's Auxiliary could be put in charge of ventions," Samuel protested. the cuisine." "But this Convention is supposed to be dif- "And the laundry," Isabel added. "Oh Sam- Isabel reminded him. uel, you're so clever." ferent," "Well," Mr. Entwhistle concluded. "It's a' "The Brotherhood of St. Anthony could be publication. great idea . .. even if it is impractical. Let's the stewards, and run the infirmary, or what-

and go to bed." ever they call it on a ship. It's right up their "But it seems to me it's very practical." alley." reuse Isabel told him, as she went to lock the front "And the acolytes," Isabel chanted. "Just for door. think. We could put all the little acolytes down "My dear," said Samuel stopping at the foot in the engine room to run the motors, and ring of the stairs. "We forgot. With all these required bells and things like that." people busy running things on board ship, there Samuel pursed his lips thoughtfully. "I will be nobody left to convene. I mean as soon don't think they are really equipped for that as it's time for the House of Bishops to

Permission type of work. I would suggest we give them assemble there'll be nobody to run the ship." charge of lighting the lamps. You know, every ship has a lot of little red and green lights all "Couldn't we just anchor somewhere when- DFMS. ever the Houses are in session?" / over it. So people know we're coming." "That's a cute idea. But who will run the "Possibly. But it seems to me it would be better under those conditions just to tie up to

Church engines ?" "Well," Mr. Entwhistle suggested, "there's a wharf somewhere. For the whole two weeks." the liberal Catholics, and the Anglo-Evangel- "But then we wouldn't have any cruise at

Episcopal icals, and the Order of the Nasturtium... and all," pleaded Mrs. Entwhistle with her hand on the light switch. "We might just as well not the all those exhibit people and .... " of "Don't forget the altar guilds," Isabel said. rent the boat. We might just as well meet in "And the Young People and the Glastonbury Chicago." Clubs." Samuel thought earnestly for a mo- "It does leave us back where we started Archives ment. "There's all those mass-dynamics boys from, doesn't it?" Samuel agreed, starting to too. We could put them in the engine room yawn again. "I remember once at the Edge- 2020. so they won't feel rejected." water Beach Hotel . .." "But, Samuel, that would make them feel "I don't want to go to Chicago," Isabel wailed more rejected." as she turned out the downstairs light. "I Copyright "Would it? Well, they could be the deck want to go to Bali." crew. Right up on top, mixing with everybody "My dear," said her husband soothingly as else." they climbed the stairs, "Why don't you tele- "And all the Bishops could be officers. graph "381" in the morning, and tell them of Wouldn't it be grand?" your decision. Perhaps since you've read "Perhaps we could have everyone fill out a Tropical Fury,' they'll take you along as guide." theological questionnaire," Samuel murmured as he knit hIs brows. "Then all the Calvinists LAMBETH CONFERENCE RESOLUTIONS OF 1948 and the Neo-Orthodox could go down in the An important document, particularly in view of the forthcoming Anglican Congress and Assembly of the World Council of boiler room." Churches "And the High-Churchmen could be lookouts, 25c a copy and the Low-Churchmen could be in the hold, THE WITNESS - Tunkhannock, Pa.

TeX THu WITNESS - AUGUST 5, 1954 Showdown or Showing I By Wolcott Cutler Rector of St. John's, Charlestown, Mass. to free one of the best informed Wash- many years they have been striving RECENTLYington correspondents of a leading Boston themselves from a tyrannical and alien white daily has given us a series of well-written power. For a time President Franklin D. articles on the advisability at this juncture in Roosevelt urged that we take their part. Such international affairs of America's taking upon a policy would have been in keeping with our herself the responsibility for preventing Russia own background and temperament. We chose, from risking a war with the so-called free instead, to support France against her colonies, nations, by preparing this country and as many leaving it to Russia to sympathize with their allies as we can secure, to hold our own in a inevitable desire for freedom. The recent military showdown. This is not advising a conquerors of Dien Bien Phu are revolutionary preventive war: it is supposed to avoid the natives. There never were any Russian danger of a possible war by our gathering soldiers actually fighting in Indo-China against publication. such material strength as to be clearly the the French. Our only excuse had we entered the war on France's side, would be that of and stronger in a "preventive showdown." The idea seems to be that as Russia gains material keeping certain highly valuable raw materials, or reuse strength from year to year, we are likely to such as rubber, in the white man's control, for find ourselves less and less sure to win in a rather in capitalist white man's control. There possible ultimate military encounter; so we are no grounds for U.N. action in Indo-China, must now work harder to prevent her from partly because France doesn't want the U.N. required increasing any further her territory or her brought into the situation, and partly because world trade. The only way we can think of when Cambodia tried to get the U.N. inter- to do this seems to be by frightening her from ested in the cause of the native Indo-Chinese,

Permission future advances in any direction. our country persuaded Cambodia to withdraw We who are not military experts, but only her appeal. laughed at no doubt What Is Needed DFMS. ordinary civilians, will be / by the professional men of war when we fail HAT this world really needs is not war to see how America and Russia can long avoid either cold or hot-nor even a showdown

Church actual blows if they, year after year, go deeper -between the two great rivals for world trade and deeper into debt spending three-quarters and world dominance, but a stronger United of every dollar that they can grab or borrow Nations in which a real balance of powers

Episcopal on ever-increasing and fantastically destructive would prevent either side controlling a majority the armaments, hoping each to scare the other of voters and would allot such raw materials of into not daring to call their opponent's bluff. as rubber and oil and manganese and tungsten Poker games for such high stakes seldom end proportionately among the industrial nations of peacefully. the whole world. This country has no moral Archives Russia's satellite Poland was charged with right to corner so large a percentage of the It would indeed world's oil or the world's rubber. Neither 2020. selling arms to Guatemala. be, as President Eisenhower has said "a ter- have we any moral right to tell China, for in- rible thing" if Russia were to "establish an stance, what kind of government she ought to have or who should represent her in the Copyright outpost on this continent." But Russia and India and Egypt officially protested against United Nations, of which she is one of the our not only arming but training the military most important members. It is fantastic for forces of Pakistan on the very borders of us to insist that the exiled governnient in Russia in Asia, and we paid no attention to Formosa, which we protect from complete their Asiatic "Monroe Doctrine." extinction, is the true government of the Similarly with regard to the three states of 400,000,000 people in China, whether they like Indo-China, no doubt we are justified in not it or not. wanting to see them overrun by external com- To be sure, the Communists in Russia and munist forces. But why have we not been elsewhere are no believers in or practisers of equally solicitous about their being held in democratic principles. But they are human virtual slavery as colonies of France? For beings, and they are supported by nations no

