BOARD OF MANAGERS

OF

THE DOMESTIC AND FOREIGN MISSIONARY SOCIETY

O F T O E

Protestant ^Episcopal £l)uvd) in tl)C 15. 0. of -Uncvica,

REPORTS OF STANDING COMMITTEES, RECOGNIZED AUXILIARIES, AMD MISSIONARY BISHOPS.

1880- 81.

WITH ANNUAL TABLES.

NEW YORK:

P u b lish e d a t N os. 22 a n d 23 B ib l e H ou se, Second Floor, Fourth Avenue Entrance. Contents.

Reports of Committees, Auxiliaries, etc...... 4371 From the Missionary Bishop of Cape Palmas.... The Forty-sixtli Annual Report of the Committee Annual Report of the Missionary Bishop of for Domestic Missions...... 439 ■ Shanghai...... Bishop Clarkson’s Sixteenth Annual Report...... 433 | Annual Report of the Bishop of Haiti ...... Bishop Tuttle’s Fifteenth Annual Report...... 456 Annual Report of the Bishop Elect of Cuernavaca Bishop Morris’ Thirteenth Annual Report...... 400, in Behalf of the Mexican Church...... Bishop Whitaker’s Twelfth Annual Report...... 465 Report on Publications...... Bishop Pierce's Report for Arkansas and Indian ¡Report of the Standing Committee on Trust Territory ...... 4G7, Funds...... Bishop Hare’s Ninth Annual Report...... 468' Tenth Annual Report of the Woman’s- Auxiliary Bishop Spalding’s Ninth Annual Report...... 474 to the Board of Missions...... Bishop Elliott’s Eighth Annual Report...... 478 Report of the American Church Missionary Bishop Wingfield’s Eighth Annual Report...... 484 Society...... Bishop Garrett’s Eighth Annual Report...... 48s Fifth Annual Report of the League in Aid of the Bishop Dunlop’s First Annual Report...... 495 i Mexican Church ...... Bishop Brewer’s First Annual Report...... 497 Report American Church Building Fund Com- Bishop Paddock’s First Annual Report...... 500 mission...... Number of Missionaries...... 504 Annual Tables...... Annual Report of the Committee for Foreign ; Subscribers to General Missions...... Missions to the Board of Managers...... 505 ' Act of Incorporation...... The Fourteenth Annual Rejiort of the Missionary Missionary Canon...... Bishop of Yedo...... BOAED OF MANAGERS OP THE DOMESTIC AND FOREIGN MISSIONARY SOCIETY

or THE Protestant (Episcopal €l)urd) in tlje 11. S. of America.

All the Bishops of the Church, members ex officio, The Secretaries and Treasurers of the Domestic and Foreign Committees, ex officio, And, appointed by the General Convention of 1880, sitting as the Board of Missions, Rev. John Cotton Smith, D.D. Mr. F. S. Winston. Rev. Henry C. Potter, D.D. Mr. J. C. Garthwaite. Rev. H. Dyer, D.D. Mr. George N. Titus. Rev. Charles H. Hall, D.D. Mr. Cornelius Vanderbilt. Rev. Noah Hunt Sclienck, D.D. Mr. William Scott. Rev. E. A. HofEman, D.D. Mr. Charles R. Marvin. Rev. William N. McVickar. Mr. William G. Low. Rev. George Leeds, D.D. Hon. Benjamin Stark. Rev. J. Livingston Reese, D.D. Mr. Lemuel Coffin. Rev. J. H. Eccleston, D.D. Hon. H. P. Baldwin. Rev. Thomas F. Davies, D.D. Mr. R. Fulton Cutting. Rev. James Saul, D.D. Mr. Howard Potter. Rev. William Tatlock. D.D. Mr. Joseph W. Fuller. Rev. S. H. Tyng, Jr., D.D. Hon. John A. King. Mr. C. M. Conyngham.

R e v . A. T. TWING, D.D., Secretary o f the Board.

R e v . A. T. TWING, D.D., Secretary, R e v . JOSHUA KIMBER, Secretary, Mr. LLOYD W. WELLS, Treasurer, Mr. JAMES M. BROWN, Treasurer, FOR DOMESTIC MISSIONS, FOR FOREIGN MISSIONS, 22 Bible House, N. Y. 23 Bible House, N. Y.

S t a t e d M e e t i n g s .— In the City of , at 2 o’clock P. M., on the second Tuesday of December, March, June, and September.

REPORTS OF COMMITTEES, AUXILIARIES, &c.

T h e undersigned, a Special Committee of the Board of Managers appointed to supervise the publication of Annual Reports, with great pleasure present to the Church, the following record of her General Missionary work during the year ending September 1st, 1881. The pleasure arises in a large degree from the fact that, in the matter of finances, the year, as the Reports of the Committees show, was the most prosperous in all the history of the Domestic and Foreign Missionary Society. There is also occasion for joy and devout thanksgiving in the consideration that the work in the field, at home and abroad, has steadily progressed, and gives increasing promise of most encouraging results. Little need be said here upon either of these two points, as the Reports themselves are full and clear. Three Missionary Conferences have been held since the last Annual Reports were issued, one in Trenton, J., one in Rochester, N. Y ., and one 438 REPORTS OF COMMITTEES, AUXILIARIES, dr.. in New Haven, Conn. Mention of the first two has already been made in T h e

S p i r i t o f M is s io n s . At the third the sermon was preached by the Eight Reverend the Missionary Bishop of Northern Texas, who also made one of the addresses. The other speakers were the Right Reverend the Bishop of Connec­ ticut, the Rev. Cortlandt Whitehead D.D ., Bethlehem, Pa. ; the Rev. E. E. Johnson, of Trinity College, Hartford, Conn.; the Rev. Orlando Witherspoon, of Birmingham, Conn.; the Rev. G. W. Douglas, of New Y o r k ; the Rev. James Haughton, of Yonkers, N. Y.; the Rev. A. C. Bunn, M.D., formerly of Wuchang, China; Mr. R. Fulton Cutting, of Brooklyn, N. Y .; the Rev. C. IL Malcom, D.D., Corresponding Secretary of the American Church Building Fund Commission ; the Rev. Abbott Brown, Secretary of the Mexican League, and the Secretaries of the Domestic and Foreign Committees. At each of the three Missionary Conferences mentioned, valuable services were rendered by the Local Committees in the several places. The Systematic Offering Plan has thus far resulted in the setting forth of pastoral letters on the subject by twenty-four Bishops and in the manifestation of a certain measure of interest in thirty Dioceses. Twelve hundred Subscription Books have been sent out in response to requests for the same. Twenty-four hundred and ninety names of subscribers have been sent in for publication and are given in this volume, the amount of contributions received from these sub­ scribers being $3,706.06. It should be remembered, however, that many books have probably been used in parishes from whence considerable returns have been made without mentioning that the money was raised under this plan. It seems proper to state here that Archdeacon Kirkby, of whose appoint­ ment notice has been given in T h e S p i r i t o f M is s io n s , has arrived in this country and entered upon his work, and that the welcome thus far accorded him is all that could possibly be desired. His whole time will be given to the visitation of Parishes in behalf of the Domestic and Foreign Missions under the care of the Board of Managers.

J o h n C o t t o n S m it h ,

R. F u l t o n C u t t in g ,

C. V a n d e r b i l t ,

A . T . T w i n g ,

J o s h u a K i m b e r . THE FORTY-SIXTH ANNUAL REPORT OF THE COMMITTEE FOR DOMESTIC MISSIONS:

Being the Fourth to the Board of Managers of the Domestic and Foreign Missionary Society of the Protestant Episcopal Church.

T h e Missionary attitude and action Altogether, the meetings of the new of the General Convention of 1880, and great Board were as a divine re­ sitting as the Board of Missions, freshment, coming after long waiting marked an epoch in the endeavors of and craving and many prayers, and un­ this Church to perpetuate and extend folding into devout thankfulness, assur­ her life and influence in these United ed hopefulness, strong courage and res­ States and Territories. The Mission­ olute resolve to move forward on the ary thought was more in the mind of plain lines of duty and promise. The that great representative body than in harvest of that sowing has not yet been that of any one of its numerous prede­ wholly garnered. It was a sowing for cessors, and the Missionary sentiment perennial harvests. The sowing is more in its heart. No such Mission­ not yet at an end. There will be other ary meetings were ever held on this sessions of the great Board. Fresh continent as those convened during the Missionary thoughts will be struck out; sessions of that Convention, embracing the old ones will be expanded and its entire membership and as many corrected if need require. The dis­ others as the great church would hold. cussions of practical and vital topics, That those who had bean appointed once opened and thoroughly enjoyed leaders in our vast outlying Missionary by the ablest and best men among us, Districts had proved themselves worthy will be resumed from time to time, and and wise leaders, the right men in the a broader and deeper thoughtfulness right places, went home as a clear and will be inspired. The representative strong conviction to thousands of minds, laity of the Church, coming together and settled as a welcome and joyful from all parts of the country, will more sentiment into thousands of hearts, dur­ and more clearly understand their rela­ ing the progress of those meetings. tions to the whole business of evangeli­ The addresses of our Missionary Bish­ zation and the duties growing out of ops were pertinent and earnest, con­ those relations. In this class reside vincing and eloquent to a degree that great powers for good yet to be evoked left no scope for adverse criticism. and utilized—powers touched by, and Never before had so many and such comprehended in, the great Commis­ members of this Church been, for days, sion to go and subdue the world to so engaged in considering and discuss­ C h k is t . If this be forecasting in the ing the Missionary elements, aspects garb and style of prophecy, it finds its and opportunities of that portion of the ample justification, if not in the open, Kingdom of G od set up in this land. emphatic utterances, yet certainly in 440 REPORT OF THE DOMESTIC COMMITTEE. the whole tone and spirit of the last summer, of which it is thought fitting meetings of the Board of Missions. to make a formal record in this Report: The signs of the times are hopeful, one of a thousand, the other of thir­ The sowing is not yet at an end, but teen thousand and two hundred dollars. there has been good harvesting during Silent thanks were offered to G o d , and the year, better than ever before, largely, a silent prayer that He would move no doubt, the product of the good seed others of His children to go and do sown last October. likewise. The receipts of the year, including The cost of conducting the work— legacies and specials, — the former commonly called central expenses—has amounting to $37,100.13, the latter to been fou r and a little more than one- $4:0,333,05— are $220,593.29, and, ex­ tenth per cent, o f the receipts. In other cluding both, $143,160.11. In only words, ninety-six cents of every dollar one year have the specials been larger received, lacking less than two mills, than those now reported, in 1875, when have been sent, or will be sent, to the they were a little more than $42,000. workers in the field. The legacies are about $10,000 in ex­ On the whole, the Committee think cess of those of any previous year. The they may very properly regard this part amount of appropriations was $167,900; of the operations and work of the year Avhile the receipts from legacies, offer­ with a feeling of sincere satisfaction, ings in churches, individual gifts and and devout thankfulness to G o d , whose other sources, are $13,260.24 in excess helping hand and S p i r i t , influencing of those figures. The total receipts, the minds and hearts of His children, available for the purposes of the Com­ they desire most fully and reverently to mittee, are in advance of those of the recognize. And, as people like to be previous year by $35,894.90, and, in­ connected with and help a rising and cluding specials, $55,320.21. advancing, more than a retrograding or Individual gifts are becoming more stationary cause, as well as for other numerous, as well as frequently more and better reasons, they confidently significant in amount, than they for­ hope for and expect a greater degree of merly were. Sometimes they are des­ prosperity in the year now opening than ignated as “ thank-offerings ” for mer­ was vouchsafed in that just closed. The cies received. Then again, they are Committee for Domestic Missions have accompanied by tender and loving a constituency that any executive body words, indicating dearly cherished mem­ might well be proud of and thankful ories of departed ones; and sometimes for, and it is a constituency that is con­ they are laid down in silence on the stantly enlarging, and constantly tak­ Secretary’s table, with only appearance ing to itself those elements and quali­ to raise the thought that they are in ties that aim at and achieve success. one way or another the product of be­ The time has not come, however, reavement and sorrow. They are when there can be, with propriety or precious gifts peculiarly fitted, it would safety, any folding of arms or rest of seem, to accomplish that whereunto mind. The thought of relaxed effort they are sent. Two of this general must not for a moment be anywhere class were received during the past entertained. The business of Mission- REPORT OF TEE DOMESTIC COMMITTEE. 441 ary Education, reaching to, moulding ress of the year. It was a well-consid­ and directing the best powers of Chris­ ered and resolute advance movement, tian manhood, must be everywhere made in faith—faith in G od, and in urged forward. The duty of cultivat­ the ability and willingness of this ing the true Missionary spirit that takes Church to provide the additional sup­ men and women out of themselves, and plies it would inevitably call for. If sets them to thinking, working and there has been unfavorable criticism, praying in the interest of others, must charging presumption for virtual be more and more earnestly and per­ pledges of help without the means in suasively proclaimed. The possible hand with which to redeem them, it uses of wealth in building up and set­ has been so slight and feeble as to be ting forward the Kingdom of C h r i s t , without effect. The unexpected in­ and so of ministering to the most urgent crease of supplies may be undoubtedly needs of mankind, must be held forth regarded as witnessing, in no faint way. with the highest degree of clearness to the almost universal and deeply and force. There are exhaustless Divine cordial recognition of that forward powers, ever ready to be drawn upon, movement as wise and necessary. Carp­ but their full helpfulness is not to be ing and chilling words about imposed realized to give value or comeliness to additional burdens our people have the indifference and indolence of those not uttered. On the contrary, appar­ who are under vows to render faithful ently admitting their share in the and life-long servi ce. 0 n ly when C h ris- responsibility of the venture, they tians are vigilant and doing the best have acquitted themselves accord- they can, is G od so among them as to inglv. turn their weakness into strength, and The three Bishops-elect were conse­ make success signal and complete. In­ crated early in the year, and started stead of less, there must be more soon thereafter for their respective thoughtfulness, more gathering of in­ fields. How they were received, in formation, more downright study of what condition they found the work to the work in its broad expanse, in its which they were sent, and what its principles, methods and aims—more prospects and needs are, will doubtless accurate measuring of ability, more giv­ be fully set forth in their first Annual ing, and, to make all this certain, effect­ Reports, which, with those of the other ive, and pleasant, more praying than Missionary Bishops, will appear as an ever before. The laurels already won appendix to this document. in this service, though not notably The number of Missionary Bishops numerous or significant, may serve for in the Domestic Department of the inspiration and encouragement; but service is now thirteen. Hitherto the those to rest upon, if there be any in general Church has provided the means the life that now is, are yet to be toiled for their support, and to defray their for. traveling expenses within their Juris­ The action of the General Conven­ dictions, without any charge upon the tion of 1880 in electing three Presby­ people to whom they minister. It is ters to the Missionary Episcopate may evident that this arrangement can not not be omitted in reviewing the prog- be, and ought not to be, regarded as 442 REPORT OF THE DOMESTIC COMMITTEE. permanent. To allow it to run on in­ system; it is in and for the service, definitely would be in contravention the benefit, of those who have, believe of the common usage of this Church, in and enjoy it,and upon such, sooner founded on the principle that those or later, and as soon as the ability ex­ who enjoy the benefits of the Episco­ ists, devolves the duty of its partial or pate are properly and justly chargeable entire support, as in the case of the with its support. other orders of the Ministry. Besides, Four of these Bishops have been in aid continued and relied upon beyond the service twelve or more years, one its real occasion or need, not only parts eleven years, two eight years, three with its intrinsic beauty and value, but seven years, and three a little less than becomes positively hurtful in fostering one year. With some of the Jurisdic­ narrowness of mind and heart in those to tions the time is manifestly too short whom it is extended, postponing the to justify the presentation to the few time of adequate self-helpfulness, and and scattered people of the question of with it the dignity and joy of such a their taking any part in the support of recognised and accepted condition of the Episcopate, while, in the case of Church life. others, it is believed the time has come There would seem to be no valid and when this question should be raised sufficient reason why capacity to help, and thoughtfully considered, both with in the line of these suggestions, as it is reference to the duty of the general developed in the Missionary Districts Church, and the duty and interest of proper, should not be utilized as well the people most intimately concerned. as in the weaker Dioceses,of which there The Committee for Domestic Missions is a considerable number. It is thought venture to suggest that it would be wise that a sliding or graduated scale, reduc­ for the Board of Managers to refer this ing, after a certain number of years, whole subject to the custody of a spe­ the amount paid by the general cial committee, consisting of Bishops, Church for the support of the Mission­ Presbyters and Laymen, for considera­ ary Episcopate, may be so framed and tion and report. presented as to prove acceptable to the The thought is not thus suggested, people, who will thus be expected, at as it is not for a moment entertained, stated periods, with due regard to their that the salaries of the Missionary ability, to take at least a share of the Bishops, provided by the general burden of which they have been and Church, are at all in excess of their are now wholly exempt. deservings or needs, or out of propor­ The portion of the work belonging tion to the service they render. There to, and always performed in, the open is much in the office and service of the and broad field, and in the interest of Ministry in all three of its orders, the which all else is done, has been faithfully value of which is wholly outside of and and steadily prosecuted in the thirteen above any possible measurement of Missionary Jurisdictions, and in thirty money. But this is not the question. Dioceses, by three hundred and eighty- The Episcopate is not for the rounding one Missionaries, other than the Bish­ out and full setting forth of a theory, ops. A complete list of names and ad­ nor for the completed ornament of a dresses will be appended to this Report. REPORT OF TEE DOMESTIC COMMITTEE. 448