Eleven THE WITNESS - AUGUST 5, 1954 more natonalistic than ourselves. And they and public. The world as a whole has liked us. are coming nearer to meeting some at least of How tragic, that it doesn't like us so well any the basic desires of many millions of gravely more, that we are feared instead of being oppressed peoples than we have chosen to do. looked up to as the one land of hospitality and To try by military and merely material means good will. to stop the spread of Communism or to "con- Recently the Marshall Islanders felt obliged tain" Russia by military might alone is utterly to address their petition for protection against futile. It is probably also suicidal. Although our H-bombs to the Trusteeship Council of the we are materially the richest nation on earth, U.N. They report that inhabitants of two of we are not at the present time proving our- the islands "are now suffering in various de- selves to be the smartest. Every day that we grees from lowering of the blood count, burns, waste on McCarthyism, every Oppenheimer nausea, and the falling off of hair from the that we shelve because of his unwillingness to head as a result of the recent H-bomb tests." be a rubber stamp for the politicians in power, They ask that "all experiments with lethal every ton of wheat that we refuse to starving weapons within this area be immediately Orientals, and every dollar that we lop off ceased." The United States has expressed its publication. from our tiny Point Four program abroad, sympathy; and has promised to make what and proves us anything but a morally strong or an reparations it can for the injuries sustained; intellectually competent nation. Furthermore, but we have not promised to stop the blasts. reuse when we talk bravely about threatening Russia Here again our preoccupation with the mir- for and China-and even India unless she submits age of a "preventive showdown" seems to be to our dictation-with a "preventive show- blinding our eyes to the unfortunate showing down," we would do well to remember that up of cur complete obsession with our own required the people of the United States number but military might and material wealth. We ac- one-sixth of the population of the world. cuse Russia of seeking to dominate the world, Maybe we can keep up the military dom- forgetting that we are hardly in a position to Permission inance a little longer, but assuredly not for- criticize, so long as we are completely con- ever. "Whom the gods will destroy, they first trolled by the passion for dominating the world

DFMS. ourselves. Such is the tragedy of the policy

/ make mad." Surely there must be an increas- ing number of thoughtful and moral-minded of "preventive showdown." persons in our land who are capable of seeing Church before it is too late that a purely military preventive showdown can only in the end prove to be a showing up of our ethical and spiritual Pointers for Parsons Episcopal bankruptcy. By Robert Miller the Episcopal Clergyman of Campton, N. H. of Traditionally we have shown ourselves a people of generous impulses, of world-wide missionary zeal, and of great tolerance toward WILL not be silenced and I will be heard," Archives varying points of view. Religiously and polit- T wrote William Lloyd Garrison. He was ically, if not in the field of economics, we have

2020. heard. He was heard at Bull Run and Appo- put up with a wide variety of opinions, even of mattox. propaganda. Presumably our amazing prog- "We will be silenced and we will not be ress as a nation has owed much to such open-

Copyright heard," the clergy of today might say as they mindedness toward new and often upsetting read of the veiled and scurrilous charges that ideas. are sometimes made against them. "Why so We have provided free trade among the many Reds, Clericals?" asked a man who should states of half a continent, and we have for have known better. "How many are," I asked over a hundred years been too wise to fortify but he answered not. our northern frontier. When China paid our Must we first deny that we are Communists nation a large indemnity, we had the good before we let our passion for justice break sense to use the money for the benefit of her forth in word and act? nationals. When less favored lands suffered It is time we had done with witch hunts and from pestilence or famine or great disaster we private informers and guilt by association and were quick to help with funds both private dishonor by accusation. These things threaten

Twelve THE WITNESS - AUGUST 5, 1954 our freedom, our liberty, our life. They belong patients of a spiritual preparation before they and some to Hitler and not to free men. And freedom receive an anesthetic. If conflicts toward ill- is not for a few. If only one man lose it, the emotions can predispose our bodies of God sum of human freedom is made less. ness, then the presence and power influence for health. It is no longer enough to preach two by four can be a real I am quite clear that the chief role of religion sermons of petty morality nor is it enough to health must be an indirect one. We do not bow down in the house of Rimmon. We have in primarily to improve our to go all out. turn to religion health. Bodily ills make us take stock of our- Sometimes it seems to me that I have never selves and sometimes induce us to think more heard anything but caution counselled in the seriously than we do when we are well, as Church. Christ was not cautious. He staked revealed in John Donne's meditations. The his life, and, as man, he loved it. He lost it? ministry to the sick offers opportunity to reach No. He gained it. some men more easily than when they are Well, gentlemen? well. It is quite right that we should seek to help them improve in health, but that is not publication. the chief purpose of religion; it is to relate men to God. Jesus did not pamper his body. and Religion and Health His life was not exactly the perfect regimen yet I am reuse that one would choose for health; By Anson Phelps Stokes, Jr. for sure his body served him well, because his New York Rector of St. Bartholomew's, whole being was devoted to God. root for "holy" and Deep Anxiety required THE Anglo-Saxon "whole" is the same word. There is a NE of the facts in health which religion close connection between religion and health, can provide is self-forgetfulness. Ill- for religion deals with all aspects of human health does not come so much because of

Permission life. Christianity has always concerned itself worrying about objective problems but because, with the body as well as with the spirit. Christ in addition to our worry, there is a deeper early Church healed men. In our because we ourselves are involved. We DFMS. and the anxiety / Prayer Book, starting on page 308, there is cannot face a solution without such questions "The Order for the Visitation of the Sick." At arising as "What will people think of me ?" If

Church its conclusion, on page 320, is a form for this concern about ourselves can be removed, "Unction of the Sick." There is also an abbre. the problem is attacked more directly and viated form of the Communion service for use effectively. A woman who had had several

Episcopal in the sick room, prayers for the sick are nervous breakdowns reported to my mother one day the frequently found. that she had never had another since of The Church's ministry to the sick has not when she told her doctor, "I have made a dis- merely been in distinctly religious terms. The covery-it makes no difference what happens history of hospitals and nursing is closely allied to me, and I shall never have another break- Archives "You are right; to Church history. With the rise of modern down." The doctor replied, religion and you never will." Real Christianity produces 2020. medicine in the last century, an aid to medicine tended to separate, as science and self-forgetfulness, which is in itself religion in that period were quite distinct. But health. the recognition of Christianity makes us face unpleasant facts. Copyright recently, especially with world, psychosomatic medicine, the relationship be- Some religions take us to an unrealistic people tween the two fields has become obvious. Each and when, in the name of Christianity, their so- of us know in our own experience how closely avoid reality, they often find that than for the condition of our digestive system, of our called religion makes more for illness is the religion glands, of our skin, and of our respiration, is health. True Christianity, which real allied to emotional and psychological factors. of a Saviour who was crucified, makes of injustice, pain, Doctors and ministers are now working to- upon the cross the facts we are gether. St. Luke's Hospital represents the and apparent failure. Do we feel that Is any healing ministry of our Church, but so does unjustly treated? Look upon him. the work of its chaplains. I have heard Chap- suffering like his suffering? In Christianity lain Rice speak of the beneficial influence on we face the unpleasant facts openly and frankly,

Thirteen THE WITNESS - AUGUST 5, 1954 and yet know that in Christ they can be con- quered. Much illness comes from burying Christian Marriage these facts deeply in our sub-consciousness, and one of the virtues of religion is that it is By James A. Pike a type of "medication" that can penetrate Dean of New York Cathedral through the suggestions of prayer and Scrip- ture and sacrament, into the deep sub-conscious. TATISTICS show that there are two and a Dean Another cause for ill-health is guilt. quarter times as many marital breakups Pike says that every man has to face the among couples without religion as there are problem of combining self-acceptance with self-criticism. Christianity recognizes sin for among those with it. And Dr. Kinsey's studies what it is. We are bidden to face our sins and show that the instances of adultery are about confess them but, having done that, we know two to one in the case of couples inactive that in Christ they can be conquered and put religiously. away, and we can go forth anew. What is the distinctive element which loy- publication. Fellowship is a human need and many there alty to the Judeao-Christian heritage brings are whose illnesses are traceable in part to and into a marriage and which gives it cohesive- loneliness or lack of happy relationships with ness? It is a special kind of love which is

reuse their fellow men. True fellowship is an ideal revealed to us in the Bible and supremely in for of the Church. It is not an auditorium where Jesus Christ. It is not meant to replace people come to hear some one preach. It is a "Eros"-the love of the other because of the family of people bound to one another, accepting

required others loveableness; but it undergirds the and helping one another. That is the goal of because it does not depend upon this every church. marriage motive. It is the love of the other because of Finally, religion gives men purpose. Jesus the other's need of love. It is not a mere

Permission described a man from whom a devil had been concern to meet the needs cast out, but when he found the house empty, sentiment: it is a is, not as he ought to be or swept, and garnished, and nothing else had of the other as he

DFMS. as one might wish he were. This fills the gaps / taken his place, the devil returned with "seven when there are parentheses in Eros, due to the other spirits more wicked than himself" and or the other or unpredictable dif- the last state of that man was "worse than the fault of one Church For this different kind of first." It is not enough merely to overcome a fidence in feelings. particular sickness. There must be a positive love the New Testament writers chose the purpose for which to live. Christianity gives Greek word "agape" and redefined it in the Episcopal us that. light of the revelation in Jesus Christ. the of The ministry of religion is the ministry of Our religion not only tells us about agape relating men to God. A living relationship to love; it supplies the motivation for it. In our God, mediated through prayer, Bible reading, Christian experience we know that God loves Archives sacraments, and other ministrations is the us this way: not on the basis of our merits or special way through which his presence is attractiveness to him, but on the basis of our 2020. made known. The acts are not important in need. This is the meaning of the Cross: in themselves, except as they help deepen the Jesus Christ God meets us where we are, as relationship of faith between the individual we are, taking up the burden of our weakness Copyright and God. Through him you will find self- and sin. It is in gratitude for this that we so forgetfulness, the power to face the hard facts, love others, especially the one with whom, the revelation and the answer to our quest, under God, we have chosen to make our earthly fellowship and purpose. pilgrimage. The distinctive thing about Christian mar- CONFIRMATION INSTRUCTIONS By Bishop Irving P. Johnson riage is not simply that the marriage was per- Has been used in hundreds of parishes formed in church. The distinctive thing is 50c a copy that God's love, forgiveness and acceptance is The WITNESS a constant dynamic in the life of each, thus Tunkhannock, Pa. inspiring-both consciously and unconsciously- this kind of love one for the other.