It is not always easy, indeed, it is military action, seventy or eighty from often very hard, to get money for Mis­ the wildest and most ungovernable of sion work, but when once in hand, its the tribes in that Territory were cap­ amount and value can be readily and tured and transferred to a United certainly stated. 1’t is otherwise with States fort in Florida, where, under a the actual work itself. In the distant Christian soldier, they were taught Territories or Dioceses, or elsewhere, many of the elementary lessons of civ­ good men work on for a twelye-month, ilization and religion. About three patiently and hard, and possibly under years since, on the occasion of their discouragement and trial. All this is release, a few expressed the wish to re­ easily enough stated, easily enough un­ main longer among Christian people, derstood. A certain number of Servi­ and learn more of the white man’s ces are held at one point and another; ways. At that time, Mrs. M. D. so many persons are baptized, so many Burnham, widely known for her Mis­ confirmed, there are so many communi­ sionary zeal and efficiency, happened to cants, so many children are gathered be in Florida for the improvement of in Sunday-schools with so many teach­ her health. Having obtained the con­ ers, and so on. Here, again, statement sent of her Bishop, the Et. Rev. Dr. is easy, and comprehension is not diffi­ Huntington, she brought four of the cult. When, however, certain progress, number desiring to remain longer assured, real success, is the subject of among civilized people, to Central New study in Mission life and work, sta­ York, one of them having been, at the tistics are, at their best, apt to be de­ begining of his imprisonment, so fierce fective and misleading, as not covering and savage that it was all but thought the whole ground. The Committee necessary that he should be shot. require, receive, and try to estimate They were subsequently received into them at their true value ; but they have the family of a noble Presbyter, the more confidence in a reasonable assur­ Rev. John B. Wicks, of Paris Hill, ance of conscientious, wise and untir­ who became their teacher and friend, ing fidelity on the part of the workers, and almost father. The money for their and this assurance regarding those in support was raised through the in­ the field during the year, they take strumentality of Mrs. Burnham and great pleasure in recording. They have the branch of the Woman’s Auxiliary in been faithful and diligent sowers of that Diocese. One of the number died, the good seed. The harvest will come and one, after a while, went to Carlisle, in its time, and will be gathered with Pa., to learn a trade. The other two, in songs of gladness and praise. June last, at Syracuse, were by Bishop During the past summer new work Huntington admitted to the Order of has been undertaken in the Indian Ter­ Deacons in the Church of G od, one of ritory. The story is a long one, and them being the very man whom it had reads as though it were a page from the been thought next to impossible to records of the early conflicts and con­ tame. quests of Christianity. In the fulness of On the day of their Ordination, ac­ its details it may not be given here. Suf­ companied by their companion from fice it to say that some seven years ago, in Carlisle, and all under the care of their 444 REPORT OF THE DOMESTIC COMMITTEE. friend and teacher, who had given up in the spirit of thankfulness in relation his parish and family for a year to go to the past and of trust for the future and instruct and help them in their — thankfulness, first of all and above Missionary work, they started for their all, to God, without whose constant old home in the Indian Territory, where blessing nothing would have been well they were received with the warmest and worthily done, and then to H is welcome and the most cheering hopes children, whose thoughtful and timely of success. The Domestic Committee helpfulness has been more abundant have pledged $1,000 for one year toward than ever before— and trust, supreme their support, the balance of which in Him, and then unfaltering in them. will be supplied by those who have This Church has outlived, and, better aided them hitherto. From a begin­ yet, has consciously outlived the day of ning in every way so remarkable and small things in her Missionary aptitude auspicious, it is hoped and believed and capability. In both regards, she is that many and great blessings will now strong—very strong— stronger, in- come to the Indian tribes of that por­ indeed, than she fully knows. Her tion of the field hitherto unreached by need, to fill the future with triumphant the ministratioDS of our Church. success, is twofold— a clear and deep The Treasurer’s Eeport, and other conviction of her ability, and then the tables and statements that follow it, unreserved consecration of it to the give in detail all the information that upbuilding of the Kingdom of C h r is t , can be reasonably desired by the Board her L o r d , in this land. of Managers and the many other friends Eespectfully submitted, of our Domestic Mission work, regard­ A. T. Twing, Secretary. ing the situation at the close of the year. Mission R ooms, 22 Bible H ouse, The Committee conclude this Eeport N ew Yobk, September 1st, 1881.

Committee for Domestic Missions. The Rt. Rev. A. N. LITTLEJOHN, D.D., LL.D., Chairman. Rev. George Leeds, D.D., Mr. G. N. Titus, “ Henry C. Potter, D.D., “ William Scott, “ N. H. Schenek, D.D., “ H. P. Baldwin. “ T. F. Davies, D.D., “ J. C. Garthwaite, “ J. L. Reese, D.D., “ W. G. Low, “ William N. McVickar, “ Lloyd W. Wells, “ James Saul, D.D., “ Benjamin Stark, “ S. H. Tyng, Jr., D.D., “ John A. King. “ A. T. Twing, D.D.. Rev. A T . T w i n s , D.D., Secretary, Mr. L l o y d W . W e l l s , Treasurer, 22 Bible House, New York. 22 Bible House, New York. ’

Form of a Bequest to Domestic Missions. I give, devise, and bequeath, to the Domestic and Foreign Missionary Society o f the Protestant Episcopal Church in the o f America, for Domestic Missions...... •...... - ... Should it be desired, the words can be added: To be used fo r work among the Indians, or fo r work among Colored People...... REP OUT OF THE DOMESTIC COMMITTEE. 445

LEGACIES. Albany, Troy...... Estate of Miss Fanny E. Tuttle. . . . . $1,825 84 Central New York, Auburn...... Mrs. Laura Williams...... 375 00 Central , Y ork ...... Miss Juliana Clark...... 29 55 Connecticut, Hartford...... Chester A dam s...... 9 GO “ New Haven...... Lucy Nichols...... 9 60 “ New Milford...... Miss Cornelia E. Boardman 10,000 00 “ Pine Meadow...... Mrs. C. N. Chapin (of which in­ terest $60), St. John’s Church. 110 00 Long Island, Brooklyn Mr. Harry Messenger...... 5,000 00 Glen Cove...... Bequest of Mrs. Elizabeth T. Somarindyke of which to Woman’s Auxiliary $500 ($250 appropriated to salary of Mrs. Miles, Va., and $250 to salary of Mrs. Jackson)...... 1,750 00 Greenpoint...... Estate of E. N. W ood 86 30 Maryland, Baltimore. Mrs. Henrietta Bolton...... 102 35 Massachusetts, Newton. Mrs. Mary C. Baury...... 83 83 New York, New York . Commodore Graham...... 2,670 02 Mrs. W ilkins...... 1.500 00 Robert Barfe...... 144 51 Caroline Jones...... 171 87 Northern New Jersey, Jersey C ity .. Miss Sarah Randolph, St. Mat­ thew’s Church...... 250 00 Ohio, Granville. Rev. Alvah Sanford...... 1,650 00 Mrs. Clarissa Sanford...... 9,641 00 Rhode Island...... Mr. Henry Codman...... 1.500 00 Western New York, Rochester. Allen Ayrault (of which interest $32.16)...... 191 66

$37,100 13

TREASURER’S REPORT. L lo y d W. W e lls , Treasurer, in account with the Domestic Committee of the Board of M a n a g e r s . RECEIPTS. 1880. 8ept 1st. To Cash on hand, as per Treasurer’s Report, depos­ ited in Bank...... $10,178 28 1881. Sept. 1st. Received for General Purposes, from Collections and Contributions...... 111,169 48 From Legacies, for General Purposes...... 25,059 13 “ Balance of Interest on Investments...... 1,695 28 “ Subscriptions Young Christian Soldier and Carrier Dove, $20,764.65, less payments for the paper during the year $20,663.18 _ 101 47 ‘ 1 Mite Chests not credited to Parishes..... 144 28 For Indian Missions, of which from Legacies, $6,552.69...... 30,374 90 “ Missions among Colored ^People, of which from Legacies, $3,838.33...... 11,023 06 “ Indian Missions, Interest on Investments.. . 135 66 “ “ U. S. Government D raft. .. 1,213 08 “ “ Bishop Whipple Hospital Fund (interest)...... 650 17 “ Special Purposes...... 40,333 05 “ Endowment of “ Ivy Lyons ” Scholarship... 500 00 ------$232,577 84 446 REPORT OF THE DOMESTIC COMMITTEE.

EXPEND ITtTRES. Missions among White People in Thirteen Missionary Jurisdictions andd Twenty-eight Dioceses. 1881. Stipends. Specials. Total. Sept. 1st. By Cash paid Arkansas...... *$4,266 66 $ 50 30 $4,316 96 Colorado and Wyoming ...... *6,537 07 3,999 38 10,536 45 M ontana...... *2,720 83 836 75 3,557 58 Nebraska and Dakota...... *7,354 19 1,460 17 8,814 36 N evada...... *3,291 66 763 50 4,055 16 New Mexico and Arizona...... *2,658 34 848 31 3,506 65 Northern California...... *3,952 36 100 00 4,052 36 Northern Texas...... *4,341 78 712 61 5,054 39 Western Texas...... *4,534 31 3,526 01 8,060 32 O regon...... *5,305 38 5,329 11 10,634 49 Washington Territory...... *1,143 60 260 00 1.403 60 Utah and Idaho...... *5,249 99 5,039 13 10,289 12 Niobrara, Black Hills...... 833 32 550 00 1,083 32 Outfits...... 775 00 775 00 Travelling Expenses of Miss’y B’ps. 8,865 74 3,865 74 Alabama...... 391 66 ••••••«• 391 66 California...... 1,254 16 100 60 1,354 76 Florida...... 1,408 32 191 00 1,599 32 Fond du Lac...... 933 33 112 06 1,045 89 Georgia...... 741 67 541 12 1,282 79 Indiana...... 799 99 50 00 849 99 Iowa...... 1,999 98 2,550 00 4,549 98 TTansa.s...... 3,420 82 612 16 4,032 98 K entucky...... 760 40 760 40 Louisiana...... 441 67 23 50 465 17 Maine...... 2,625 01 365 10 2,990 11 Maryland...... 100 00 100 00 Michigan...... 1,182 15 1,182 15 Minnesota...... 3,875 01 1,077 44 4,952 45 Mississippi...... 1,183 33 45 82 1,229 15 Missouri...... 1,436 66 1,436 66 New Hampshire...... 2,012 49 25 00 2,037 49 North Carolina...... 799 99 23 50 823 49 Ohio...... 275 00 275 00 Quincy...... 708 33 ...... 708 33 South Carolina...... 845 08 120 91 965 99 Springfield...... 1,604 19 30 00 1,634 19 Tennessee...... 681 65 62 00 693 65 Texas...... 429 04 429 04 Virginia...... 1,495 64 1,495 64 Western Michigan...... 1,181 32 1,181 32 West Virginia...... 458 33 458 38 Wisconsin...... 790 59 20 00 810 59 Miscellaneous Specials...... 3,607 37 3,607 37

$89,020 40 $34,328 49 $123,848 89

* Including Bishop’s Salary, $3,000. REPORT OF THE DOMESTIC COMMITTEE. 447

Missions among Indians. By Cash pa id: Niobrara—Bishop’s Salary...... $3,000 00 Santee...... 5,042 50 Yankton...... 7,128 50 Lower Brule...... 1,268 00 Yanktonnais...... 1,558 00 Red Cloud...... 176 00 Cheyenne...... 4,254 00 "Flandreau...... 120 00 Hope School...... 2,275 00 Pine R idge...... 2,574 00 Rosebud...... 1,703 18 Sisseton A gency...... 130 00 Trust Fund Committee...... 248 75 Niobrara Store Room (Specials)...... 20 00 Printing ...... 27 34 Insurance...... 222 50 Protecting Property...... 222 71 Travelling Expenses and Incidentals...... 2,446 75 Painting...... 25 00 Telegrams...... 4 68 Specials...... 1,237 53 U. S. Government Draft...... 1,213 08 Minnesota—White Earth...... 3,547 58 Mission to the Sioux...... 661 36 Fond du Lac—Oneida...... 498 92 ------$39,605 38

Missions among Colored People. By Cash paid Florida...... 183 33 Georgia...... 625 00 Louisiana...... 333 33 Maryland...... 1,362 49 Mississippi...... 333 34 Missouri...... 458 33 North Carolina...... 3,258 32 South Carolina...... 929 92 Tennessee...... 916 66 V irginia...... 3,420 83 ------11,821 55

Central Expenses. By Cash paid Secretary and Assistant...... 3,600 00 Assistant Treasurer...... 900 00 Rent of Mission Room s...... 1,021 50 Office Expenses...... 1,13716 Printing for use of Office...... 11310 Traveling Expenses...... 193 73 Mite Chest Expenses...... 232 76 Legacy Expenses...... 244 33 ------7,442 58 448 REPORT OF THE DOMESTIC COMMITTEE.

Cost of Making Work Known to the Church. By Spirit op Mission, Extra Pages...... 224 94 Miscellaneous Publications...... 830 77

1,055 71 Less Amount defrayed by the Stated Publications, 1,000 00 ------55 71 Board of Managers’ Expenses...... 477 75 Woman’s Auxiliary to the Board of Missions 798 36. Systematic Offering Plan Expenses...... 368 97 1,645 08 Outside Payments. Balance paid on Loans...... 9 33 Cash in Bank...... 48,649 32 48,658 65

$232,577 84 Mr. W. L. Matson, of Hartford, holds deeds of real estate in Hartford, Conn., valued, when received from Chester Adams’ estate, at $11,000, which is held in trust for the Do- mestic and Foreign Committees of the Board. The investments and stocks of the Committee are as follows : Jersey City Water Loan, 7 per cent...... $10,000 00 1 Bond of City of New York, ditto...... 9,500 00 Donation to the Committee of uncertain value : 12 40-100 shares St. Louis, Iron Mountain and Southern R. R., par value $1,240...... 1,240 00 The Treasurer holds 42 shares at the par value of $4,200 of United New Jersey Railroad and Canal Co., donated by the Rev. James Saul, D.D., of Philadelphia...... 4,200 00 1 note of J. W . Conger & Co., Jan. 27th, 1880,at 2 years... 2,918 75 The undersigned Auditing Committee of the Board of Managers have examined the preceding accounts and compared them with the vouchers, and believe them to be cor­ rect. C. R. M a r v in , F. S. W in s t o n , New York, 4th Oct., 1881 Auditing Committee.

Receipts fo r Domestic Missions fo r 1831 and Three Previous Tears from the Several Dioceses and Missionary Jurisdictions.

DIOCESE, ETC. 1878. 1879. 1880. 1881.

Alabama...... , ...... $130 70 $92 25 $110 75 $157 87 Albany...... 2,478 13 2,151 67 2,397 80 2,510 66 Arkansas...... 120 80 27 15 10 15 84 91 California...... 377 43 292 39 432 52 195 51 Central New York...... 2,511 68 2,825 89 2,249 91 2,367 22 “ Pennsylvania...... 1.1K0 50 1,453 48 1,573 94 2,287 11 Colorado...... 108 50 59 82 60 85 203 51 Connecticut...... 8,124 36 5,900 77 7,493 86 11,675 47 Dakota...... 12 45 11 22 13 30 4 01 Delaware...... 315 91 466 33 710 63 555 36 Easton...... 151 33 99 91 187 35 118 35 Florida...... 176 58 7 04 123 22 21 61 Fond du Lac...... 76 74 50 06 103 92 9 23 REPORT OF THE DOMESTIC COMMITTEE. 449

AMOUNT CONTRIBUTED IN DIOCESE, ETC. 1878. 1879. 1880. 1881.

France...... 19 00 5 00 105 00 Georgia...... 144 74 261 33 313 37 130'74 Idaho...... 11 75 36 10 Illinois...... 715 18 423 00 335 85 265 54 Indiana...... 198 98 206 31 260 19 232 68 Iowa...... 141 45 206 91 146 97 81 15 Italy...... 81 50 24 70 Japan...... 86 87 37 42 131 42 84 64 Kansas...... 56 60 49 20 92 55 93 40 Kentucky...... 384 78 342 33 488 08 486 34 Liberia...... 2 35 Long Island...... 10,343 62 13,263 24 14,213 19 15,888 37 Louisiana...... 236 85 78 50 143 72 101 30 Maine...... 191 26 112 61 292 71 96 08 Maryland...... 4,583 3 5,307 51 5,601 46 5,535 74 Massachusetts...... 3,990 47 5,299 22 6,262 75 8,738 30 Michigan...... 1,216 61 755 06 1,235 65 1,642 67 Minnesota...... 680 93 152 96 456 36 145 66 Mississippi...... 216 01 132 38 178 43 62 65 Missouri...... 390 82 307 83 363 50 672 23 Montana...... 97 15 68 70 147 06 151 20 Nebraska...... 586 85 324 23 180 04 108 95 New Hampshire...... 169 38 259 58 434 02 211 36 New Jersey...... 1,422 21 1,509 43 2,044 16 1,867 40 New Mexico...... 60 00 6 35 19 00 New York...... 36,983 38 41,463 50 45,854 44 69,902 46 Nevada...... 474 CO 101 40 67 55 162 00 Niobrara...... 9 15 74 39 73 79 66 84 North Carolina...... 501 83 526 60 507 93 424 30 Northern California...... 59 60 3 18 10 00 “ New Jersey...... 2,321 48 1,821 70 1,751 86 2,352 01 Texas...... 59 90 19 75 71 60 54 85 Ohio...... 1,174 88 1,270 27 1,451 97 2,445 49 Oregon...... 358 55 355 52 169 35 93 75 Pennsylvania...... 15,298 51 20,525 22 19,985 19 22,629 96 Pittsburgh...... 780 92 1,172 59 1,709 67 2,211 26 Quincy...... 85 58 98 87 106 13 43 40 Rhode Island 1,614 13 2,272 09 4,594 OS 5,710 08 South Carolina...... 235 92 343 30 326 73 173 03 Southern Ohio...... 1,176 58 1,467 47 1,775 61 2,524 38 Springfield...... 33 91 67 73 70 87 92 08 Tennessee...... 142 36 89 SO 158 46 60 75 Texas...... 33 20 180 73 94 78 100 00 Utah...... 173 47 255 60 195 64 239 88 Vermont... 362 62 321 88 393 07 379 12 Virginia...... 676 00 644 67 841 31 913 32 Washington Territory...... 143 24 38 35 86 50 67 80 Westem Michigan...... 327 65 337 37 427 42 292 54 “ New York...... 2,206 83 2,501 98 3,903 36 3,144 24 “ Texas...... 95 97 33 75 42 55 15 35 West Virginia...... 104 44 105 05 167 88 W isconsin. 129 05 247 50 199 33 143 35 Wyoming...... 8 57 17 40 2 51 Legacies. ... 17,241 50 23,648 32 26,241 34 37,100 13 Miscellaneous...... 4,082 19 6,181 52 4,672 69 3,245 19 Proportion of General Mission Offerings. 5,290 54 ** 8,738 25 Mite Chests not credited to Parishes...... 876 97 751 44 583 32 142 28 Missions among Colored People...... 14,300 38 “ Indians...... 34,555 09

Totals...... $178,181 31 $*154,845 42 f $165,273 08 $|220,593 29 * Of which for Indian Missions, $30,832.72; and for Missions among Colored People, $13,2X5.15. i Of which for Indian Missions, $28,992.95; and for Missions among Colored People, $9,603.72. Î Of which for Indian Missions, $31,160.73; and for Missions among Colored People, $11,023.06. ** In 1880 amounts from this source were included in the receipts from different Dioceses. DOMESTIC MISSIONARIES

Receiving Stipends from the Domestic Committee during the whole or a part of the year from September ist, 1880, to September 1st, 1881.

MISSIONARIES TO WHITE PEOPLE.

ALABAMA. Rev. J. L. Strong...... Chariton MONTANA. Under Rt. Rev. R. H. W ilmf.r , D.D. Rev. W. T eam e...... Fort Madison Under Rt. Rev. L. R. Brew er, D.D. Rev. C. E. Cabanias...... Huntsville KANSAS. Rev. S. C. Blackiston Fort Benton Rev. F. B. Lee...... Minter’s Station Under Rt. Rev. T. H. Va il , D.D. Rev. F. B. Lewis...... Bozeman Rev. B. F. Mower...... Florence Rev. R. S. Adams...... Ottawa Rev. E. G. Prout...... Virginia City Rev. J. F. S m ith ...... Talladega Rev. John Bennett...... Wyandotte Rev. George Stewart...... Missoula Rev. De B. W addell...... Clayton Rev. Alfred Brown North Topeka NEBRASKA ARKANSAS, Rev. J. T. Carpenter...... Burlington Under Rt. Rev. R. H. Clarkson, D.D. Under Rt. R ev. H. N. P ierce, D.D. Rev. G. P. Com ings...... Girard Rev. H. B. Burgess...... Plattsmouth R ev. I .O . A d a m s...... Camden Rev. C. H. Canfield...... Winfield Rev. T. E. D ickey...... Nebraska City Rev. C. A. B ruce...... Helena Rev. L. DeLew, D.D...... Wichita Rev. George Greene...... “ “ Rev. P. A. Johnson...... Conway Rev. I. M. F rey...... Independence Rev. W . A Greene...... Omaha Rev. Geo. Moore...... Hope Rev. B. H artley...... F ort Scott Rev. W. Greenwood...... Hastings Rev. J. A. Matthews...... Van Buren Rev. H. H. Hewitt...... Clay Centre Rev. Samuel G oodale...... Columbus Rev. J. J. V aulx...... Fayetteville Rev. W. H. H iokox...... Wakefield Rev. M. Henry...... Nemaha CALIFORNIA. Rev. L. L Holden...... Williamsburg Rev. W. E. Jacob...... Decatur Under Rt. Rev. W. I. Ki p , D.D. Rev. W. Horsfall...... B a xter Springs Rev. J. McNamara, D.D...... Falls City Rev. John A. E m ery...... Anaheim Rev. R. P. Kendall...... Beloit Rev. J. Paterson...... Omaha Rev. D. O. K elley...... Fresno Rev. J. H. L ee...... Manhattan Rev. J. A. Russell...... Falls City *Rev. W . C. Y ou n g...... San Francisco Rev. J. Newm an...... Hutchinson Rev. H. C. Shaw — ...... Silver Creek COLORADO Rev. R. C. Talbott...... Parsons NEVADA. Under Rt. Rev. J. F. Spalding, D.D. Rev. George Turner...... Hiawatha Under Rt. Rev. 0. W. W h itaker, D.D. Rev. F. B yrne...... Fort Collins Rev. G. R. Davis...... Carson Rev. E. S. Cross...... Ouray KENTUCKY. Rev. W. R. Jenvey...... Reno Under Rt. Rev. B. B. Smith, D.D. Rev. A. D. Drummond Lake City Rev. R. S. Eastman...... Austin Rt. Rev. T. TJ. Dudley, D.D., NEW HAMPSHIRE. Rev. E. H. G aynor...... Peublo Assistant Bishop. Rev. John Gray...... Greeley Rev. G. W . Flowers...... Fulton Under Rt. Rev. W. W. Niles, D.D. Rev. C. M. H og e...... Durango Rev. C. H. L ockw ood...... Proctor Rev. W. H. Burbank...... Woodsville Rev. R. W. Jones Colorado Springs Rev. C. L. P in d a r...... Dayton Rev. W. C. Dawson ...... Hanover Rev. G. T. Le Boutillier. Colorado Springs Rev. N. H. Burnham ...... Pittsfield Rev. W . J. L ynd...... Ouray Rev. George Rogers Bowling Green Rev. E. P. Little...... Lancaster Rev. H. Mitchell...... Pitlcin LOUISIANA. Rev. J. Le R ov ...... Nashua Rev. O. E. Ostensen...... Denver U nder Rt. Rov. J. N. Galleh er, D.D. Rev. H. A Remick...... Goffstovm Rev. D. C. Pattee...... Canon City Rev. C. Cam eron...... Natchitoches NEW MEXICO. Rev. J. T. P rotheroe...... Nevadaville Rev. R. C. Cleburne...... New Iberia, Under Rt. Rev. G. K. Dunlop, D.D. Rev. M. F. Sorenson...... Littleton Rev. John Philson...... Rosedale Rev. A. H. Boyle...... Raton Rev. G. C. R a fter...... Golden Rev. A. J. Tardy...... New Orleans Rev. H. Forrester...... Albuquerque Rev. T. V. W ilson ...... Boulder Rev. Oliver Wilson...... Cheneyville Rev. J. McNamara, D.D...... Las Vegas DAKOTA. MAINE. NIOBRARA. Under Rt. Rev. R. H. Clarkson, D.D. Under Rt. Rev. H. A. Ne ely, D.D. Under Rt. Rev. W. H. {[ARE, D.D. Rev. T. B. B erry...... Sioux Falls Rev. J. M. Bates...... Waterville Rev. G. C. Pennell, D.D...... Deadvoood Rev. J. V. Him es...... Elk Point Rev. Henry Jones...... Ashland Rev. M. Hoyt, D.D...... Swan Lake Rev. T. Marsden...... D exter NORTH CAROLINA. Rev. W . P. L aw ...... Grand Forks Rev. M. M cLaughlin...... Hallowell Under Rt. Rev. T. B. Lym an, D.D. Rev. John Morris...... Mitchell Rev. G. II. Bell...... Valle Crucis Rev. H. P. Nichols...... Brunsioick Rev. D. H. Buel, D.D Rev. J. R. M orrison...... Dell Rapids Rev. H. Sawyer...... F ort Fairfield ...... Asheville Rev. J. M. McBride...... Eden Rev. J. Buxton, D.D...... “ Rev. K. F. Small...... Waterville ...... Franklin Rev. J. G. Miller...... Bism arck Rev. W. Walker...... Thomaston Rev. J. A. Deal Rev. M. S. Robinson...... Swan Lake Rev. N. Falls...... Old Fort Rev. W. H. Washburn...... Lewiston Rev. I. Harding...... Chocowinitv Rev. D. A. Sanford...... Mitchell Rev. M. H. W ellm an...... Eastport FLORIDA Rev. N. C. H ughes...... Greenville Under Rt. Rev. J. F. Y oung, D.D. MICHIGAN. Rev. R. B. Sutton, D.D...... Louisburg Rev. Juan B. Baez...... K ey West U nder Rt. Rev. S. S. H a rris, D.D. Rev. W. R. Wetmorc...... Lincolnton Rev. E. W . Meany...... Gainesville Rev. John Barrett...... Tanner’s P. O. Rev. R. B. W indley...... Smithville Rev. C. E. M cDougal...... Milton Rev. R. H. Dennis...... Hoicell NORTHERN CALIFORNIA Rev. Lyman Phelps...... Sanford Rev. L. C. R ogers...... Sheboygan Under Rt. Rev. J. H. D. W ingfield, D.D. Rev. C. P. R od efer...... W aldo Rev. E. C. Seym our Sault Ste. Marie Rev. W. S. Cochran...... Vallejo Rev. C. M. Sturges...... Orange Park Rev. James Skinner...... A u Sable Rev. W. Leacock ...... Napa Rev. Oliver Taylor...... “ “ Rev. W. H. Smythe...... Sand Beach Rev. W . S. Neales...... Lakeport Rev. O. P. Thackara...... F em andina Rev. R. W ood ...... Negauuee Rev. W . C. P ow ell...... Nevada City Rev. C. S. W illiam s...... Crescent City MINNESOTA. NORTHERN TEXAS. Rev. C. W . W a rd ...... Maitland Under Rt. Rev. H. B. W h ipple, D.D. Under Rt. Rev. A C. Ga rrett, D.D. Rev. R. H. Weller, Jr...... Ocala Rev. L. F. Cole...... St. Charles Rev. E. G. Benners...... Paris FOND DU LAC. Rev. T. J. Crump...... Litchfield Rev. H. B. Dean...... Weathersford Under Rt. Rev. J. H. H. B rown, D.D. Rev. J. E. H i g g i n s ...... St. Charles Rev. J. F. Ham ilton...... Dallas Rev. W illiam D after...... Oconto Rev. D. G. Gunn...... Windom Rev. J. T. Hutcheson...... Cleburne Rev. J. A Davenport Stevens’ Point Rev. J. J. H illm er...... W inona Rev. T. B. Lawson, D.D...... Bonham Rev. F. Moore...... Ahnapee Rev. T. C. H udson...... Morris Rev. B. L. Newton...... Texarkana Rev. J. A. Upjohn...... Neenah Rev. R. D. Irw in ...... Albert Lea Rev. J. Portm ess...... TerreU GEORGIA. Rev. J. K archer...... Granite Falls Rev. W. W. Patrick...... F ort Worth Under Rt. Rev. J. W. B eckwith, D.D. Rev. E. L iverm ore...... St. Peter Rev. G. E. Purucker...... Sherman Rev. J. Knowles...... Greensboro Rev. S. K. Miller...... Le Sueur Rev. A M. W hitten...... Clarksville Rev. H. Lucas...... Brunsioick Rev. E. L. Petersen...... Faribault OHIO. Rev. G. Macauley...... Atlanta Rev. W. Richmond...... Mankato Under Rt. Rev. G. T. Bedell, D.D. Rev. S. J. Pinkerton...... Marietta Rev. C. R ollit...... E. Minneapolis +Rev. A W . Mann...... Cleveland Rev. H. K. Rees...... Cave Spring Rev. I. J. Townsend...... Blue Earth OREGON. Rev. J. M. Stonev...... Milledgeville Rev. T. W ilcoxson...... Hastings Under Rt. Rev. B. W . Morris, D.D. IDAHO. MISSISSIPPI. Rev. A. P. Anderson...... Eugene City U nder Rt. Rev. D. S. Tuttlf., D.D. Under Rt. Rev. W. M. Greene, D.D. Rev. W . L. McEwan...... Dalles City Rev. F. W. Crook...... Boise City Rev. W. K. Douglas, D.D D ry Grove Rev. B. E. Habersham...... Corvallis INDIANA Rev. R. Hines, D.D...... Meridian Rev. J. R. W . Sellwood...... E. Portland Under Rt. Rev. J. C. Talbot, D.D., Rev. B. Halstead...... Lexington Rev. Thomas Smith...... Cove LL.D. Rev. E. H am vasy...... Sardis Rev. R. L. Stevens...... Albany Rev. T. R. Austin...... Vincennes Rev. Nowell Logan...... P ort Gibson Rev. A W . W rixon...... Canyon City Rev. J. J. Faude...... Plymouth Rev. M. M. M oore...... Rodney QUINCY. Rev. B. T. H all...... Lawrenceburg Rev. R H. Prosser...... Rosedale Under Rt. Rev. A. Burgess, D.D. Rev. S. C. M. Orpen...... Lima Rev. W. Presbury...... Kirkwood Rev. T. L. Alien...... Princeton Rev. W. W. Raymond...... Goshen llev. J. W. Turner...... Woodville Rev. March Chase...... Robins' Nest Rev. A Reeves, M.D...... Worthington MISSOURI. Rev. N. P. Chariot...... Preem ption Rev. R. Totten...... Cannelton Under Rt. Rev. C. F. ROBERTSON, D.D. Rev. John A. F arrar...... Aledo IOWA. Rev. J. W. Dunn...... Independence Rev. W. F. Lloyd, D.D...... Carthage Under Rt. Rev. \v, s. Pe r ry , D.D. Rev. C. A. Foster, LL.D...... Sedalia Rev. Edward H. Rudd...... Kewanee Rev. G. A. Chambers...... Anamosa Rev. J. L G ay...... Fayette SOUTH CAROLINA Rev. W. W . Estabrook...... W interset Rev. J. R. G ray...... Columbia Under Rt. Rev. W . B. W . H ow e, D.D. Rev. D. C. H ow ard...... Oskaloosa Rev. W . A. H atch...... Maryville Rev. T. F. Gadsden...... Anderson Rev. J. H ochuly...... Fairfield Rev. W. Johnson...... Lebanon Rev. R. P.-Johnson...... YorkvtUe Rev. F. E. Judd...... Brooklyn Rev. W . A. Masker...... Jefferson City Rev. J. D. MeCollough___ Spartanburgh Rev. C. H. K ellogg...... Davenport Rev. O. P arker...... Springfield Rev. W . O. Prentiss...... Charleston Rev. B. T. H. M ayeock...... Keokuk .Rev. G. E. P urucker...... De Soto Rev. J. H. Tillinghast...... Eastover Rev. W . C. Mills...... Creston Rev. T. M. Thorpe...... Nevada SPRINGFIELD. Rev. C. S. P ercival...... Cresco Rev. J. H. W aterm an...... Chilicothe Under Rt. Rev. G. F. Seymour, D.D. Rev. J. A. Russell...... Marengo Rev. Peter Wager...... Kirksville Rev. J. B. Draper...... Petersburg Rev. G. H. S. Som erville...... Davenport Rev. M. S. W oodruff...... Marshall Rev. W. Elmer...... Jacksonville * Chinese Missionary to Chinese. t Deaf-Mute Missionary to deaf-mutes. REPORT OF THE DOMESTIC COMMITTEE. 451

Rev. ft. H. Higgins...... Bunker Hill Rev. L. P. Rucker...... Brenftam I WESTERN TEXAS. Rev. Jesse Higgins...... Centralia Rev. E. ''S ickens...... Hearne Under Kt. Rev. W. B. Elliott, D.D. Rev. W. C. Hopkins...... Champaign Rev. J. C. W ad dill...... Matagorda , Rev. '\v. T. Allen...... B oem e Rev. C. J. H en d ley ...... Mattoon Rev. E. A Wagner...... Marshall ! Rev. Nelson A yres...... Browm ville Rev. J. N. W . Irvine...... McLeansboro UTAH. \ Rev. W. W. Corbyn ...... Seauin Rev. W . MorraU...... Albion Under Rt. Rev. D. S. Tuttle, D.D. ! Rev. N. B. Fuller...... buling Rev. F. H. P otts...... Mattoon Rev. P. McD. Bleecker...... Ogden ! Rev. T. T. C. Stanley...... Ovalde Rev. W . M. Steel...... Effingham Rev. G. D. B. Müler...... Salt Lake City ! liev. F. K. Stan-...... Victoria Rev. G. W . G. Van W in k le .. .Jerseyville Rev. S. Unsworth...... “ “ liev. J. AY. Tavs...... El Paso Rev. H. C. W h itley ...... Springfield WASHINGTON TERRITORY. WEST VIRGINIA TENNESSEE. Under Rt. Rev. J. A. P addock, D.D. Under Rt. Rev. G. W. Petkrkin, D.D. Under the Et. Rev. C. T. Quint ard, D.D. Rev. A. M. A b e l...... Olympia Rev. 0. F. Collins...... Brownsville Rev. E. Davis...... Part Toicnsend Rev. G. A Gibbons...... Fairm ont Rev. F. P. Davenport...... Tullahoma Rev. R. S. Nevius, D.D— Spokane Falls Rev. R. H. Mason...... Pufon Rev. C. M. G ray...... Cleveland Rev. G. E. W o o d ...... Dayton Rev. W. H. H. Pow ers...... It'eaton Rev. G. N. James...... Franklin WESTERN MICHIGAN. WISCONSIN. TEXAS. Under Rt. Rev. G. IX Gillespie, D.D. Under Rt. Rev. E. R. W elles, D.D. Under Rt. Rev. A l e x . G regg, D.D. Rev, H, J. Cook...... Coldivatcr Rev. H. M. Green...... Darlington Rev. E. G. Benners...... Jefferson Rev. E. W . Flow er...... Greenville Rev. EL Langlois...... Hudson Rev. H. C. H ow ard...... Columbus Rev. J. S. L arge...... traverse City Rev. A B . Peabody...... Star Prairie Rev. S. W. K ennerly...... H em e Rev. J. B. P richard...... Ludington WYOMING. Rev. T. J. Morris...... San Augustine Rev. W. H. Sparling Grand Rapids Under Rt. Rev. J. F. S fa ld in o , D.D. Rev. J. E. Meredith...... Calvert Rev. E. P. Schetky.D.D...... l\iw Paw Rev. J. D. Ferguson...... Laram ie Oity

CHINESE MISSIONARY AMONG THE CHINESE. CALIFORNIA. Under the Rt. Rev. W. L Kir, D.D. Rev. W. C. Young San Francisco.