Fourteen TH WITNESS - AUGUST 5, 1954 BASTILLE DAY solid mahogany pews for 100 SERVICE. persons, and a pipe organ, one of the first in the state, which * Evensong in French was is still in good condition. held July 14 at Grace Church, The French flavor was estab- Georgetown, Colo., to mark lished by Louis Dupuy, a Bastille Day. The town, once French fortune hunter and ex- the site of the world's greatest priest, who built the Hotel de

for Birthdays e005ornor occasloae.. silver mining activities, had a Paris, still noted for its French ChlrosBosismporteoi Nopkion. Cift.smo yother Eah siafrol atmosphere and food. $1 koop op to 60cprofit for youroelf. population of 6,000 in the 1850's SEND NO MONEY Jostor and now has 375. The church Get o,.oF-t Oro Chistsosd The Bastille Day service was 1dross. Cord Aooorfo'of ON APP'OA "pI with comopletemossy moakingplaoos sod was established in 1867 with sopo flw-rodProi ChrtmhiasmsLad conducted by the Rev. Gustave FREE. No elrorinoooooc' e. Writs NOW! BROWN,tIc., Delt T- 60,225neWALLACE fIih AV., New York 10. N.Y. Lehman of St. Mary's, Denver, assisted by the Rev. Robert More Than __ Serna, newly ordained deacon who is in charge of the George- RELIGIOUS A Half _ publication. town church. About 75 at- tended the service after which and LEADERS Century- they joined others for dinner JYACCUS E! of and festivities at the famous reuse I accuse you of violating the first hotel. for and great commandment which is Dependable Service to love God with ALL your heart, in mind and soul. Either of your CHURCHMAN NAMED own volition or because you are required bound by your ordination vows, CHURCH SECRETARY you divide your love between God and your tradition, your pet the- FURNITURE ology, your special denominations * Isaac W. Carpenter Jr., so that God's house is dangerously junior warden of Trinity Cathe- Permission divided AGAINST itself. dral, Omaha, has been named It was this same love of tradi- Le tion that blinded the religious L. an assistant secretary of state leaders of our Lord's time, so that by President Eisenhower. DFMS.

/ they, whose duty it was to reveal God to man, failed to recognize God when he came among them. They too had that first and great C~UTHHERTSON Church ,ommandment on which depend all Ready-to-Sew the laws and the Prophets! Unless you give God ALL your I love, you are no more worthy to II CUT-OUT KITS

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2020. Mart yn, Box 53, Glen Ridge, N. J. half the price of custom-tailored vestments (Christian name) -yet give you the quality materials and beauty for which Cuthbertson ecclesiasti- cal vestments are distinguished.

Copyright All fabrics are perfectly centered, marked Before you go to Church next Sunday, read and cut, ready to sew. Easy-to-follow in- structions included. Send today for your FREE copy of illustrated, descriptive cata- PREACH log, complete with- order forms. r J. THEODORE CIJTHBERTSON, INC. ' 2013 Sansom Street, Philadelphia 3, Pa. THE WORD OF GOD Please send me your FREE Catalog of Cut-Out I Kits. By The Very Rev. Frederick M. Morris, D.D. IName of YourCurh _ ___.- Rector-elect, St. Thomas Church. New York City IYour Name. - IYour Address ______A MOREHOUJSE-GORHAM BOOK $2.50 Ct Zo_?ne...State. - F-e

THE wITNESS - AUGUST 5, 1954 OLD SWEDES MARKS cial committee to consider the ANNIVERSARY matter is followed. CATHEDRAL STUDIOS * Old Swedes, Wilmington, There will be regional offices Silk damasks, linens, by yd. Stoles, burses & veils, etc. Two new books, Church Embroid- Delaware, marked its 255th in Chicago, Washington, At- ery & Vestments, complete instruction, 128 anniversary on June 13th. The pages, 95 illustrations, vestment pasterns lanta and Forth Worth. drawn to scale, price $7.50. Handbook fox service was conducted by the The New York headquarters Altar Guilds, 4th ed., 53 cts. Miss Macrllle, 11 Kirke St., Chevy Chase, Md. 15. TeL Rev. Donald Mayberry, rector will be in the area of New York OL 2-2752. of Trinity, of which Old Swedes Cathedral, Columbia Univer- is a part, assisted by the vicar RECTOR WANTED: City Parish, Diocese sity, Union Seminary, with of Ohio, desires active Rector capable of of Old Swedes, the Rev. H. John D. Rockefeller Jr. having conducting extension program. Good lay support. Address The Witness, Box C, Edgar Hammond. promised a million dollars for Tunkhiannock, Pa. The sermon was by the Rev. the center. G. Paul Musselman, head of KEMPER HALL urban work of the National ANSON P. STOKES KENOSHA, WISCONSIN Boarding and day school fot girls offering Council, who declared that the ACCEPTS thorough college preparation and training for purposeful living. Study of the Fine Arts . encouraged. publication. impact of the Church in China * The Rev. Anson Stokes Complete sports program. Jnio school department. Beautiful lake shore campus. had been slight because it was Jr., rector of St. Bartholomew's, Under the direction of the Sisters of St. Mary. and more concerned with ecclesiast- New York, and a contributing FOR CATALOG, ADDRESS, BOX WT ical traditions than with help- editor of The Witness, has ac- reuse ing the people establish a new cepted election as bishop co- for Write us for social order, which they wanted adjutor of Massachusetts. and which the Gospel pro- ST. JAMES LESSONS Organ Information claims but the Church largely Content: Nine courses based required ignores. on the Prayer Book. AUSTIN ORGANS, Inc. Method: Workbook, 33 lea. Jesus proclaimed a new so- sons, handwork. Hartford, Conn. cial order, he declared, and To teach under' Objective: standing and prac-

Permission founded th e Church to estab- Y P tice of the Epis- lish it. What is important to- copal faith. Current Prices: THE PARISH OF TRINITY CHURCH day, he said, is not the efficien- Pupils work books...... ea. .75 New York City DFMS. Teachers manuals I tom .... ea. .50 Rev. John Heums, D.D., r

/ cy of Church organization and administration, but its basic Teachers manuals IV to IX.... .75 TRINITY Rev. Bernard C. Newmuan,.v (Postpaid U.S.A.) Broadway and Wall St. relevance to modern life. Nt. Samples Payment with orders Sun HC 8, 11, EP 3:30; Daily MP 7:45,

Church ST. JAMES LESSONS, INC. HC 8, Noon Set, EP 5:05; Sat HC 8, EP 1:30; HID & Fri HC 12; C Fri 4:30 & By P. 0. Box 221, Larchmont, N. Y. t NATIONAL COUNCIL app HEADQUARTERS CASSOCKS ST. PAUL'S CHAPEL Episcopal Broadway and Fulton St. SURPLICES - CHOIR VESTMENTS * New York will Rev'. Robe"t C. Hnsickde v the be perma- EUCHARISTIC VESTMENTS Sun Music Broadcast CBS 9, HC 10; Daily of nent headquarters of the Na- ALTAR HANGINGS and LINENS MP 7:45, HC 8, 12 ex Sat, EP 3; C Fri tional Council of Churches if All Embroidery Is Had Done & Sat 2 & by sppt J. M. HALL, INC. the recommendation of a spe- CHAPEL OF THE INTERCESSION 14 W. 40th St., New York 18, N. Y.