MISSIONARIES AND LAY—HEADERS AMONG THE COLORED PEOPLE. FLORIDA. NORTH CAROLINA. Under Rt. Rev. J. F. Y o u n g , D.D. Under Rt. Rev. T. B. Lyman, D.D. Rev. O. P. Thackara...... Femandina Rev. S. V. Berry...... Asheville Mr. C. C. Manigault...... “ Rev. A. A. Benton...... Fayetteville Rev. J. C. Atkinson...... New Berne GEORGIA. Rev. J. E. C. Smedes...... Raleigh Under Rt. Rev. J. W. B e c k w i t h , D.D. Rev. 0. O. Brady...... Wilmington Rev. H. Dunlop...... Savannah Rev. C. E. Cummings...... Tarboro Rev. R. Landsberger...... “ Mr. Symons...... “ SOUTH CAROLINA. LOUISIANA. Under Rt. Rev. W. B. W. Howe, D.D. Rev. J. Y. Welch...... Charleston Under Rt. Rev. J. N. G a l l e h e r . D.D. Rev. B. B. Babbitt...... Columbia Rev. C. H Thompson, D.D,...... N. Orleans Rev. T. B. Clarkson...... '...... Eastover MARYLAND. Rev. E. T. Walker... : ...... Edgefield Under Rt. Rev. W. P i n k n e y , D.D. Rev. A. Crummell, D.D...... Washington TENNESSEE. Rev. Joseph Bryant...... Aquasco Under Rt. Rev. C. T. Quintard, D.D. Rev. C. B. Perry...... Baltimore Rev. J. E. Black...... Sewanee Rev. A. A. Roberts...... “ Rev. W. Cheshire...... Bolivar MISSISSIPPI. Rev. J. B. McConnell...... Memphis Under Rt. Rev. W. M. G r e e n , D.D. Rev. J. L. Tucker, D.D...... Jackson VIRGINIA. Under Rt. Rev. F. McN. Whittle, D.D. MISSOURI. Rev. G. B. Cooke...... Petersburg Under Rt. Rev. 0. F. R o b e r t s o n , D.D. Rev. J. H. M. Pollard ...... Mr. C. M. C. Mason...... St. Louis Rev. Thomas Cain...... Richmond

SCHOOLS AND TEACHERS AMONG THE COLORED PEOPLE. St. Augustine's Normal School, Raleigh, N. C. St. Mary the Virgin's School, Baltimore, Md. Rev. J. E. C. Smedes, Principal. Mrs. William H. Bishop, Jr. Mr. W. R. Harris, Mrs. Anna J. Cooper, Miss M. E. Pettipher, Assistants. Mission School, McFarland's Station, Lunenburgh, Virginia. St. Stephen’8 Normal Parish, and Primary School, Mrs. M. M. Jennings. Petersburg, Va. Mission School, Clover, Halifax Co., Va. Rev. G. B. Cooke, Principal. Rev. J. H. M. Pollard, Mrs. G. B. Cooke, Miss Virginia Mrs. M. E. Miles. M. Morgan, Miss Kate Beckwith, Mrs. M. Payne, School o f the Good Shepherd, Laiorenceville, Bruns­ Assistants. wick Co., Va. Mrs. F. E. Buford. St. Barnabas’ School Wilmington, N. C. Mr. W. F. Jones. Mrs. Fanny S. Jackson. Beechwood Mission School Aspenwall, Charlotte Co., Mission School, Asheville, N. C. Virginia. Rev. S. V. Berry. Mrs. H. W. Burgwin. 452 REPORT OF THE DOMESTIC COMMITTEE.

MISSIONARIES AND TEACHERS AMONG THE INDIANS.

NIOBRARA MISSION. C h e y e n n e A g e n c y M i s s i o n — P . O . Address, F o r t Sul­ The Rt. Rev. WILLIAM HOBART HARE. D.D., Mis­ ly, Dakota. sionary Bishop, residing at Yankton Agency, Da­ Rev. Henry Swift, Presbyter in charge. kota. St. Stephen's Church, Moreau River. Standing Committee—Revs. J. W Cook, W. J. Cleve­ Rev. Henry Swift. land; Messrs. Hackewaxte, Isaac Tuttle (Natives). Harry Marshall (Native), Catechist. S a n t e e M is s i o n — P. O. Address, Santee Agency, Ne­ St. Paul's Station, Mackenzie's Point. braska. John Kitto (Native), Catechist. Rev. W. W. Fowler, Presbyter in charge. St. John's Station, Striped Cloud's Camp. Church o f our Most Merciful Saviour. Rev. W. W. Fowler. St. John's Boarding School {Girls). St. Mary's Boarding School (Girls). Mr. J. Fitch Kinney, Jr., Principal. Miss Amelia Ives, House Mother. Mrs. J. Fitch Kinney, House Mother. Miss Mary Graves, Associate. Miss Mary Stevens, Associate. Miss Mary S. Francis, Teacher. U p p e r B r u l e M is s io n — P. O. Address, Rosebud Chapel o f Our Blessed Redeemer, East Bazille Creek. Agency, Dakota. Rev. W. J. Cleveland, Presbyter in charge. George Paypay (Native), Catechist. R e d C l o u d M i s s i o n — P. O . Address, Pine Ridge Chapel o f the Holy Faith, Wabashaw Village. Agency, Dakota, via Camp Robinson, Nebraska. John Wapaha (Native), Catechist. Rev. John Robinson, Deacon. Sister Julia A. Draper. S p r i n g f i e l d , D a k o t a —-Ho p e Boarding School (Boys and Girls). Little Wound's Camp. Mrs. E. E. Knapp, House Mother. Miss M. J. Leigh, Teacher. Miss Carrie Bennett, Teacher. Joseph Marshall (Native), Catechist. Joseph Taylor (Native), Teacher. Orphan's Camp. F l a n d r e a u , D a k o t a — St. Mary’s Church. Rev. Amos Ross (Native), Deacon. David Weston (Native), Catechist.

Y a n k t o n M i s s i o n — P. O. Address. Greenwood, Da­ FOND DU LAC MISSION. kota. Under the Rt. Rev. J. H. H. B r o w n , D.D. Rev. Joseph W. Cook, Presbyter in charge. G r e e n B a y A g e n c y — P. O. Address, Oneida, Brown Cathedral Church of the Holy Fellowship. Co., Wisconsin. Rev. E. A. Goodnough, Presbyter. Rev. Joseph W. Cook. Mission School o f Hobart Church. St. Paul's Boarding School (.Boys). Rev. E. A. Goodnough, Principal. The Bishop, President, Mrs. E. A. Goodnough, Assistant. Rev. Wm. V. Whitten, Principal. Rev. J. W. Cook, Instructor in the Bible. Mrs. W. V. Whitten, House Mother. MINNESOTA MISSION. Miss Sarah Bingham, Associate. Under t h e R t . Rev. H. B. W h i p p l e , D.D. Henry E. Dawes, Teacher. W h i t e E a r t h R e s e r v a t i o n . Isaac H. Tuttle (Native), Teacher. Rev. J. A. Gilfillan, Presbyter. Emmanuel House. Miss Anna E. Weagant. Church o f St. Columba. Rev. J. J. Enmegahbowh (Native), Presbyter. Chapel of St. Philip the Deacon—White Swan. Frank Vassar (Native;, Catechist. R e d L a k e A g e n c y . Church o f St. John in the Wilderness. Chapel o f the Holy Name—Choteau Creek. Rev. Fred Smith (Native) Deacon. Rev. David Tatiyopa (Native), Deacon. Rev. Mark Hart (Native), Deacon. Chapel o f the Holy Comforter—Point o f the Timber. Church o f St. Antipas. Rev. John Coleman (Native), Deacon. S is s e t o n M is s i o n — P. O. Address, Sisseton Agency, W i l d R i c e R i v e r . Dakota. Church o f the Epiphany. Rev. Edward Ashley. Rev. George B. Morgan (Native), Deacon. Y a n k t o n n a i s M is s io n — P. O. Address, Crow Creek. Agency, Dakota. L e e c h L a k e . Church o f the Good Shepherd. St. Thomas' Church, Agency. Rev. Charles Wright (Native), Deacon. Rev. H. Burt, Deacon. T.a k k W innibigashish . Christ Church—Upper Camp. Mission o f St. Philip the Deacon. Church o f St. John the Baptist—Lower Camp. Rev. George Smith (Native), Deacon. Philip J. Deloria (Native), Catechist. M is s i o n t o t h e S i o u x i n M in n e s o t a . Rev. George W. St. Clair (Native), Deacon. L o w e r B r u l e M i s s io n — P. O. Address, Lower Brule Agency, Dakota. Rev. Luke C. Walker, Presbyter in charge. INDIAN TERRITORY MISSION. St. Luke's Station—Little Pheasant's. Under the Rt. Rev. H. N. P i e r c e , D.D., LL.D. Rev. John B. Wicks, Presbyter In charge. Church o f the Saviour, Agency. Ch e y e n n e a n d A n n a p a h o e A g e n c y — P . O. Address, Rev. Luke C. Walker (Native), Presbyter. Darlington, Indian Territory. Rev. David Pendleton Oakerhater(Native),Deacon- St. Alban's Station, Standing Cloud's. K i o w a a n d C o m a n c h e A g e n c y ,— P. O. Address, Ana- Salos Walker (Native), Catechist. darke, Indian Territory, St. Barnabas Station, Big Mane's. Rev. Paul Caryl Zotom (Native), Deacon. Salos Walker (Native), Catechist. Henry Pratt Taawayite (Native), CatechlsL [A p p e n d i x t o D o m e s t i c C o m m i t t e e ’ s R e p o r t —A.]

THE SIXTEENTH ANNUAL REPORT OF THE MISSIONARY BISHOP OF DAKOTA.

The year 1881, like the three years that Presbyterian Church, kindly loaned us. preceded it, has been marked by a great in­ There should be a church here. With $500 coming of settlers into Dakota, especially I could secure one. into the central and northern portions of the On the 5th of June I consecrated the Territory. beautiful church at Bismarck, a small We have occupied some new points, and debt that remained upon it having been held our Services at all the old Stations. With paid by the generosity and efforts of Mr. W. a few more Missionaries and a few hundred G. Dominick of . It is the dollars more of Missionary aid, we could handsomest church in the Territory. 1 easily establish permanent Services in a confirmed eight persons here on the evening dozen other places, where the Services are of the day of consecration, presented by the called for by the people. Rector, Rev. J. G. Miller, who, amid many My visitation this year commenced at difficulties, is doing his work cheerfully and Grand Forks. Here the church is com­ faithfully. pleted, though I am sorry to say that there Watertown and Huron, two remarkable is a small debt upon it, owing to the ina­ towns for growth and activity, are under bility of the Vestry to collect all of the local the charge of Dean Hoyt, who lives in the subscriptions made for its erection. I con­ former, and officiates alternately in each. firmed 15 persons in the Church on the 31st Property has been secured by him in both of May, the happy result of the energetic of these towns, and local subscriptions ob­ labor of the Missionary, Rev. W. P. Law, tained for churches that will, I hope, be who also holds Services occasionally in the erected immediately. I was able to extend settlements north of the town. $150 aid to Watertown for a church, from The rapidly growing town of Fargo is the Western Church Building Society. now under the charge of the Rev. B. F. Huron has asked for no aid. This is a re­ Cooley, who came to us from the Diocese of markable instance of self-reliance on the Massachusetts in June last. The congre­ part of Church people, and with the excep­ gation is prosperous, and a large addition is tion of Valley City, is the only case of the being made to the church edifice. Mr. kind on record in the history of church Cooley also officiates occasionally at Cass- building in Dakota. Every other church leton. that has been erected in the Territory has At Valley City, on the Northern Pacific been largely aided from outside sources. We Railroad, the Rev. E. S. Peake has been may hope that the example of these two officiating at intervals. Here a few families towns, Valley City and Huron, will become under the leadership of Rev. Herbert Root, contagious. I confirmed one person at who is a resident of the town, are erecting, Huron on the 4th of September. without calling upon the Bishop for aid, a 'The Church work in the two towns of beautiful stone church which will be finished Dell Rapids and Flandreau ought to be this fall. I preached there in June last. united under one Missionary ; but it seems At Jamestown, a new Parish called St. to be impossible, as each one wants to James, has been organized by the devoted have the Missionary as a resident. Rev. Lay-reader, Mr. B. S. Russel, and a Mis­ Mr. Morrison has officiated at Dell sionary ought to be settled at this point and Rapids for a part of the year, but is about Valley City. I held Services there in the leaving. There is a church at Flandreau, 454 REPORT OF TEE BISHOP OF DAKOTA.

and there could be one built at Dell Rapids, Swan Lake and Turner, and three other if the two places would agree to unite in Stations, Parker, Lincoln Centre, and Len­ the support of a Missionary. nox— since Dr. Hoyt left in the spring for The Rev. Mr. Berry, the Rector of Sioux Watertown and Huron, has been most faith­ Falls, having met with a great loss in the fully ministered to by the Rev. M. S. Rob­ death of his lovely wife, was obliged, for inson, who resides in the parsonage at Swan his children’s sake, to return to the East, and Lake. Except Parker, none of the other therefore resigned the Parish on the 1st of points in the district have grown in September. The Vestry are now making an population, in consequence o f the railroad effort to secure a successor. The town is one passing them by and making new towns of the most important in Dakota, and the along its line. But the congregation still church building one of the best. New keep good, and I have confirmed in my re­ people are being added to the population cent visitation, six persons presented by Mr. every month, and it is of the utmost conse­ Robinson. quence that the church should not remain The two towns of Canton and Eden have vacant long. I officiated there on the even­ both now good churches. The one in Can­ ing of the 8th of September. ton is just finished. A lovely Christian Mitchell has also grown rapidly in the lady of the Diocese of New York, who aided last year. By the kindness of an unknown largely in its erection, and by whose desire donor, through Mr. R. L. Livingston of New it was named “ The Church of the Holy In- York City, we have been enabled to erect a nocents,’’ has just been called to her rest in very neat and graceful church here in the Paradise. The Rev. Mr. McBride serves present year, at a cost of $1,000. It is en­ both of these congregations, besides offici­ tirely furnished and is without debt, and ating temporarily on every alternate Sunday occupies a very valuable site given to the in Calvary Church, Sioux Falls. On the Church by the Milwaukee & St. Paul Rail­ 14th of September I preached at Canton road. The Rev. D. S. Sandford took charge and confirmed two persons, and on the 15th here in May last, and besides officiating in at Eden and confirmed 3 persons. In Eden Mitchell, also held Services in Stations there is no other church edifice but ours, around. I officiated here on Sunday the and no resident Minister but our Mission­ 11th of September. ary, and I believe no Christian Services but Morris, a rural Parish in a community our own. This can hardly be said of any made up entirely of Church families, is sit­ other town in Dakota. uated six miles from Mitchell, on the James The people of Christ Church, Yankton, River, and ministered to by Father Morris, are now busily occupied in building their the venerable Missionary o f the Valley. I new church, and are all apparently deeply Confirmed two persons here on the 11th of interested in the great enterprise. The plan September. Nearly all the settlers for sev­ is a very fine one, and there is now every eral miles around are Churchmen, and there prospect that it will be completed during ought to be a Church there immediately. the coming winter, and without debt. The I have an opportunity o f securing fo r the sum cost will be about $6,000, and the edi­ o f $500, a fine stone church, and if any indi­ fice is of brick and stone. The Parish vidual or congregation will contribute the same, is now without a Rector, and, notwith­ the church may be made a Memorial and named standing this fact, on the 18th of September l>y the donor. I consider this one of the I confirmed 10 persons there, who were pre­ greatest opportunities ever presented for sented by the Rev. Dr. Hoyt, the Dean of permanent Church extension in the whole the Territory. Steps are now bei ng taken by Territory of Dakota. I sincerely trust that the Vestry to secure a Rector, and we may these words will meet the eye of some one hope that before winter a good man may be who will be guided and inclined to bestow settled over that important Parish. this great boon upon the jurisdiction. The two towns of Elk Point and Vermil­ Father Morris also travels up the valley to lion are still under the charge of the vener­ Forestburgh, 20 miles from his home, and able Presbyter, the Rev. J. V. Himes, who officiates there. exhibits in the discharge of his duties all The Missionary District of Swan Lake and the enthusiasm and activity of youth. The parts adjacent—including two churches, church at Elk Point has been beautifully REPORT OF THE BISHOP OF DAKOTA. 455 fitted up, and is now a model of neatness Jamestown. With $500 aid from Eastern Bud taste. A belfry and bell has been sources, we could build a beautiful and added. The Sunday-school is large and useful church at each of these points, and prosperous, and the congregation lias greatly furnish it without debt. This must be our increased. The result of the two years labor next year’s work. of this godly man are almost without paral­ On the 9th of January last, in St. An­ lel in the history of the Missionary opera­ drew’s Church, Elk Point, I admitted to tions of the West. On the 25 th of Sep­ the Priesthood the Rev. J. V. Himes and tember I confirmed two persons in St. An­ the Rev. J. M. Me Bride, and to the Dia- drew’s Church, Elk Point. The Chapel at conate the Rev. M. S. Robinson. Vermillion is about to be removed to the During the year I have baptized in Da­ new tent on the bluff, and the people have kota, 23 children and 7 adults, and con­ gone \ip there to reside since the flood. On firmed 56 persons. There is one Candidate the 19th of September I preached in the for Holy Orders pursuing his studies at Fari­ School-house to a large congregation and bault, and 13 Clergy canonically connected administered the Holy Communion. with the Jurisdiction. The Church work in the town of Spring­ We acknowledge with great gratitude our field has been turiied over to Bishop Hare, indebtedness to the Board of Missions, and who has a school for Indians located here, to many helpful and generous friends in the and there is generally a resident Clergyman East who have aided us in building churches in the school, who officiates in the village and in sustaining our work. The Territory church. is still rapidly filling up, and we need more New churches are needed at several points than ever more Missionaries and more besides those now contemplated at Huron churches. and Watertown; especially is it desired that R o b e r t H. C la r k s o n , there should be one at Dell Rapids and at Missionary Bishop of Dakota. [A p p e n d i x t o D o m e s t i c C o m m i t t e e ’ s R e p o r t —B.]

THE FIFTEENTH ANNUAL REPORT OF BISHOP TUTTLE.

Being the First Report of the Missionary Bishop of Utah and Idaho.