Archives Broadway and 15 5th St. TEL. CH 4-3306 Rev. Joseph S. Misi~ss, D.D., v Sun HC 8, 9:30 & 11, EP 4; Weekday 2020. New HC daily 7 & 10, MP 9, EP 5:30, Sat 5, MAKE EXTRA MONEYwithExcitIDI CHURCH LINENS Int 12; C Sat 4-5 & by appt Day-l. Christmas Cards By The Yard ST. LUKE'S CHAPEL I Fine Irish Linens made for us in Belfast. 487 Hudson St. New lumi noun Day-Glo aaa't. sells on sight for Transfer Patterns, Vestment Patterns,

Copyright Ny- $1.00! Complete box assts line... 512 items l Up Ion for Surplices, Thread, Needles, etc. Rev. Paul C. Weed, Jr.,. ma24toet10 otonsI .50 bs Pereonetl p~trintLine: Free Samsples Sun HC 8, 9:15 & 11; Daily IC 7 &8, pesn nsstationery~csrdssslow a Scaiel Amesaovgnlaes. abonn.. Roshname for Frea Sampls Personal- adad Po. on C Sat 5-6, 8-9 & by appt eroval. Oroonientjons,sob for spn-W credit pln rte TODAY Mary Fawcett Company STYLE LINE, 3145 Nicollet Avenue, Box 25w, MsnusLnuzsn, Ms. ST. AUGUSTINE'S CHAPEL Dept. B-401, Minneapolis. Minn. 292 Henry St. Cat Scamniel) CHURCH LINENS Rev. C. Kilmser Myers, v Exquisite dualities and outstanding values Sun HC 8:15, 11 & EP 5; Mon, Tues, Wed, MONEY for your TREASURY imported from Ireland for Churches and Fri HC 7:30, EP 5, Thum, Sat HC 6:30, Religious Orders. 9:30, EP 5 OVER 1.500.000 SUNFLOWER DISH CLOTHS Plexiglass PalU Foundations ST. CHRISTOPHER'S CHAPEL Were sold in 1946 by members of Sunday 5%"- -64-7"-SL0O Schools. Ladies' Aids, Young People's Groups, Pure Silks Embroidery Floss 48 Henry St. etc. Thev enable you to earn money for Ecclesiastical Trasfer Pattens Rev. Edward E. Chandler, p-ino-e your treasury, and make friends for TOUr Linen Thread for Girdles Sun HC 8, 10; Daily HC 8, ex Fri & organizaton FREE SAMPLES Sat 7:45 SANGAMON MIL.LS lIIARY MOORE, Importer Established 1915 Cohoes. N. Y. Box 394W DAVENPORT, IOWA

Sixteen THE WITNESS - AUGUST5, 1954 DEPLORE MOVE of Churches, will be more re- FROM HOUSTON stricted than the others. This was confirmed by the state de- * The standing committee of partment which declined to give Virginia, with the approval of the reason. the bishops of the diocese, has All eleven are being required issued a statement deploring to travel directly to and from the removal of General Conven- meetings they are permitted to tion from' Houston. attend and then leave for their "Such a retreat," the reso- home countries. lution states, "seems to us to subject the mind of the Church MIGRANT WORK CAMP to secular considerations at the AT KING FERRY very time the country needs * The annual migrant work the clear witness of a Church camp opened June 27 at King publication. united in the spirit and re- Ferry, N. Y., sponsored by the deeming love of her Lord to department of social relations and help resolve its problems." of Central New York. Directing children of mi- reuse the work with ESTEY ORGAN CORP., BRATTLEBORO,VT. HUNGARIAN BISHOP bean pickers is the Rev. for grant IS RESTRICTED Rugby Auer, rector of St. Paul's, Waterloo, N. Y. He is * Bishop John Peter of the S ADDRESS CHANGE required of Hungary, assisted by a team of college Reformed Church Please send both your old and the eleven Czech and students of different religious one of your new address. Hungarian leaders to attend the affiliations who are serving as assembly of the World Council volunteers. Permission

DFMS. FOR / TO SAVE YOU FUNDS OTHER NEEDS! Church

THE CHURCH LIFE INSURANCE CORPORATION or only for the clergy and lay officials and workers of the Church, voluntary Episcopal Operated cost life insurance to paid, and members of their immediate families. Low premium the dependents, to build up funds to meet education of ease financial .burden on surviving and imme- costs, to build retirement income, to protect property investments. Deferred diate annuities. Group retirement plans. Program and advice service. Archives THE CHURCH FIRE INSURANCE CORPORATION 2020. Low cost fire, windstorm, extended coverage, additional extended coverage, vandalism, by or fine arts, glass, burglary, robbery, theft and larceny insurance on property owned of clergy-fire, closely affiliated with the Church. On residences and personal property Copyright and floater windstorm, extended coverage, additional extended coverage, vandalism policies. THE CHURCH HYMNAL CORPORATION and Publisher of all church editions of the Book of Common Prayer and the Hymnal, books are of fine other books including the popular Prayer Book Studies series. The margin goes quality, prices are kept low to save the parishes money, and the profit into clergy pensions. Affiliated with THE CHURCH PENSION FUND 5, N. Y. 20 Exchange Place New York

Seventee THE WITNESS - AUGUST 5, 1954 to discover what else there is in his branch of Christianity. The main THE NEW BOOKS shortcoming of the book lies in the fact that its authors seldom define GEORGE H. MAcMURRAY-Book Editor with sufficient correctness the differ- ence between the Protestant and Ro- Preach There Also by E. Dargan a taste for shopping around in reli- man Catholic doctrines discussed. At Butt. Seabury-Western Sem- gion, one has to read a book like the end of the book, one can still ask inary. $2.00 this to find out what Protestantism what makes the basic difference be- tween Protestantism and Roman The Episcopal Church has not taken as a whole really is. The book Catholicism, except the Papacy and been noted for a serious considera- deliberately o iit s Fundamentalism its authority. Further the omission of tion of the implications of the town- and regards the cults, as the editor Fundamentalism and even of the and-country ministry although, in re- calls them, as outside the pale of cults makes the book less than a cent years, the summer field work ongoing Protestantism, but covers complete picture of Protestantism. training programs around the coun- everything else from Neo-Orthodoxy try, and the winter conferences at to theories which would merge Prot- The book concludes with a chapter estantism into religion in general. It by the editor himself, entitled, "Be- publication. Roanridge, have helped to take up this slack. Other denominations, consists of ten articles by very well- yond Protestantism," which contrasts and however, have departments of town- known Protestant leaders, each writ- "Catholic Protestantism" consisting and-country work in their seminaries, ing independently of the others and of sixteenth century Protestantism, reuse and have produced countless books from his own standpoint. Most of current Fundamentalism, Neo-Or- for of varying worth concerned with the articles glory in Protestantism as thodoxy and the like with "Protest- this topic. a faith free from authoritarianism art Protestantism," which "may well Dargan Butt, who has operated as and totalitarianism, and contrast it be," the author writes, a "new to Roman Cath- required a one-man department of town-and- in these particulars religion." ccuntry in several seminaries, has olicism. Among the contributions is -James M. Malloch done a great service in drawing to- an excellent chapter by John Cole- gether and re-writing his lectures, man Bennett on the Protestant con- ception of religious authority and a Permission presenting the history and current status of town-and-country *work in powerful one by John Thomas Mc- the Episcopal Church. Basing his Neill, which defines with accuracy the generally recognized prin- DFMS. facts on up-to-date sociology (but what / not beating the reader over the head ciples of Protestantism meant at the with itl) , Prof. Butt adequately beginning, both authors being of Union Theological Seminary.

Church portrays some of the problems and opportunities that confront the Church The book is worth its price just for in the town-and-country field, as well these two chapters, and, as for the ~otow~Church Group Protestant should be willing Your Church Organization can solve all its as presenting resources (such as rest, the fund raising problems selling Sunshine's beau- Episcopal Home Prayers, Church School by tiful sell-on-sight quality Christmas Cards. " SUNSHINE'S FUND RAISING PLAN has the Mail, the Rural Workers' Fellow-4 r n CHURCH BULLETINS worked successfully for thousands of groups just of like 'fours. No risk or investment is ship, etc.) which the clerical or lay Ever rogr...iv. church should required. use . 0.triDLu. Bulletig, Sunshine provides F R EE INCENTIVE ministry may wish to use in town- Board. .i nilied. effectv, andJ AWARDS to best salespeople in your group. economical Over 7,000 IN USE. and-country work. Increase .ttendance, interest SCRIPTURE TEXT CHRISTMAS CARDS and collections. Write tdayAor Sunshine's Silent Night Scripture Text As-

Archives There are two minor faults which llue Catalog H. E. Winter. sortment, lithographed in glorious full color on Specilty Company, Davenport. fine paper. Each card features approoriate we would pass on-they are sins of Ioa omission, rather than commission. The 2020. first is that we believe the book would have been much stronger and Mlinisters and Religious Workers more vivid if actual 'case-material' STUDY AT HOME. Single studies or com-

Copyright plete schedule leading to diploma. Courses had been inter-spersed with the fac- on Bible, Theology, Church Building, His- tual data. The second is that the tory of the Protestant Episcopal Church, the Prayer Book, and many others. Write bibliography is not adequate to the for information TODAY. subject. We highlight this latter, Central School of Religion because there is no doubt that Preach (A Correspondence Institution, est. 1896) There Also will be a working tool 6030 Lowell Ave. Indianapolis, Ind. for the town-and-country ministry MANY OTHER Quality Sunshine Christmas Box Assortments. Also Gift Wraps, Gift Items, and, therefore, should more ade- Stationery, Everydays and other money-making quately lead the reader on to further VESTMENTS fast sellers. study. Cassocks-Surplices-Stoles-Scarves Silks-Altar Write for Details TODAY-Send No Money -W. B. Spof ford, Jr. Priest Cloaks-Rabats-CollarsCloths-Embroideries Custom Tailoring for Clergymen tSjI SUNSHINE ART STIIDIO10, INC:., Dept. LG-8 The Protestant Credo. Edited by 187Church Vestment Makers Springfield 1, Mass. Pasadena 3, Calif. Over One Hundred Years Vergilius F e r m . Philosophical (If you live east of the Rockies, write to Library, $5.00 o .OS&VNNIc Springfield office.) Unless one has time to travel and