T h is is the Fifteenth Annual Report of Mr. Charles G. Davis remains the accept­ Bishop Tuttle; but the First Report of the able and most faithful head of our School of Missionary Bishop of Utah and Idaho. For the Good Shepherd, Ogden. The Rev. Mr. thirteen years and eight months I had charge Bleecker assists Mr. Unsworth in care of o f Montana, Idaho and Utah. In that period Ogden, and takes special oversight besides 2,518 were baptized, 795 confirmed, 796 of St. John’s School, Logan, and St. Paul’s married, and 934 buried. From no Clergy­ School, Plain City; and of the Missions at men the growth was seventeen, and from no Blackfoot and Eagle Rock, over the terri­ churches to ten, and from half a dozen torial border in Idaho. Mr. Unsworth visits communicants to 877. Evanston, Wyoming, one Sunday every A t the last General Convention my heart month, by request of Bishop Spalding, was made grateful and my life kept hopeful In Salt Lake the Rev. Charles 31. Arm­ by the appointment of a Bishop to Montana. strong has taken Mr. Unsworth’s place in Most timely and wise was such appointment, charge of St, Paul’s Chapel. This beautiful and when the Reports of the Bishop ap­ structure, completed as a Memorial to a de­ pointed come in, year after year, the Church parted sister by a family in New York City will see the wisdom of the act and be satis­ at an expense of $18,500, I consecrated in fied. March last. I kept charge of Montana for Bishop The Rev. Mr. Kirby and the Rev. Mr. Brewer until January 1, 1881. To him I Miller have gone steadfastly on in their re­ have reported my official acts for the period spective fields of duty. The former, besides from August 1, 1880, to January 1, 1881. being the Pastor of St. Mark’s Parish, is the And so, formal records about Montana have Superintendent and Treasurer of St, Mark’s ceased for me. Grateful and tender memo­ Hospital. In this, 255 patients were cared ries of a people loving and loved remain, for last year. Its income, mostly from the however, graven in my heart and not to be dues of one dollar a month from miners effaced. round about, was $9,197,95. TJTAH. Mr. Miller remains the head master of the To human eyes a serious misfortune has Salt Lake Schools, and has had 481 pupils overtaken us here during the year. On Feb­ in charge. We cling to our old belief, and ruary 14th, died the Rev. James Lee Gillo- we have reason to strengthen our asseveration gly, our Missionary at Ogden. His death thereof, that the educational is the true and was a severe blow to the work, and a sad effective Missionary work among the Mor­ personal affliction to myself. He died while mons. We beg Sunday-schools, congrega­ I was on my return from the East, and so tions, and individuals, who are giving us was the privilege denie'd me of ministering Scholarships of $40 per year, not to cease to his weakness. A faithfully devoted, un­ them nor to be weary in giving, Without selfish, untiring man of G o d and Mission­ the Scholarships we could not keep up our ary ! All these he was. I loved him as a Utah schools; and without the schools our brother and so mourn his departure, while work for reclaiming souls from the Mormon believing that G o d doeth all things well. delusion would be shorn of efficiency. The Rev. Samuel Unsworth, my own son I verily believe that the Mormon “ Church, ” in the Gospel, whom I ordered Priest in by quickening appeals to loyalty and by a March, has taken pastoral charge of Ogden. careful closing up of the ranks, is stronger And he will carry vigorously and faithfully to-day than in the last year of Brigham out the plans entered upon by Mr. Gillogly, Young’s life. No time this, surely, for us to in­ I feel sure. termit vigorous efforts in any direction. REPORT OF THE BISHOP OF UTAH AND IDAHO. 457

So it comes to pass that I am preparing The Rev. F. W. Crook, during last win­ for a movement forward. On August 29th ter, was disabled by a severe contusion of “ Rowland H all” is to be opened, a Board­ the knee. I am glad to report him entirely ing School for Girls, in Salt Lake City. recovered. While still residing at Boise! he And may the L o r d prosper this our new un­ has enlarged his Missionary cure, and faith­ dertaking ! fully looks after Idaho City, Silver City, Mr. F. R. Graves, one of my Candidates Reynold’s Creek, Emmetsville, and Boisé for Holy Orders, a graduate of the last class Yalley. of the General Theological Seminary, I had I have visited the mining districts in the hoped to have for help in Utah. But he W ood River and Salmon River regions. I feels that the L o r d calls him to China, so I ought next year to give a Missionary to each cheerfully give him up and wish him G od - of these. No Sacraments, no L o h d ’s Days, spaed. He was ordered Deacon by Bishop no Sunday-schools, did I anywhere find. Potter in New York, June 12th, and I gave Aud yet hundreds of children and families him a Letter Dimissory to Bishop Scheres- are there. Ought we not, must we not, ehewsky, June 14th. look after'these sheep in the wilderness, and The Woman’s Auxiliary has kindly sus­ that soon ? tained Mrs. S. H. de Klugery as a woman At Hailey and Ketchum I arranged for helper for us in Salt Lake City, She has the purchase of ample and eligible church been devotedly faithful in her work; and it lots. I was enabled to do this by a timely will be readily understood that in such a grant made to me by the Western Church community as ours her help is of double Building Society. value. In Idaho, 52 have been baptized, and 13 In Utah 114 have been *baptized and 23 confirmed. There are 188 communicants, confirmed. There are 359 communicants, 48 13 Sunday-school Teachers, and 177 schol­ iJunday-school Teachers, and 710 scholars. ars. IDAHO, I have also confirmed during the year 14 I have been able to extend to this Terri­ in Montana, 13 in New York, 7 in Albany, tory more attention than heretofore. I have 4 in Central New York, 4 in Oregon, and 2 given it a visitation^ o f three and a half in Pittsburgh. months. And for the first time I visited CONCLUSION. Korthern Idaho, to find that at Lewiston, Gratitude and anxiety ! I am in a strait Bishop Morris and the Rev. Dr. Nevius have betwixt the two. kindly done faithful work in my stead. Assuredly my heart is full of the former. I confirmed six there, organized a Mission, The Board of Managers and the Domestic and placed the Rev. J. D. McConkey as Committee have been unceasingly kind. Mr. resident Pastor. Lewiston is a growing F. S. Winston in securing grants of Bibles, town of considerable importance, at the and Mr. Pott, Prayer Books, have always head of navigation of the Snake River. responded to my calls. Ladies’ Associations In getting there by stage I was compelled have sent, in generous amount, articles of to travel through Oregon and Washington. use for our Hospital, our Schools, and our The two Bishops and I met for a Conference poor. The cheering flow of “ Specials ” has in Walla Walla; discussed with three or not been intermitted, and by their help I four assembled Clergymen practical matters have been enabled to pay off $3,700 of of common interest; and sent fraternal standing debt. A lady in Philadelphia has greetings to three Bishops of British North given $5,000 towards the $8,000 purchase America from whom we have since received money of Rowland Hall. Three sisters in kindly responses. New York have given more than $8,000 to After a vacancy of a year, the Rev. I. T. finish St. Paul’s Chapel, besides furnishing psborn has entered upon the Rectorship of bell, font, and sacred vessels for the altar. St. Michael’s, Boisfi, and, please G o d , all A gentleman in Salt Lake provided means things in that important Parish will now go to meet the expenses of one of my young on right well. But I am sorry to say that men at college. Hr. C. H. Moore retires from the principal- Yet anxiety also hovers around and some­ ship of St. Michael’s School, and we hardly times settles, and seems inclined to go deep known whither to turn for a successor. and grow rooted. 458 REPORT OF THE BISHOP OF UTAH AND IDAHO.

I still owe of standing debt $5,375, and Candidate for Holy Orders: Charles G-. to fit and furnish Rowland Hall is calling Davis. for $3,000 besides, not a cent of which have Postulant: S. Lord Gilberson. I. And I have two young men at Union Standing Committee: Rev. Messrs. R. M. College, and one at the General Theological Kirby, and G. D. B. Miller; and Messrs. Seminary, and one studying at Ogden, all George M. Scott and George Y. Wallace. looking forward to the Ministry for their Examining Chaplains: Rev. Messrs. R. life’s duty, and meanwhile looking to me M. Kirby, G. D. B. Miller, S. Unsworth. for the means necessary to their preparation. Receipts and expenditures have been as May I beg all kind givers to see how there follow s: can not be as yet any let up to my crying RECEIPTS. Balance, Last Year’s Report...... $ 150 84 need for their help ? Sent directly to m e...... 33,124 21 I am glad to say that St. Mark’s school “ Specials,” S p i r i t o p M i s s i o n s ...... 4,371 50 Sent to Rev. J. L. Gillogly ...... 200 00 house is now entirely paid for. The last From Western Church Building Society 150 00 £100 thereon I expected would be paid by “ American Church Missionary Society 100 00 Special gift from Domestic Committee 100 00 the S. P. C. K. of England. I wrote to the Secretary to remind the Society of such $38,196 05 expenditures . promise. But the promise was made eight In Montana: For Benton...... $1,098 84 or nine years ago. I could only now get “ Butte...... 1,000 00 around to the condition for claiming the “ Helena...... 771 28 “ Missoula...... 503 53 grant. And the Secretary answered me that “ Deer Lodge...... 395 22 “ Bozeman...... 191 03 such grants are only good if claimed within $3,959 90 five years. So I lost that help. This Society In Salt Lake City: did kindly pay, years ago, the last £100 due For St. Mark’s School...... $5,787 85 “ “ Rectory 455 61 on St. Mark’s Cathedral. “ “ Hospital 20 00 My standing debt is as follows : “ St. Paul’s Chapel (Build­ ing)...... 8,239 65 Rowland Hall, $2,000; School of the “ St. Paul’ Chapel (other expenses)...... 725 20 Good Shepherd, Ogden (Lot, $1000, House, “ Rowland HaU...... 7,359 00 $750), $1,750; St. John’s School House, “ Other objects...... 676 50 $23,263 Logan, $750 ; St. Mark’s School, Salt Lake, In Ogden: $500; Miscellaneous, $375; Total, $5,375. For School of the Good Shep­ herd (Lot)...... $2,170 00 The Clergy of the Missionary District “ School of the Good Shep­ are: herd (other expenses). 1,047 00 " P a r is h ...... 1.014 00 Rev. R. M. Kirby, Assistant Minister of :------$4,231 00 the Cathedral, Salt Lake, and Superintend­ For Logan ...... 666 00 “ Plain City...... 430 00 ent of St. Mark’s Hospital. “ Boisé...... 892 40 “ Lewiston...... 408 50 Rev. G. D. B. Miller, Assistant Minister “ Idaho City...... 181 65 of the Cathedral, and Head Master of the “ Silver City...... 196 90 “ Hailey...... 50 00 Salt Lake Schools. “ Ketchum...... 50 00 Rev. Charles M. Armstrong, Assistant “ Theological Éducation...... 1,507 25 *■ I n t e r e s t ...... 700 23 Minister of the Cathedral, and in charge of Miscellaneous...... 513 50 Repaid Loans (besides $500, Helena; St. Paul's Chapel. $500, Missoula; $1,000,Butte; $2,000, Rev. Samuel Unsworth, Minister of the Ogden)...... 1,600 00 Balance to New Report...... 44 91 Memorial Church of the Good Shepherd, Ogden. $38,196 05 Rev. P. McD. Bleecker, Deacon, Assistant Gifts to me ,124.21) came from the Minister of the Memorial Church of the following Dioceses Good Shepherd, Ogden. New York $15,0$15,036 33 Maryland...... 301 25 Pennsylvania... 8,875 39 Michigan...... 860 00 Rev. I. T. Osborn, Rector of St. Michael’s, Connecticut__ 1,311 05 Southern Ohio.. 210 00 Boisé. Massachusetts. 1,108 68 Nebraska...... 200 00 Central N. York. 910 68 Illinois...... 120 00 Rev. F. W. Crook, Deacon, Minister of Albany...... 832 40 Ohio...... 115 00 St. Mark’s, Idaho City, and St. James’, Silver New Jersey.___ 503 09 Vermont...... 115 00 Rhode Island... 484 85 California...... 90 00 City. Pittsburg...... 450 17 W. Michigan__ 44 00 Long Island__ 447 25 C. Pennsylvania 20 00 Rev. J. D. McConkey, Minister of the N. N. Jersey__ 440 92 Montana...... 20 00 Church of the Nativity, Lewiston. Western N .York 438 15 Quincy...... 12 00 New Hampshire 400 00 Rev. B. S. Dunn. Utah...... 378 00 CO œ 'Ó Sunday Pabish nj a o Baptisms. Cfl Offerings. 0 c5 a Schools. Schools. 53 ^ 'S f-.c¡ a CO -U cj Value of O W3 "3 a> 'd O GQ Name of P arish or Station. o “ a o 0? co m Church M ¡u o fl tS) s-, 0 7 f-i 03(- AmouD t Amount Total for -a -u’ a en V ja V Property. 1 * 'S « II a & ja ¿a fS given at given to Church ubo s-. o 'S 'S «Ö o o o o o a ö 3 «tHc3 +-> a a sì c3 Station. Station. Purposes. e3 A ä O o o c5 3 v 'S O o Ü a 5 O i—i Eh O O S m H OD En OQ

$ $ 9 St. Mark’s, Salt Lake City, U. T .. 2 1 1 64 3 67 13 197 42 43 20 300 16 481 105,000 00 $ 17,107 02 14,298 96 31,405 98

St. Paul’s Chapel, Salt Lake,U.T. 1 1 1 17 5 9,9, 9 37 9, 5 10 119 21,000 00 386 02 8,964 85 9,350 87

Good Shepherd, Ogden, U. T .. . 2 1 1 19 4 23 4 70 16 7 10 192 3 145 28,000 00 1,230 514,231 00 5,461 51

Good Samaritan, Corinne, U. T .. 1 8 500 00 10 00 10 00 St. John’s, Logan, U. T ...... 9,3 4 48 1 40 5,000 00 50 53 666 00 716 53 St. Paul’s, Plain City, U. T ...... 9 9, 4 17 4 51 1 45 1,900 00 46 75 510 00 556 75 Grace, Silver Reef, U. T...... 8

St, Michael’s, Boisé, I. T...... 1 1 15 9, 17 8 101 6 8 60 2 47 11,700 00 1,805 80 392 40 2,198 20 St. Mark’s, Idaho City, I. T ___ 1 5 1 6 4 9,7 1 64 25 181 65 245 00 St. James’, Silver City, I. T ...... 7 7 8 114 95 196 90 311 35 Holy Innocents’, Blackfoot, I. T. 9 9 q 9, 4 65 40 00 235 45 235 45

Nativity, Lewiston, I. T ...... 1 8 9, m 6 10 9, 1 52 190 00 243 90 408 50 652 40 Miscellaneous...... 1 s 3 42 1 1 171 10 2,820 98 2,992 08

Totals...... 9 2 5 1 149 17 166 36 54766 63 61 887 23 758 173,330 00 21,466 28 82,671 24 54,137 52

Salt Lake City, Utah, A ugust 24th, 1881. DANIEL S. TUTTLE. [A p p e n d i x t o D o m e s t i c C o m m i t t e e ’ s R e p o r t —C.]

ANNUAL REPORT OF TEE MISSIONARY BISHOP OF OREGON.

T h e action of the late General Convention, it through so dark a cloud, and that at the by which Washington Territory was made a very threshold of his great undertaking his separate Jurisdiction, takes from my charge chief human aid and counsel was to be taken and oversight, seven Clergymen, eight from him. G o d has ways of working out churches and chapels, four parsonages, and His ends far beyond our knowledge or a well established girls’ boarding and day- thought, and we have but to say, ‘ ‘ He doeth school, with five teachers and seventy-five all things well.” pupils. A boys’ school, established last year, It is just six months since I returned from at Spokan Falls, by the Rev. Dr. Nevins, the East, and much work has necessarily and named by him the Henry Rodney Mor­ been crowded into that period of time. ris School, should also be mentioned in this Within that time I have held our Annual list. It is a new undertaking, but one that Convocation, conducted the closing exercises occupies an important and promising field. of St. Helen’s Hall and the Bishop Scott This division leaves to the Jurisdiction of Grammar School, delivering a written ad­ Oregon a population of one hundred and dress at each, and opened the present term seventy-five thousand, and an area of over of St. Helen’s Hall on the first day of Sep­ ninety thousand square miles— a territory tember. half as large again as the original State of In the month of May I met the Bishop of Virginia, and more than twice the size of Montana and the Bishop of Washington the State of Ohio. It has fifteen Clergymen Territory, with several Presbyters, at Walla beside the Bishop, twenty-three churches, Walla, for conference on the interests of two boarding and day-schools, with sixteen our common work. It was an occasion to teachers, and over two hundred pupils, a us all of much interest, and we trust, of use­ hospital and an orphanage. fulness, as well. Of course we did not meet This division was made by the authorities for any legislation for the present or future, of the Church that our work might grow but simply for fraternal counsel and advice, and be strengthened in all its departments, in a work which has so many similar and and we have every reason so far to believe, common interests. Beside the public Ser­ that this expectation will be realized, and vices, sermons and addresses, the Bishops that this increase of Episcopal service was and Presbyters had frequent meetings in pri­ not made a day too early. From the exist­ vate, for the consideration of such practical ence of the large body of public lands of matters as seemed desirable. great fertility in Washington Territory; Our conference was especially gratifying, from its many latent sources of wealth and in that we found ourselves so much of one prosperity, and from the opening up of the mind in regard to the needs of our work, country through the construction of several and the most desirable ways of prosecuting lines of railroad; I look for a growth of it ; and we were further pleased to hear from the Church there, more marked and rapid our brother, the Rector of Walla Walla, that than in the older Jurisdiction. he thinks he can already see that it has done We have welcomed the new Bishop whom great good to his people. It certainly did the Church has sent to this field, I trust, in some of us good to witness the progress of the true spirit of brotherly love and sym­ our work in that new part of the country, pathy, well knowing that he was putting and to know that there where, a few years his hand to an arduous and self-denying ago, we were entirely unknown, we have work that required all the hopefulness and now ten churches and congregations, two enthusiasm of the most sanguine nature. Christian schools, and prospective interests We little thought that he was to pass into that could bring together three Bishops, REPORT OF THE BISHOP OF OREGON. 461 ! with their Presbyters, for three days’ public! denying life, and is quietly sowing the Services and private conference. jgood seed of the Gospel as he travels by long On the 25th of September I attended the, journeys on foot over these plains and moun­ meeting and the organization of the first tains. r. Smith has regular monthly Ser­ Convocation of Washington Territory, and vices in the churches at the Cove. La Grande, preached the sermon at the consecration of and Union, in Union Co., and in Baker City St. Luke’s Church, Vancouver. ]in Baker Co. One round of his Services in­ In these six months I have visited all the volves a journey of one hundred and ten churches and Missions except one, and many miles, oftentimes in open carriages, in very of them more than once. In the month of disagreeable and severe weather. Mr. July I made a visit of three weeks to the Smith has now occupied his Mission just counties lying on the southwestern coast of twelve months. The improvement in many Oregon. I took the Rev. Mr. Stevens, your respects is quite encouraging, and all that Missionary at Albany, with me on this ex­ could have been expected, where Services cursion, and found him of great service in are spread over so large a district. many ways. I was enabled to realize through At Union, in Grand Ronde Valley, where these Services, how well it was for us to go we have “ St. John’s Memorial Church,” into these new regions “ two and tw o,” as there is quite a revival of interest in our in the Apostolic times. A large part of this work, especially with reference to t lie es­ journey was made on horseback, over moun­ tablishment of a girls’ school under our tain trails impassable by any other mode. auspices. Many of the leading citizens are We went into a country of unsurpassed beauty very urgent that we should undertake this, and grandeur as to natural scenery, but al­ and promise liberal assistance. A lot of most entirely destitute of the ministrations ground of nearly three acres is offered us as of religion. We were cordially welcomed a gift, and if we had the means to put up a and kindly treated everywhere. We com­ building, a school could be started with puted that there were fifty families there in great promise of success. The position whole or in part, already members of our would be very central to a large scope of own Communion. These, with many others, country, and a Church School once estab­ would cordially receive the services of a lished here would extend its influence far Missionary, and many of them would con­ and wide. Three or four thousand dollars tribute liberally toward his support. On would inaugurate such an enterprise, which this visitation three adults and twenty-two by slow increase might grow into established children were baptized, and eight persons strength. The good and blessed work that confirmed. It was a great trial for us to has been done elsewhere, by such instru­ turn homeward from these people without mentalities, might just as well be done here, even the promise of any more pastoral care if the means were only at hand for its be­ and oversight than such an annual visit ginning. Lacking these the opportunity is would furnish. Yet such is our unfortunate unimproved by us, and others enter in and condition. occupy, in the interests of Rome or sectari­ The field about us is unlimited, the anism, what we have neglected. laborers are few or none. I spent the most As I passed along the new town-site of of the month of September in visiting the North Powder, mid-way between, Union northwestern part of the Stare, where your and Baker City, I received the gift of a block two Missionaries, the Rev. Thos. Smith, and pf ground of two acres, for church purposes. the Rev. Arthur W. Wrixon, are all the This is directly on the line of railroad now laborers we have in a field as large as the being built between the Columbia River and State of Pennsylvania. We have in this the Union Pacific Railroad, and from the region seven churches and congregations. advantages of its position it has every pros­ Mr. Wrixon’s Mission is in the beautiful pect of being a flourishing town. I could but isolated John Day Valley, lying be­ point to several prosperous business centres, tween the Cascade and Blue Mountains. He now with their stores, banks, churches, rail­ holds regular Services at St. Thomas’ Church, road depots, and busy population, that were Canyon City, and at the outlying stations of literally desert wastes, as far as human in­ John Day and Prairie City. He is greatly habitants were concerned, when I first passed esteemed for his faithful labors and self- through this upper country. There is no 462 REPORT OF TEE BISHOP OF OREGON. reason why “ North Powder” shall not have The catalogues of the three Church a similar history, and then our central block Schools, within the old Jurisdiction, St. of two acres will be a great help in our work. Helen’s Hall, the Bishop Scott Gram­ On this September visitation, five adults mar School and St. Paul’s School at Walla and eleven children were baptized, and Walla, last year enrolled the names of over twenty persons confirmed. There are ten three hundred pupils. The two former, re­ children from this remote part of the Juris­ maining in this Jurisdiction, will this year diction attending our Church Schools at Port­ number over two hundred pupils, while the land and Walla Walla, some of them reaching latter I learn will have its full proportion, us by an overland journey of six days. The through what bids fair to be its most pros­ relations of our Missionary and educational perous year. In their ordinary expenditures work are thus strikingly illustrated, one these schools have kept within their income promoting and sustaining the other in a very and have incurred no debt. But they manifest and satisfactory way. should be doing more than this. They The two churches in the flourishing towns should be able to add improvements, to of Pendleton and Weston, in Umatilla Co., make repairs, to purchase libraries, and, if are still vacant, and have only such Services possible, to provide endowments, to meet as I can render from the long distance of large outlays that must come in the future. two hundred and seventy miles, or such as I This they will only do as they are generously can provide by the occasional “ detail ” of a aided by the gifts of those who appreciate Missionary from some other point. These the value and blessedness of the Christian towns are surrounded by an agricultural education they are appointed to supply. country of unsurpassed fertility, and will In this connection I am happy to say I soon have railroad connections east and have received, through the Woman’s Aux­ west, which will bring them sure growth iliary, $500 as the beginning of the and permanent prosperity. Any well quali­ “ Sarah Memorial Scholarship ” in St. fied Clergyman could here find an ample Helen’s Hall. It is the purpose of the gen­ field for all his energies and sure rewards erous author of this gift to add to it from for his labors. But none are found, and the time to time, till the sum of three thousand work lingers and languishes to our great dollars is made up, for the full support of a sorrow. boarding pupil in this school. There are also a number of vacancies in The needs of the two schools in Portland, the rectorship of the churches on the west­ this year, for expenditures upon the property ern and older side of the mountains, as well are very great. The street improvements as in the newer fields o f the eastern side. now in progress and under order, will cost Oregon City, Salem, McMinville, and just nearly five thousand dollars. With the as­ now, Astoria, are all without a Clergyman. sistance of the citizens of Portland, I have I have no present prospect for supplying already met and provided for one half of either o f these, unless it is in the anticipated this large sum. The remaining twenty-five return of the Rev. Mr. Chambers to Salem. hundred dollars, as yet, I know" not how to His removal to the East was in answer to meet. It is a heavy burden that oppresses the call of imperative domestic duties. me day and night. It is entirely out of the These having been discharged, I hear that question for the ordinary income of these he would be willing to resume his former schools to provide for such expenditures. charge at Salem, where he would be cord­ They must receive aid from abroad, or be ially welcomed. burdened with a debt that will clog and I rejoice in being able again to report hamper their usefulness, and, may be, peril that our schools in Portland continue their their existence. I trust that this simple good work, with increasing usefulness and statement of our need and of our danger, influence. In view of the number of new will move the hearts of some of G o d ’s faith­ schools that have been established in the ful almoners to come to our relief. past few years, and the zeal and efforts with St. Stephen’s Chapel, anew building being which their interests are advocated, we may erected on the grounds of St. Helen’s Hall take encouragement from the steady and for the joint use of the school and a public continued progress of this most important congregation, is nearly completed, and will branch of our work. be occupied in the course of the winter. REPORT OF THE BISHOP OF OREGON. 463

This chapel is much admired for it beauty I have met with some success in my efforts and fitness, and we look to it, and the Ser­ to secure endowments for free beds. The vices regularly to be held there, for impor­ ladies of Portland have provided, by month­ tant aids in the Christian education and cul­ ly subscriptions, for the support of one bed ture of our pupils. for needy women. The churches at Eugene City and Salem A generous friend of the Hospital main­ have been repaired and improved. St. tains alone a b^d, by regular monthly con­ George’s Church, Roseburg, has received the tributions. Two beds have a completed en- addition of a bell-tower, which is furnished dowement of $3,000 each, one being a with a fine bell, the gift of St. Mark’s Sun­ memorial to a daughter of the Hon. Benj. day-school, Orange, N. J. The congrega­ Stark, of Middletown, Conn., and the other tion of St. David’s, East Portland, have a memorial to the late S. Morris Wales, of built a very comfortable rectory, and the Philadelphia. Two other endowments have Bishop has received the gift of a house and each reached half the required amount, and lot in Salem, for the use of the Rector of St. are steadily growing. One other, the Paul’s Church. “ Philadelphia bed,” has a fair beginning. The Good Samaritan Hospital, and the Another free bed has been supplied for one Good Samaritan Orphanage continue their year as a memorial offering for a special work with fair success. The latter, since blessing which G od gave, and which in His its founding, has cared for one hundred and wisdom He hath taken away. Thus we nre twenty-four children. A number of these, slowly providing a permanent support for a mere waifs upon the world, have been pro­ portion of our charity patients. W e hope vided with excellent and permanent homes, that there are yet other persons who will where they are receiving every bodily com­ desire to provide in this way for the care of fort, as well as Christian care and training. the sick and needy, not only for the present, The present number, in charge of a most ex­ but on through all time, when they them­ cellent matron, is fourteen. selves shall know nothing of earth’s joys or The Hospital is steadily growing in use­ sorrows. fulness and efficiency. It has cared this past The Hospital owes a debt to many kind year for one hundred and eighty patients, friends in the East, which I would gladly of whom fifty-six were kept without any acknowledge here in detail if the time would charge. Its income has been $5,008.20, and allow. Prominent among them are the its expenses $4,993.00. Expenditures have Woman’s Auxiliary to the Board of Missions, been made within the last few months for and its efficient and pains-taking Secretary. improvements in the kitchen and dining­ To the New Haven branch of this Associa­ room quarters, and for increasing the accom­ tion the Hospital is indebted for a very val­ modations for patients, of over $1,000. And uable box of household supplies: also to we aro free to claim that the Hospital, as it the ladies of Trinity Church, Elmira, and of stands at present, is an institution not in­ St. John’s, Elizabeth, New Jersey, for a ferior to many of those in older Eastern similar gift. The ladies of the Parish at Dioceses. Monroe, Michigan; All Saints, Lower Dub­ We think much of the improved condition lin, Penna.; the Young Ladies Bible Class of the Hospital is due to the efficient admin­ of St. Peter’s Church, Philada; a Sunday- istration of Sister Mary. She was duly school class of St. John’s Church, Washing­ trained and graduated in one of the New ton, D. G .; and the Sunday-school of St. York hospitals, and has many superior quali­ Thomas’ Chapel, N. Y., have made the Hos­ fications for her position. We owe it to the pital generous contributions, of money and Woman’s Auxiliary that we have her efficient most acceptable articles of clothing, house- services here. To the persevering efforts of linen, etc. These contributions have been the Secretary of the Auxiliary we are also of great assistance, and we are truly grate­ indebted for securing two other women ful for this kindness shown by our Eastern helpers, who have recently arrived at the friends to the sick and suffering in this dis­ Hospital, and will soon be inducted into our tant land. Sisterhood. We look to the services of According to the report submitted to our these devoted women for great support and last Convocation, the Fund for Disabled comfort in our hospital work. Clergymen amounts to $2,847.00 and the 464 REPORT OF THE BISHOP OF OREGON.

Episcopal Fund to $1,088.00. These funds gatherings of a few family mite boxes sent are of such a nature and origin as to make out for that season only, aggregated the sum them the common property of the two of $400. I think that by another Lent Jurisdictions, and will be equitably divided. we can increase this by one fourth, and that These are but small beginnings toward future we shall thus be doing a double good, support and independence, but we consider while we train our children and young peo­ them beginnings in the right direction, that ple into the blessed habit of giving accord­ by faithful attention will grow into im­ ing to their power; even they who have portant aids in the future. little, “ doing their diligence gladly to give For the same purpose, an effort is now of that little.” being made to build an Episcopal residence. I should not close this report without A subscription has been started in Portland, acknowledging my indebtedness, to many which, with the funds already in hand, will of my Clerical brethren, and to many lay give us between five and six thousand dol­ friends, for the cordial and generous help lars. The building will be begun in another they have given in this work. I hope I am month, and, with the available means, can be not mistaken in the belief that their gifts have so far finished as to make it comfortable, not been thrown away. I can point to no and more convenient and desirable for the brilliant results; but I think there has been Bishop’s family, than his present “ hired encouraging growth and progress. The house.” field is wide and widening, and the laborers By way of carrying out the recommenda­ are few and far between. tions of the Board of Missions, in regard to And it remains still to say, “ Faith cometh receiving contributions from all classes of by hearing, and hearing by the word of our people, I made an appeal to the children G od . H o w shall they hear without a of our Sunday-schools for their savings dur- preacher; and how shall they preach ex­ ing the season of Lent, in the result of cept they be sent?” which we were all much encouraged. These B. "Wistar M orris. “ Lenten Savings,” together with the Missionary Bishop of Oregon. [A p p e n d i x t o D o m e s t i c C o m m i t t e e ’ s R e t o r t —D.]

TWELFTH ANNUAL REPORT OF THE MISSIONARY BISHOP OF NEVADA.

T h e condition of the Church in Nevada the past year. The number of scholars in is substantially the same as reported a year attendance is even greater than at any time ago. The same Clergymen are occupying during the three years last past, and the the same positions which they then occu­ tone of the school is higher. In these re­ pied, and performing their duties with spects its condition is very satisfaciory. We the same fidelity. One has been transferred have an excellent corps of teachers, and it to Central Pennsylvania, but he was e on- is certain that the school is doing a great resident when my last report was made. deal of good. The debt upon the school a The past year has been one of great depres­ year ago was $6,310. Through the generous sion in the leading industry of the State, contributions of friends at the East, this has and most of our larger towns have lost in been reduced to less than $3,000. .Moreover, population. Some few have gained, but it in addition to specific gifts for this object , is probable that the losses have exceeded I have conditional pledges, which, if paid, the gains, and that there are fewer people in would reduce the debt to $1,700. These the State than there were a year ago. pledges are conditional upon the whole The number of communicants was then amount being contributed before the end of 340. To these 18 have been added by re­ the year. If I can obtain seventeen hun­ moval, and 58 have been confirmed ; but dred dollars more towards the payment of y4 have been been lost by removal, so that this indebtedness by the 31st of December, the present number is 377, a gain of 37. these pledges will be paid, otherwise they The number baptized is 168; of wrhom 19 may not be, and probably will not be. were adults. Now I ask every one to whom this state­ The amount contributed for current ex­ ment comes, will you send me your pledge penses, payment of debts, and Missions, is a for a contribution towards this seventeen little more than was given last year. Of the hundred dollars, to be paid in January next, indebtedness resting upon our Church provided that the whole amount is pledged, property, more than one half has been paid otherwise you are not to be holden. during the year, and no new debts have If I could adequately set before you the been incurred. need which exists for this school, and what Then are several places in the State in it is doing for the moral and religious wel­ which there is great need of a Clergyman, fare of the people of this State, I am sure and where his ministrations would be kindly that this appeal would meet with a hearty received, but they are towns remote from response. I hope and pray that such may any other, and can only be supplied by a be its reception now. To those who have Minister resident in each. In neither of contributed so kindly toward this and these places could a Minister be wholly other objects of our Church work during supported by the offerings of the people ; the past year, and in all other times, I re­ but the desire that has been expressed for turn my sincere thanks. May the L o r d re­ regular Services in two of them is so evi­ ward them abundantly for all their kindness. dently sincere, that I purpose establishing a Faithfully Yours, Mission in each as soon as I can find a suit­ O. W . W h it a k e r , able man for the place. Missionary Bishop of Nevada. I am thankful to be able to report that Virginia, Nevada, Sept. 1st, 1881. the condition and prospects of our Diocesan Some statistics will be found in the ac­ School for Girls have much improved within companying tabular statement. TAUU LA li STATEMENT OF PARISHES AND ¡STATIONS IN NEVADA .— For the year ending August 31st, 1881. I 1!

Baptisms.

N ame of Parish or Amount given Value of for Church Church Description of Station. P roperty. +3 GQ Purposes. Property. Scholars.

a Teachers. X-tOj 3 -4-9 Sunday-school d O Sunday-school Communicants. Confirmations. 1—( Ei Marriages. Burials.

St. Paul’s, Virginia City.. 77 53 3 56 15 13 29 21 471 $4,911 46 $30,000 00 Church and Rectory. St. John’s, Gold Hill...... 16 5 5 1 6 11 94 86 70 8 000 00 St. Peter’s, Carson C ity... <52 15 2 17 5 7 8 7 45 1,917 15 12,000 00 Church. St. Luke’s, Hamilton...... 1 2 2 8 80 3 000 00 St. James’, Eureka...... 45 12 1 13 2 9 5 7 102 2,476 09 5,000 00 Church and Rectory. Christ Church, Pioche. . . . 5 3 3 5 60 25 50 3 000 00 Trinity, Reno...... 73 21 8 29 16 10 5 15 210 1,192 35 8,000 00 Church and Rectory. St. George’s, Austin...... 33 10 10 2 3 5 8 91 1 818 80 17 000 00 St. Stephen’s, Belmont___ 4 3 3 4 25 20 50 5 000 00 Grace, Silver City...... 5 3 1 4 4 1 2 4 40 81 75 4,000 00 Church. Genoa...... 6 Dayton...... 15 2 4 0 9 3 8 70 330 60 Wadsworth...... 7 12 12 5 75 Winnemucca...... 2 Palisade...... 1 5 25 Carlin...... 4 11 50 E lko...... 3 3 25 Lewis...... 2 T ybo...... 2 W ard...... 2 Tuscarora...... 5 1 1 16 00 Aurora...... 2 Grantsville...... 4 2 2 2 55 20 Cherry Creek...... 2 4 4 1 39 75 Battle Mountain.... 15 00 Fort Halleck...... 5 1 1 20 00 W ells...... 4 House, Furniture, and Diocesan School for Girls. *** 30,000 00 Block of Land.

Total...... 377 149 19 168 53 47 63 90 1,208 $13,041 40 $125,000 00

V irginia City, Nevada, September 1*/, 1880. * Included in Report of Trinity Church, Reno. 0. W. W h i t a k e b , Missionary Bishop. [A p p e n d i x t o D o m e s t i c C o m m i t t e e ’ s R e p o r t —E.]

REPORT OF THE MISSIONARY BISHOP OF ARKANSAS AND INDIAN TERRITORY,

For the year ending September lsi, 1831.