Eighteen THE WINESS - AUGUST 5, 1954 the whole Church in Christian hos- C. G. HAMILTON pitality and tolerance. Our Church Rector at Corinth, Miss. BACKFIRE has met in the South before in Gen- It is discouraging to read in a eral Convention. The principles of liberal magazine a suggestion that we LAWRENCE ROSE religion were active before commun- should lose something precious if we Dean of General Seminary ism and the decree of the Supreme lived as most Americans under So- JAMES A. PIKE Court, elements which influenced him cial Security. It is remarkably un- Dean of New York in his "painful decision." Christian to be willing to let ministers Selecton of Hawaii was adroit, For over two years the African of poverty-stricken fringe sects starve but no one can go except the because we are not willing to let Bureau, of which the honorary di- wealthy. For the Presiding Bishop rector is the Rev. Michael Scott, has them have social security. It scarcely to state that the important business behooves us to suggest that the church served as a reliable center of infor- can be transacted in two or three in is more Christian than the politicians mation on events and attitudes days, in contrast to the usual two British Africa, at -witness the Supreme Court. different parts of weeks, is frank at least. providing an oppor- the same time Basically, segregation applies not tunity for varous African delegations only to color but to unseen barriers. SAINT MARY'S HALL and leaders to inform the British SAN ANTONIO, TExAs publication. New England is segregated by intel- public-including the Parliament- A residence and day school for girls. Pre- lectual and moral superiority from the paring for leading colleges. Fully accredited. and Its executive com- Training in leadership and Christian char- of their views. rest of America ! Seminaries are Church acter. Religious education, music, dramatics, mittee includes distinguished snobbish proverbially. Wealth, so- art. Outdoor sports throughout the year. of all three Est. 1879 reuse leaders and members cial position, inheritance of blood. British political parties. Beatrice McDermott Head Mistress for and talent, create unseen segregation. 117 EAST FRSENCHSPLACE Many American Episcopalians, in- Nobody is more snobbish than the cluding we are sure readers of The fanatical social reformer: he thinks Witness have shared these same con- CARLETON COLLEGE required he alone is right. cerns and have been interested in the It is our duty to get along to- LAUNzCE M. GouLD, Pred~dewt the Rev. Michael Scott. Carleton is a co-educational liberal arts col- 'work of gether as brothers, to use our brains lege of limited enrollment and is recog- in of Minnesota. Some of these may be interested about such issues as segregation in nized as the Church College of Admssijos receiving the reports and other pub- and if Addresss Director Permission color and in unseen relations, the Africa Bureau, and CARLETON COLLEGE lications of possible laugh at and laugh with one NORTHSFIELD MINNESOTA in expressing their concern by con- another. trbution to its work. The address DFMS. / is 69 Great Peter Street, London, H OL DE RN E SS S.W. 1. The White Mountain School, for boys EPISCOPAL SCHOOL FOR GIRLS prepaation in oldest preparatory school for girls. 13-19. Thorough college Church Virginia's RALPH A. WEATHERLY small classes. Student government em- Rich in cultu, al traditions of the South. reaponsibility. Team sports. Rector, Grace Church, Kingston, Pa. Charming surroundings. Modern equipment. phasizes Graduates in skiing. Debating. Glee Club. Art. of Grades 9-12. Fully accredited. building. In dismissing the invitation leading colleges. General course. Music, art. New fireproof Bishop Quin to the General Conven- Gymnasium, wooded campus. Indoor pool. DONALD C. HAGERMAN, Headmaster Episcopal site of its Catalog. New Hampshire tion and transferring the MRS. WM. T. HODGES. Headmistress, the meeting from Texas to Hawaii, the Box L, Staunton, Va. of Presiding Bishop missed an oppor- St. Mry*.l-n-the-MounltaiflU tunity to continue the friendship of Episcopal college _preparatory boarding The CHURCH HOME school for 60 girls. Community life based on Christian principles in which all s- for social, spoIrts, Archives HOSPITAL dents share responsibility BLUE RIDGE SCHOOL AND activities. 31, MARYLAND religious, and social service ST. GEORGE, VA. BALTIMORE Work program. Arts. Skiing, other spors. A Christian School for boys and girls. A three year accredited course of nursing. Catalogue. 2020. Situated in Blue Ridge Mountains 23 miles Classes enter August and Septembier. Schol- Mary Hari"y Teaks, M. A.. Principe from Charlottesville. Grades one through' arships available to wvell qualified high depart- LITLETON (White Mountains), twelve. Pre-school and convalescent school graduates. New H~Arstmul ment. Tuition and hoard from $60 to $75 Apply: Director of Nursing per month. REv. D. C. LOVING, Headmaster Copyright ST. AGNES SCHOOL LENOX SCHOOL A Church School in the Berkshire Hills for Ans Episcopal Country Day and Boarding boys 12-18 emphasizing Christian ideals ST.,MARY'S SCHOOL School for Girls and character through simplicity of plant SEWANEE, TENN. Excellent College Preparatory record. Spe- and equipment, moderate tuition, the co- cial courses arranged for girls not conitem- operative self-held system, and informal, Exclusively for high school girls. Honor plating college. Day pupils range from personal relationships among boys and system stressed. Accredited. Kindergarten to College Entrance. Boarders Please address: from Grade 8 to College Entrance. REV. ROBERT L. CURRY, Headmaster The Sister Superior, C.S.M. MISS BLANCHE PITIMAN, Principal Lenox, Massachusetts ALBANY News ORE Virginia. Episcopal School St. Augustine's College ASHLEY HALL LYNCHBURG, VIRGINIA RALEIGH. NORTH CAROLINA LIN HISTORIC CHARLsESTON Prepares boys for colleges and university. 1867 - 1951 Girls, grades 8-12. An outstanding college Splendid environment and excellent corps Accredited Four-Year College for Negro preparatory school. Fully accredited. Also of teachers. High standard in scholarship Youth. Co-educational. Music, Pre-Medical, general course. Excellent departments of and athletics. Healthy and beautiful Health and Physical Education, High music, art and dramatics. Mild climate. location in the mountains of Virginia. School Teacher Training, Business, Pre- Year-round outdoor sports; riding, pool. For catalogue, apply to- Social Work, Nursing Education in co- Catalog. GEORGE L. BARTON, JR., Ph.D., operation with St. Agnes Hospital. WILLIAM S. PIPER, Headmaster Headm~aster, Box 408 HAROLD L. TRIGG, PRESIEsNT Box E CHsARLESTON., S. C. scbools of the Cburcb