The past year has been marked by no very the Rev. Mr. Yaulx at Fayetteville, to visit decided advance. I congratulate myself it at least once a month. This is all I can that, with the diminished appropriation to do for it at present, with the limited means this field during the past nine months, I am at my command. not obliged to report a retrograde move­ In regard to the Indian Territory, I have ment. I am still troubled with vacant Par­ nothing to report, save that a Priest and ishes, although steps are being taken to fill two native Deacons have begun wrork among the most important posts. the Cheyennes, and that the Board has made The Missionary at Hope and Washington & special appropriation of $ 1,000 to aid in has just sent in his resignation and been carrying on this new enterprise. That so transferred to the Diocese of Quincy. The much has been done is due to the kindly Missionary at Conway is talking of leaving. interest of the Bishop of Central New York, This latter field I can provide for in all and I owe him thanks. I hope to visit the probability very soon—when I can find a Mission at no very distant day, and then I Clergyman for Washington and Hope, wil­ can report more fully what is being done ling to live on $550 per annum, I do not and what are the prospects for the future. know. Meanwhile I must urge on the Board the I have to report at Newport a new church importance of making an appropriation of in such a state of forwardness as to be avail­ $1,000 additional, in order that I may em­ able for Services. I submit an abstract of ploy a Missionary at large among the five work in Arkansas. so-called civilized tribes. Had my request of ten years ago been listened to, we should Sermons preached - - 120 now have a strong hold in that field. But A d d r e s s e s ...... 21 it is not too late now to regain a portion of Holy Communion celebrated - - 22 what we have lost. $1,000 per annum C o n f i r m e d ...... 79 would be a step toward laying strong foun­ Baptisms, adults 8, infants 6, - 14 dations for the Church in a Territory Marriages - - 3 destined in a few years to be one of the B u r i a l s ...... 1 strongest States of the West. I can assure Clergy received - - - 4 the Board and the Church, that efforts in Miles travelled .... 5147 that direction will be crowned with success These statistics are made out only for our and most fruitful in results. Those five last conciliar year, say only to the 1st of tribes have advanced in civilization as far last May, since then I have travelled more as they ever will without the influence of than a thousand miles additional, and have the Church. They are now ripe for her visited Northwest Arkansas, confirming a higher culture. good class at Fayetteville. Eureka Springs, Respectfully yours, two years and a half ago, had not a house. H. N. P ibrce, Now it has 8,000 or 10,000 population, and Missionary Bishop of Arkansas and 4,000 or 5,000 visitors. I have requested Indian Territory. [A p p e n d i x t o D o m e s t i c C o m m i t t e e ’ s R e p o r t —F.]

NINTH ANNUAL REPORT OF THE MISSIONARY BISHOP OF NIOBRARA. 1881.

T he work of the Niobrara Mission has' and landed in a swamp some three miles proceeded during the past year (ending from its old site. I propose taking it down June 30th) very much as in former years, and re-erecting it on a high plateau, where except as hindered by a winter and spring some of the better Indians are taking up of extraordinary severity. land and opening farms, and most earnestly The winter began with a violent snow­ hope that funds for this purpose will be sup­ storm about the middle of October, and plied by those who love to do kind things. lasted with almost uninterrupted rigor, cold About $350 will be needed. and snows and wind, until the middle of It is needless to say that travel, the mail April, when it closed with another snow­ service and transportation of all kinds were storm. During almost all this time the either interrupted or suspended entirely for snow lay in well-nigh impassable drifts. six months past. The spring thaw began earlier in the Our friends will not be surprised, there­ north than in lower Dakota, and sent down fore, if the letters and boxes which they floods of water along the river courses below, may have sent were not promptly acknowl­ before the rivers had been relieved of their edged. winter coating of ice, which was from three The embarrassment caused by such a con­ to five feet thick. Acres of such ice were dition of the country as I have described, in lifted by the flood from ten to fifteen feet a Mission scattered in isolated Stations over above their former level, and then pressed a wild country, can be readily imagined. onward by the rushing current with resistless The trials incident to it were born with force. When these immense floes met with extraordinary cheerfulness by the members obstacles, they were driven under and on of the Mission, and on the coming of mild top of one another and laid in layers, forming weather the work soon resumed its usual ice-gorges, which backed the water up thirty, round. forty, and fifty feet above low-water mark. CHANGE IK THE BOUNDARY OF THE MISSION Yast stretches of farming land were thus DISTRICT. turned into large lakes, and steamboats were The House of Bishops, during the sessions seen floating among house-tops, and were of the General Convention in New York deposited when the flood subsided in the last October, changed the boundaries of the middle of farms half a mile from the river Missionary District of Niobrara, by adding bank. to it all that part of Dakota which lies On the heels of this disaster came a sud­ north of the 40th parallel [the former north­ den thaw which flooded all the smaller ern limit of the district] and south and west streams, and carried away numberless of the Missouri River. bridges. This change was entirely in accordance The devastation in Niobrara was less than with my wishes, and with my views of what we at one time feared. All our Mission build­ was necessary for the most efficient conduct ings, except a few erected in the earliest of the Missionary work, which is growing days of the Mission, have been put up on up in the Black Hills region. high ground beyond the reach of floods, and CLERGY. the only building injured by the late over­ The Clergy now engaged in the Mission flow was a log chapel on the Yankton Re­ work are: serve, known as The Chapel of the Holy The Rev. J. W. Cook, Presbyter; the Rev. Com forter. It was carried off by the flood Luke C. Walker (Native), Presbyter; the REPORT OF TEE BISHOP OF NIOBRARA. 469

Rev. H. Swift, Presbyter; the Rev. H. Burt, S. I. Brown, Crow Creek Keserve; Deacon: the Rev W. J. Cleveland, Pres­ William Saul (Native),Crow Creek Heserve; byter; the Rev. John Robinson, Deacon; the David Weston (Native), Flandmiu; Salos Rev. David Tatiyopa (Native), Deacon; the P. Walker (Native), Lower Brulé Reserve; Rev. Edward Ashley, Deacon; the Rev. Philip J. Deloria (Native), Rosebud; Amos Ross (Native), Deacon; the Rev. W. 'George W. Paypay (Native),Santee Reserve ; Fowler, Presbyter. John Kitts (Native), Cheyenne River Re­ CHANGE IN THE MISSION STAFF. serve; Frank Yassar (Native), Yankton Re­ Rev. Geo. C. Pennell, S.T.D., was re­ serve; John Wapaha (Native), Santee ceived from the Diocese of Northern New Reserve. Jersey in November last, and has taken SYNOPSIS OF STATION. charge of the important Mission of the SANTEE MISSION (Population, 1,060).

Church in the Black Hills. ¡UNDER THE CHARGE OF TIIE REV. W. W. Rev. Abdiel Ramsey, for a time Principal FOWLER, PRESBYTER. of Hope School, was transferred, at his own Church of our Merciful Saviour. request, last October, to the Jurisdiction of The Rev. W. W. Fowler. the Bishop of Iowa. Chapel of Our Blessed Redeemer, Hazilh- The Rev. W . Y. Whitten and Mrs. Whit- j Creek. ten have resigned their respective positions; George Paypay (Native), Catechist. as Principal and House Mother of St. Paul’s Chapel of the Holy Faith Wabashaw Village. School. In here recording their resignations: , John Wapaha (Native), Catechist. I gladly bear testimony, as I did on accept- ] ing it, to the fidelity with which they dis­ St. Man/s Church, Flandreaii, Dakota. charged their duties, the unceasing and David Weston (Native), Catechist. self-forgetful efforts with which they both YANKTON MISSION (Population 2,000). endeavored to advance the interests of the UNDER THE CHARGE OF 1’IIE REV. J. W. COOK, institution, and the love with which they PRESBYTER. have ministered to my comfort, when I have Cathedral Church of the Holy Fellowship, been an inmate of the school. We have lost Yankton Agency. Sister Julia, whose state of health and whose The Rev. Joseph W. Cook. duty to her mother made it necessary for Chapel of Holy Name, Choteau Creel'. her to retire from the work, and seek release Rev. David Tatiyopa (Native), Deacon. from her obligations as a Deaconess. She Chapel of St. Philip the Deacon— White Swan. spent her best strength cheerfully while en­ Frank Vassar (Native), Catechist. gaged in the work. She had won the affec­ Chapel of the Holy Comforter—Point of tion of all who knew her, and as we recall Timber. her we shall all wish, “ Think upon her, our ------, Catechist. God, for good according to all that she hath done for this people.” Miss Anna E. Wea- Emmanuel House. gant has taken up Sister Julia’s work, and Miss A. E. Weagant. has the charge as well, of the Niobrara YANKTONNAIS (CROW CREEK) MIS­ store-room. We give her cordial welcome SION (Population, 900). and wish her all success. St. Thomas' Church, Agency. WOMEN HELPERS. Rev. H. Burt, Catechist.

The ladies now engagedo o in the service of Christ Church— Upper Camp. the Mission, arranged according to the Rev. H. Burt, Catechist. lengths of their terms of service, are as | Church of St. John the Baptist—Lower Camp. follows: j William Saul (Native), Catechist. Miss Mary J. Leigh, Miss Mary Z. Graves, Miss Amelia Ives, Mrs W. Y. Whitten, Miss ¡LOWER BRULÉ MISSION (Population, F. J. Kinney, Miss Sarah Bingham, Miss i 1,200). Mary Stevens, Miss Mary S. Francis, Miss | UNDER THE CHARGE OF THE REV. LUKE C. Anna E. Weagant. j WALKER, PRESBYTER. CATECHISTS. Church of the Saviour, at the Agency. The Catechists (or Lay-readers) licensed The Rev. Luke C. Walker (Native), Pres­ during the year have been: byter. 470 REPORT OF THE BISHOP OF NIOBRARA.

St. Luke's Station, Little Pheasant's. s t . J o h n ’ s b o a r d i n g - s c h o o l ( g i r l s ) , c h e y ------, Catechist. ENXE RIVER RESERVE. St. Alban's Station, Standing Cloud's. Mr. J. Fitch Kinney, Principal. Salos Walker (Native), Catechist. Mrs. J. Fitch Kinney, House Mother. Miss Stevens, Associate. CHEYENNE AGENCY MISSION (Popula­ HOPE SCHOOL ( b o y s ), SPRINGFIELD. tion, 1,950). Mrs. E. E. Knapp, House Mother. UNDER THE CHARGE OF THE REV. H. SWIFT, Miss Bennett, Teacher. PRESBYTER. Six boys, considered as pupils detached St. Stephen's Church, Moreau. from St. Paul’s School, have been living with The Rev. H. Swift, Presbyter. the Rev. Mr. Fowler during the past year, St. Paul'8 Station, Mackenzie's Point. pursuing their studies under bis care, and John Kitto (Native), Catechist. with him carrying on the Mission farm. St. John's Station, Striped Cloud's. The efforts of the officers of these schools Vacant. have been crowned during the past year with more than ordinary success. They are UPPER BRULÉ (ROSEBUD) MISSION still carried on with that constant and assid­ (Population 6,700). uous care for the full education of the hand UNDER THE CHARGE OF THE RET. W. J. and heart of their inmates, as well as of CLEVELAND, PRESBYTER. their heads, which was announced eight Church of Jesus (Margaret Memorial). years ago at the inception of our Boarding- The Rev. W. J. Cleveland. school, with it as the principle of their ad­ Philip J. Deloria (Native), Catechist. ministration. I have myself taken immediate charge for OGALALA, OR PINE RIDGE MISSION the time being of St. Paul’s School, in order (Population, 7,250). to make it that to which its work has hith­ UNDER THE CHARGE OF THE REV. W. J. erto been a preparation, v iz.: more of a Nor­ CLEVELAND, PRESBYTER. mal and Divinity School, and that changes, Church of the Holy Cross, at the Agency. repairs and additions rendered requisite The Rev. P. C. Wolcott. by its advanced work may be made unuer Red Bog's Camp. my own eye. I hail with the warmest satis­ Mr and Mrs. Kocer. faction the Boarding-school work for Indian Little Wound's Camp. youth, which is attracting so much attention Miss Mary J. Leigh. and commendation at Hampton and Carlisle. Orphan's Camp. St. Andrew's Station. We shall gladly learn from the excellent Rev. Amos Ross (Native), Deacon. management of those schools wherever we can, and shall do all in our power to make BOARDTNG-SCHOOLS. those schools and ours (as they ought to be) Our Mission Boarding-schools are the mutually helpful and not rival, much less following : antagonistic. It is a satisfaction that ST. PAUL’S BOARDING-SCHOOL (BOYS), YANK­ school work which we have been quietly do­ TON RESERVE. ing for eight years in Niobrara has been, by The Bishop, President. means of the Hampton and Carlisle Schools, The Rev. J. W. Cook, Instructor in the commended so generally to the Christian Bible. people of the land. Mr. Henry Dawes, First Teacher. ORDINATION. Mr. Edward Dawes, Industrial Teacher. On St. Andrew’s Day I had the pleasure of Mr. Isaac H. Tuttle (Native), Assistant advancing to Priests’ Orders the Rev. Peter Teacher. C. Wolcott, ordained Deacon in June of Miss Sarah Bingham, Associate. 1879. Within a few days I expect to confer Miss Mary Dawes, Second Associate. the same dignity on the Rev. Edward Ashley, e t . m a r y ’ s b o a r d i n g - s c h o o l ( g i r l s ), s a n t e e just graduated at Faribault. RESERVE. Both of these brethren entered the Mission Miss Amelia Ives, House Mother. as Lay-helpers some six or seven years ago, Sister Mary Graves, Associate. while just entering upon young manhood. Miss Mary S. Francis, Teacher. In work in the field, and in studies in the REPORT OF THE BISHOP OF XIOBRARA.

Seminary they have been tested,and it is with In September, 1880, 1 laid on an eligible a peculiar joy that I see them now making site in Deadwood the corner-stone of a full proof of their Ministry. church, to be called St. John's, which will CONFIRMATIONS. be one of the finest Church edifices in Da­ The rigor o f the winter and the floods of kota. The happy people q f the congregation the spring made it impossible for me to fulfil gathered on the occasion in large numbers, some of my appointments for the administra­ and the ceremony was witnessed by a large tion of the rite of Confirmation, and the concourse of spectators. number of persons confirmed is therefore less The church is under roof. The basement, than usual. a large and airy room, has been fit ted up as The list of Confirmations is as follows: a place of worship, and, on Easter Day, the Mission of the Holy Cross, Pine Ridge congregation assembled in it for the first A g e n c y ...... -----7. time, and marked the occasion by services of Church of Jesus, Rosebud Agency - 9. peculiar interest. St. John’s Church, Deadwood - - - 7. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS. Church of the Ascension, Springfield - 4. The Mission has received during the past St. Stephen’s Church, Cheyenne River year, as in former years, many, many tokens Reserve ------12. of the interest which the members of the St. Paul’s Chapel, Cheyenne River Reserve 4. Church feel in it. On the basis of this in­ Chapel of the Holy Name, Yankton terest a work has been built up, which but Reserve ------10. a glance at the synopsis of the Stations and PINE RIDGE MISSION. of the boarding-schools, given on page 469 An encouraging degree o f interest has at­ of this report will show to be of considerable tended the work at all the four Stations of proportions, and which, being carried on this our youngest Mission. Difficult as it is among a poor and helpless people, must de­ to provide for the erection of Mission build­ pend almost entirely upon the charity of ings at such a distant point, a pretty church the Church. I bless G o d that this charity and comfortable dwelling for the Clergy has not failed us in the past, I pray Him were both erected there during the past year, that it may not fail us in the future. and are paid for with the exception of $200, All donations which I have received for which I have still to raise for the house. the Mission have been turned over to the The generous friends who have enabled me Treasurer of the Domestic Committee, for to put up this “ testimony of J e s u s ” in the the current expenses of the work, and have wilderness will read with pleasure these appeared in his monthly acknowledgements words of a letter from the exultant Mission­ in the S p i r i t o f M i s s i o n s ; except those ary. “ Yesterday we had the first Service acknowledged below, which have been ex­ in the new church, and a happy day it was I pended, with one exception, for buildings. assure you. Outside, a regular blizzard was Respectfully submitted, blowing, but it did not prevent a goodly W illiam H. Hare, number from coming to church. I can not Missionary Bishop of Niobrara. express the pleasure that we all felfc in wor­ shipping in the new church. It is a perfect DONATIONS RECEIVED FOR BUILDINGS. gem. Everything looks so neat and rich.” From July 1st, 1880, to June 30th, 1881. THE BLACK HILLS. A Member of St. Luke’s Church, Philadelphia f'T.o 00 I spent a large part of the summer of A Member of Niobrara Mission...... 25 00 1880 in the Black Hills Country, and was as Miss Philbrick...... 1 00 Mr. Wetmore...... 5 00 deeply stirred by the opportunity for the Society of Double Temple...... 925 00 Church’s Missionary effort which is offered R. E. H ...... 39 35 there as I was by the beauty of the country, J. M. H...... 50 00 Miss Eleanor Morris...... 10 00 and impressed by the many tokens which I H. A. Bogert, Esq...... 50 00 saw of its future wealth. So substantial Mrs. Goddard...... 100 00 seemed the evidence of prosperity, that I Rev. Arthur B rooks...... 50 00 Mrs. E. H. Stroud...... 10 00 can not but hope that the serious financial I1 Mr. and Mrs. J. J. As tor...... 015 00 depression, which is now reported to prevail!| House Mother of St. Mary’s School...... 30 00 there at the date of this report, is but]1 Friends, per. Mr. William Welsh...... 35 00 MissJ. E ...... 10 00 temporary. ! 1 George P. Clapp, Esq...... 100 00 472 REPORT OF THE BISHOP OF NIOBRARA.