THE BISHOP'S SCHOOL _ bbbST. BERNARD'S SCHOOL sLA JOLLA, CALIFORNIA A Resident Day Episcopal college preparatory school, grades Schools for Girls. Grades 7-12. Located in Somerset Hills 40 miles Seven through Twelve. College Preparatory. from New York. Small classes, supervised ART - MUSIC - DRAMATICS study, all athletics, work program. Scouring, music, rifle, camera Twenty-Acre Campus, Outdoor Heated Pool FouNmaD 1858 clubs. Boarding and Tennis, Hockey, Basketball, Riding The oldest Church Sctiool west of the Alle- day students. THE RT. REV. FRANCIS ERIC BLOY ghenies integrates all parts of its program- THE REV. WILLIAM N. PENFIEL D President of Board of Trustees religious, academic, military, social-to help Rector and Headmsaster high school age boys grow "in wisdom and GLADSTONEa, Naw JERSEY ROSAMOND E. LARMOUR, M.A., stature and in favor with God and man.- Headmistress Write CANson SINEY W. GOLDSMITE, Ja Rector and Headmaster 457 Sbumwav Hall St. John Baptist School Shsattusck School Faribault, Minnesa St. John's GAR publication. FOR GIRLS Salina. Kansas Offers College Preparatory and General Since 1887 St. John's has been perpetuat- and courses. Music, art, outdoor sports, and a DeVEAUX SCHOOL ing the cultural happy home life, with character building tradition of the Church extra-curricular NIAGARA FALLS, NEW YORK by stressing sound scholarship in Christian activities for resident and atmosphere. Grades day students, under the care of the Sisters Founded 1851 3 through 12. Fully reuse of St. John Baptist. In the country neat A Church School for boys in the Diocese of -,credited. Morristown, New Jersey. Accredited. Western New York. College preparatory. COL. R. L. CLEM, Rector for For catalog address Broad activities program. Small classcs. Box 556 Scholarships available. Grade 7 through 12. The Sister Superior, Mendham, New Jersey For infonnation address Blox "A". Morison Brigham. M. A., Headmaster Lauriston L. Scaife, D.D., required Pres. Board of Trustees Cathedral School of St. Mary GARDEN CITY, L. I., N. Y. ST. MARK'S SCHOOL Okolona College Okloa OF TEXAS An accredited Episcopal School for Girls Co-educational, Private, American Church Nursery through High School. .Boarding

Permission department age 10-18. Strong College ROBERT H. IGLEHART, A. M. Headmaster Institute for Negroes (Protestant Episcopal Church) . Established 1902. Preparation. Dramatics, Sports, Riding, 1600 Preston Rd., Dallas 30 Dance. Opportunities for New York Operas, A preparatory school for boys. Full classical High School and Junior College - Trades thestres, museums. Address inquiries to curriculunm. C.E.E.B. and S.E.B. standards. and Industries - Music the Registrar, Box W. DFMS. For informnations write: W. MILAN DAVIS / REV. D. G. THOMAS, Chaplain President For Illustrated Bulletin Write The Registrar Today's Training for Tomorrow's Opportunities

Church VIRGINIA INTERMONT FOR GIRLS VOORHEES Fully accredited Junior College and 2-year IOLANI SCHOOL SCHOOL & MR. COLLEGE High School. General, vocational courses in Episcopal Church School for Boys DENMARK, S. C. Music, Art, Dramatics, Journalism, Radio Episcopal Co-educational. Accredited by State Dept. Home Ec., Phays. Ed.2 Secretarial, Liberal HONOLULU 17, HAWAII of Education of S. C. and the Southern Arts, Nursing. Beautiful location. Sports,

the riding, gym, pool. Founded 1884. A college preparatory church school for Association of Secondary Schools and Col- leges. Under the two Dioceses of S. C. and MODERATE RATES . . . CATALOG of boys. Kindergarten through twelfth grade. Established 1862. Deav nsitio', $225 to The American Church Institute for R. L. BRANTLEY, Ph.D., Pres. $275. Boarding $765- $875. Suammer ses- Negroes. Expenses seasonable. Limited Box E, BRISTOL, VA. sion. Accredited. scholarship aid for worthy students. Apply: REV. CHARLES A. PARMITER, JR. JOHN F. POTTS, President

Archives M.A., S.T.B., Rector SAINTP PAUL'S POLYTECHNIC INSTITUTE

2020. SAINT MARY'S HALL I.AWRENCIEVILLE, VIRGINMA Founded 1866 Approved by the Southern Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools. B.S. De- Lasell Junior College Fully Accredited gree with major in Trade and Industrial Secondary Boarding School for Girls Education, B3.S. Degree in Home Economics Prepares Young Womsen for Livinsg Y Education, B.S. Degree with major in Ele- Copyright Offers Thorough College Preparation mentary Education, 103 year. Well rounded college life o Teacher-Student Ratio 1-6 B.S. Degree in Second- 30 -acre campus. ten miles from Boston. ary Education. Liberal arts, sec'l, 3 yr. nursing program, FLORENCE MAST, M.A. EARL H. McCLENNEY, President home economics, retall training, art, music, Acting Headmistress drama. A.A. or A.S. degree. Transfer credit. FARIBAULT, MINNESOTA Individual counseling. Tennis, riding, ski- ing, swimming pool. Catalog. Sunshine Acres Inc 190 Woodland Road, Auburntdale 66, Mass. A Model, Modern, Co-educational School THE PATTERSD CI SCC {UIt/ B 1YS for Children of Progressive Parents From Pre-school to College Entrance America's First Naturist School FOUNDED 1939 ST. STEPHEN'S HONEST, CLEAR, accurate thinking is FOR stressed-Campus of over 150 wooded acres SCHOOL BOYS in healthful pine area of South Jersey- ALEXANDRIA, VA. Episcopal School in Blue Ridge Mountains Ozone laden atmospher-Full Secondary ,Grades 3 thru 12 (Day School). College of WVestemn No. Carolina. Accredited. Grades Curriculum supplemented by Dancing, Preparatory. tinder the Church School Sys- 6-12. Gymnasium, sports, 42nd year. 1300- Art, Dramatics. High ration of teachers to tem of the Diocese of Virginia. acre .estate. All-inclusive rate, $750. students-Remedial instruction-All sports, Address: including sun, air, and water bathing- GEORGE F. WIESE, Sunpt. Descriptive Booklet upon request. THE REV. EDWARD T. TATE, COLLEGE Box W, Legerwsood, N. C. HEALTh Headmaster PREPARATORY EDUCATION IISLEY BOONE, S. T. M., Director 2405 Russell Rd. ALExANRtorA, VA. CHARACTER BUILDING MayaS Landing, New Jersey