Men’s Bible Class, St. Luke’s Church, Phila­ Indian Hope...... 110 00 delphia...... 29 05 Staten Island Branch Niobrara League ...... 50 00 Per. L. W. Wells, Esq., Treasurer ...... 387 26 M. H. H ...... 10 00 Total...... $5,585 66 friend of the Indians, Philadelphia...... 250 00 Rev. E. W. Gould ...... 3 00 Miss Coles ...... 50 00 EXPENDITURES Mrs. Coles...... 100 00 Rosebud Mission Buildings...... $430 00 Niobrara League...... 60 00 Lower Brulé Church...... 88 00 M. I. F ...... 100 00 Lower Brulé House...... 33 00 Estate of Miss Bessie F ox...... 50 00 St. Mary’s School...... 488 89 St. Thomas’ Church, Woman’s Association.. 100 00 St. John’s Church, Deadwood...... J 000 00 Mrs. Charles Willing...... 120 00 Church of the Merciful Saviour, Santee 82 10 Member of St. Mary’s, West Philadelphia... 10 00 Home for Truth Teller...... 205 00 Mrs. J. Markoe’s Bible Class...... 50 00 Church of the Holy Cross...... 444 82 Mrs. Delaquesta...... 1 00 Pine Ridge Mission House ...... 242 05 Mrs. Moses Ives...... 100 00 William Welsh Memorial Church...... 387 20 Mrs. Russell. Providence...... 50 00 Pine Ridge Mission Chapel...... 65 00 Mrs. P. Allen...... 75 00 Church of the Holy Fellowship...... 62 00 Absent Member. Niobrara L eague...... 100 00 Mission House, Santee...... 103 00 R S. H ...... 100 00 Chapel of the Blessed Redeemer...... 92 00 Mrs. Wagner...... 50 00 Widow of Rev. E. K. Lessel...... 30 00 Miss Rhoads...... 25 00 Mission House, Choteau...... 8 43 Boarding Home, Philadelphia...... 65 00 St. Paul’s School...... 86 00 Sunday-school,St. Stephen’s Church, Beverly 46 00 St. Mary’s, Fandreau...... 100 00 Miss E. Furniss...... 100 00 On hand unexpended for St. Mary’s School.. 388 11 Per. Mrs. W. Fitch...... 100 00 “ “ “ Society of Double Miss Alice Broome’s Class...... 8 00 Temple ...... 450 00 The Misses Biddle...... 30 00 On hand unexpended for restoration of Miss Mauderson...... 1 00 Chapel of the Holy Comforter...... 31 00 C. C. H ...... 250 00 G. L. H ...... 200 00 Total...... $5,585 66 STATiSTfC'S OF TITE MISSIONARY JURISDICTION OF NIOBRARA— From June Mth. 1880, to June 30(7/, 1881.

B a p ­ t 3 o’ t i s m s . c3 ft b o Description of Church Property. Government Buildings MISSIONS AND STATIONS. o.2 in Use.

Santee Church of our Merciful Saviour.. 87 58 $20,000 I Frame Church Building, Parsonage and ) Catechist’s House. Chapel of our Blessed Redeemer. 1 50 1,500 Frame Church Building. Chapel of the Holy Faith...... 3 70 1,250 Frame Church Building. Mr. Fowler’s Home School...... 11.500 Frame School Building, St. Agnes' Hall. St. Mary’s School...... | and out-buildings. Y a n k t o n . Cathedral Church of the Holy Fellowship. 4.000 Frame Church Building and Parsonage. Chapel of St. Philip the Deacon...... 5 00 2.000 Frame Church and Parsonage. Chapel of the Holy Name...... Ü 81 1.500 Frame Church and Parsonage. St. Paul’s School...... 11.500 Stone Boarding School and out-buildings Emmanuel House...... 500 Fi •ame House. Y a n k t o n n a is. j Frame Church and Parsonage, Sisters Christ Church...... 20 3,000 I House (Log) _ _ j St. Thomas’ Church ...... 600 Frame Church. “ Church of St. John Baptist...... 1.500 Frame Church. Frame School-house. L ow er B kui.e . Christ Church (no report)...... 1.300 Frame Church and Parsonage. School-house. St. Luke’s Station (no report)...... Catechist’s House. St. Alban’s (no report)...... St. Barnabas’ (no report)...... Cheyenne R iv e r . St. John’s Station ...... 14 60 400 Chapel. St. Paul’s Station ...... 2 55 2,000 Log Dwelling and School. St. Stephen’s Church ...... 63 35 2,400 Frame Church and Parsonage. St. John’s Boarding School...... Boarding School. R osebud, o r U p p e r B rule. Church of Jesus (Margaret Memorial). 12 74 4,000 Frame Church and Parsonage. F landkeau. St. Mary’s Church ...... Frame Church. P ine R idg e. Church of Holy Cross...... 115 Frame Church and Parsonage. R ed D og’s ...... St. Andrew’s ...... St. B arnabas’ ...... Spit INC;FIE Church of the Ascension ...... 000 Frame Church. Hope School...... D eadwood. HL. John’s Church ...... 1 6 1,290 00 Brick Church. L ead C it y , Christ (ihuivh ...... [A p p e n d i x t o D o m e s t i c C o m m i t t e e ’ s R e p o r t —G.]

EIGHTH ANNUAL REPORT OF THE MISSIONARY BISHOP OF COLORADO AND W T h e past year has been on the whole a tou; Rev. J. W. Claxton, D.D., St. Mark’s, prosperous one for the Church in this Juris­ Cheyenne; Rev. E. H. Gaynor, St. Peter’s, diction. We have increased the number of Pueblo; Rev. S. C. Gaynor, St. Luke’s, Sil­ our Missionaries. We have held Services at ver Cliff; Rev. J. H. Simey, Castle Rock ; a large number of points. Our Parishes and Rev. R. W . Jones. Missions have, with few exceptions, been Geo. L. Neider is a candidate for Priest’s gaining in strength. The number confirmed Orders, and W. H. W. Fish, a Postulant. has been larger than in previous years. Rev. Wm. P. Case, Rev. David C. Pattee More money has been expended in the and Rev. Olin E. Ortenson have been or­ building of new churches and parsonages. dained Priests, and Messrs. Henry Mitchell, The area of our Church work has been con­ John H. Simey, Wm. C. Battiscombe, and siderably enlarged. The Church Schools, Geo. H. Cornell have been ordained Dea­ W olfe Hall and Jarvis Hall, have been stead­ cons. ily gaining in excellence and in public fa­ The Confirmations were: in St. Mark’s, vor. A more hopeful feeling, more interest Cheyenne, 1; Fort Fred. Steele, 2; Rawlins, in the work, more earnest devotion to the 4; St. John’s, Denver, 27; Trinity Memor­ cause o f C h r is t , it is hoped, generally pre­ ial, Denver, 13; Emmanuel, Denver, 4; vail. For all such tokens of G o d ’s bless­ County Hospital, 5; Grace, Colorado ing, His Holy Name be praised. Springs, 6 ; St. Andrew’s, Manitou, 2; St. The Missionaries in the field at the present Peter’s, Pueblo, 11; Christ, Cafion City, 2 ; date are as follows : St. Luke’s, Silver Cliff, including one from Rev. F. Byrne, St. Luke’s, Fort Collins, Rosita, 6 ; Calvary, Golden, 1; Grace, La Porte, Livermore; Rev. C. M. Hoge, St. Georgetown, 6 ; Calvary, Idaho Springs, 2; Mark’s, Durango, Fort Lewis, etc.; Rev. M. Holy Trinity, Greeley, 1; St. Luke’s, Fort F. Sorenson, St. Paul’s, Littleton, West Collins, 2; St. Paul’s, Littleton, 4; West Plum Creek, Sedalia; Rev. A. D. Drum­ Plum Creek, 2; Saquache, 1; St. John’s, mond, The Atonement, Gunnison ; Rev. D. Boulder, 4; St. Stephen’s, Longmont, 16— C. Pattee, Christ, Cafion City; Rev. T. Y. total, 122. And since the date of this re­ Wilson, St. John’s, Boulder, and St. Ste­ port, and not properly included in it, in St. phen’s, Longmont ; Rev. O. E. Ostenson, George’s, Leadville, 8, and Alma, 2. Emmanuel, West Denver; Rev. John Gray, The following statistics are taken from Holy Trinity, Greeley; Rev. Wm. J. Lynd, the last Convocation Journal: Baptisms, in­ St. Luke’s, Rico; Rev. J. D. Ferguson, St. fant, 222, adult, 61, total, 283; confirmed, Matthew’s, Laramie City and St. Thomas, 122; marriages, 103; burials, 196; com­ Rawlins, W y o.; Rev. G. C. Rafter, Calvary, municants, 1816; Sunday-school teachers, Golden; Rev. John T. Protheroe, Christ, 174; scholars, 1550; total, 1764; families, Xevadaville, and Calvary, Idaho Springs; 1308; souls, 8780; Communion alms, $1232; Rev. Henry Mitchell, St. Bartholomew’s, Foreign Missions, $40; Domestic, $142; Pitkin. Home, $585.12; Ministers’ salaries, $17,- Besides these, the following Clergy are in 294.28; Parish expenses, $5,519.79; Sittings, the field : 4,425; Yalue of churches, $87,060.00 (now Rev. H. Martyn Hart, Dean of St. John’s much too low ); Other property, $79,460.00. Cathedral, Denver; Rev. J. B. Alexander, Total value of property, $194,820. Assistant St. John’s Cathedral, Denver; It will be better to give a summary of Rev. C. H. Marshall, Trinity Memorial, Den­ results rather than a detailed account of ver; Rev. W . C. Battiscombe, All Saints’, the work of each Missionary. Denver; Rev. Geo. H. Cornell, Supt. St. We have built a frame church at Durango, Luke’s Hospital, Denver; Rev. T. L. Bel- sixty by twenty-two feet in size, and cost­ lam, County Supt. of Schools, Golden; Rev. ing about $2,000, and also a small parson­ Arthur Lakes, Prof. State School of Mines, age, costing six or eight hundred dollars. Golden; Rev. T. J. Mackay, St. George’s, The Rev. C. M. Hoge began work here at Leadville; Rev. Geo. T. Le Boutillier, Grace, Christmas, when the town was two months Colorado Springs, and St. Andrew’s, Mani- old. As he was first in the field, so he ha REPORT OF THE BISHOP OF COLORADO. 475

by far the best and largest congregation. | felt that we must make a beginning, trust- This city has about 3,000 inhabitants. It is |j ing in G od . very prosperous, and promises growth and After incorporation on February 12th, permanency. efforts were made to secure a block of land At Pueblo and Greeley parsonages have upon which to commence a building, but been built, costing each about $2,000. St. without success. It was finally determined Peter’s, Pueblo, has become self-supporting. to purchase the Grand View Hotel property The example of Mr. S. D. Hunter of Greeley in North Denver. The building has thirty- deserves special commendation. Though four rooms, two or three of them being suita­ not a man of large wealth, he has contrib­ ble for hospital wards. It stands on a block uted more than half the cost of both church of four acres on the Boulevard, a principal and rectory. The church cost about $3,000. street in that part of the city. The cost Grace Parish, Colorado Springs, has pur­ was $7,900, $900 being for the furniture. chased a parsonage for $2*700. And the We paid down $2,400. The debt is $5,500, Chapel for St. Andrew’s Mission, Manitou, bearing six per cent, interest. We expect has been completed, seating about 150, and to sell a small property bequeathed to us for costing about, $1,500. a Church hospital for $2,000, and to apply St. George’s Parish, Leadville, has erected the same in part payment. We need at a most beautiful church, seating about five once from $1,000 to $1,500 for a tin roof, hundred, and costing $15,000. There are for heating apparatus, and additional furni­ few finer churches or better congregations in ture. The value of the property is fully the West. $10,000. All Saints’ Chapel, Denver, destroyed by As invalids from all sections must be fire last year, has been rebuilt of brick, at a our care, so we hope for aid for this great cost of $2,500. charity from the charitably disposed through­ St. John’s Cathedral, Denver, will be out the land. A payment of five dollars ready for occupancy on the first of Novem­ makes any one an annual member, and of ber. The basement is already in use by the fifty dollars a life member. $300 endows a large and rapidly growing Sunday-school. free bed for a year, and $3,000 in perpetuity. The cost of the cathedral, including organ In all these ways, as well as by special do­ and furnishing, will be somewhat above nations, our good friends and the friends of $8,000. The completion of this much- suffering humanity may aid us. needed church is expected to add greatly to The hospital was opened June 22. It has our Church strength, and to the efficiency treated about sixty patients. The present of our work in and beyond this city of number is twenty-two. 45,000 people. Last year we were able to report that there The upper story of the east wing of Wolfe was no debt on any church in the Jurisdic­ Hall has been finished and fitted up with tion. We regret that we can not say the alcoves; and steam heating has been pro­ same this year. A debt upon the Denver vided for the new parts of the building, Cathedral of $10,000 is inevitable. All which will add much to the comfort of the Saints’ Chapel, North Denver, still owes pupils. The cost of these improvements was four or five hundred dollars. Tne parson­ $3,000. age at Colorado Springs is not wholly paid One of the best things done during the for. There is a debt of $3,000 upon St. year was the founding of St. Luke’s Hospi­ George’s Church, Leadville. W olfe Hall tal, Denver. We had seen for years the owes about $3,500 for improvements that need of such an institution. Colorado is a cost sixteen or seventeen thousand dollars. sanitarium for invalids from all parts of We are sorry for these deficits, which were America and from England. There were in unavoidable. But on the other hand we, this vicinity no places for the sick but the rejoice to be able to say that the value of hotels and boarding - houses, the Roman our church property in the five new churches Catholic Sisters’ Hospital, and the County and three parsonages built, has been in­ Poor House. Many sick and afflicted per­ creased by more than one hundred thousand sons have looked to us for Christian care dollars. We hope to pay off all debts the and consolation which we were unable to coming year. provide. We could wait no longer. We The new Missions organized were St.‘ 476 REPORT OF TEE BI8E0P OF COLORADO.

Mark’s, Durango; St. Bartholomew’s, Pit- miles distant. Of Parishes, St. Paul’s, Cen­ kins; St. Thomas’, Rawlins; St. Stephen’s, tral City, has been vacant since April, and Longmont; The Atonement, Gunnison. For Grace Church, Georgetown, is now left with­ the last two we are now building churches. out a Pastor. The Bishop has visited all Four or five more churches should be built the vacant Parishes and Missions, and given the ensuing year. The new places where such services as he was able. Missions should be organized and Services The removal of the Ute Indians perma­ supplied are South Pueblo, Alma, Brecken- nently from Colorado will open up an im­ ridge, Red Cliff, Robinson and Kokomo, mense region of country to rapid settle­ not to speak of Gothic and Ruby, Aspen and ment. None who have not travelled over Ashcroft, Buena Vista, Bonanza, Vitta the portion of Colorado already under de­ Grove, and a dozen or more other places of velopment to some extent, and filling up importance. with a population scarcely equalled any­ What might we not accomplish if we only where in intelligence and enterprise, can had the men and the means. have any adequate idea of its vastness. Add Trinity Mission, Trinidad, which has had to this the newer regions referred to, which but very infrequent Services, chiefly by the have never yet been thoroughly explored, Bishop, during the last seven years, is mani­ but which are believed to abound in re­ festing renewed life. The ladies have sources attractive to prospectors and pio­ organized a society to work for a church. neers, and we shall have in this State a Mis­ We hope to arrange to connect this Mission sion field, the oversight of which will suffi­ with that at Raton, N. M., and have ciently tax the energies of one Bishop. And Services on alternate Sundays. This town now the whole of Wyoming, with the ex­ has a population of 2,500, and is growing in ception of the small Shoshone Indian Reser­ importance year by year. vation, is inviting settlement. The new At Alma also the ladies have organized a county recently set off in the north, border­ guild, to work for the support of a Clergy­ ing on Montana, will soon rival the best man. At Longmont the organization, begun of the older counties in population. The in December is particularly efficient and resources of this Territory are much greater successful. In Denver the Church organi­ than has been supposed. There is a law of zations for various purposes are working compensation in nature. Where one re­ with great zeal and success. So in other source, or source of wealth is lacking, others places. will be found of equal or greater value. Breckenridge was supplied with Services Wyoming is not an exception. most acceptably during July, August, and The rich pasturage, almost everywhere, part of September, by the Rev. Chas. J. the very considerable extent of agricultural Stout, of Western Michigan, who came out lands, the varied and abundant mineral re­ to recruit his health by “ roughing it,” sources, the great railway interests, present doing Missionary work. His success, both and prospective, will give to this Territory in improvement to health and in work done, great importance and a large and increasing was far beyond his expectations. This is a population. It will be remembered also that good example for others. We would gladly the great National Parkin the Yellow Stone welcome such laborers, for like work, during River country is in Wyoming. Already a the cool summer months in the mountains. strong plea has been made for the Services So far we report progress. But there are and ministrations of the Church in that re­ discouragements. Ouray, and its surround­ gion. The Bishop ought to be able to give ing Missions, has been vacant since the res­ at least the three summer months of every ignation of the Rev. E. S. Cross last June. year to the visitation of Wyoming Territory. Rico was vacant from December to Septem­ These are the months when the parts of ber. Lake City has had good lay-reading Colorado lying over the range must be vis­ since July, when the Missionary, the Rev. ited, and one can not do two things and be A. D. Drummond, was sent to Gunnison. in two places at once. Del Norte and the Missions of the San Luis I have been doubtful of the expediency, Valley have been unsupplied for the whole so far at least as Wyoming is concerned, of year. So also Rosita, save the few Services placing a Bishop in every Territory. But given by the Rector of Silver Cliff, eight my utter physical inability to do the work REPORT OF TEE BISEOP OF COLORADO. 477 that ought to be done, compels a change of most of them will for a time require Mis­ mind. I am now convinced that Wyoming sionary stipends. ou«ht to have a Bishop of its own. It is The Second great need, therefore, is mon­ also clear that Colorado ought to be a Dio­ ey for special stipends, so that we may cese. The necessity of an endowment fund put in the field a number of new Missiona­ for the support of the Episcopate alone ries, additional to those the Board is now stands in the way. able to provide for. Why are not some of our wealthy Church­ T h ird : we require aid for the building men led to see the necessity of endowing of Mission Chapels and parsonages. We our Missionary Jurisdictions, so that they promise the greatest care as to their location. may become Dioceses, and thus relieve the They shall be built in permanent towns Board of the burden of their support ? The where they are needed, and each will cost pioneer settlers are not likely to create' such from $1,200 to $2,000. endowments. They who know them best F o u rth : we are under the necessity of know how uncertain is any such reliance. securing $3,500 to pay for recent enlarge­ The wealth o f the mining Territories, as all ments of Wolfe Hall. We also need for intelligent people are aware, goes to enrich this school two more pianos and suitable the East and Eastern capitalists. To the books for the school library. East we ought to look chiefly for the endow­ F ift h : for Jarvis Ilall we want very much ment of our Episcopates, as the English the means to build a small barn, a gymna­ Colonial Missionary Dioceses look to wealthy sium; also, school library books and books Churchmen in the mother country. It is of reference, such as cyclopaedias and dic­ hard to understand why this paramount tionaries, and philosophical apparatus object is not seen; why in this time of mar. S ixth : aid for St. Luke’s Hospital. vellous prosperity and increase of wealth, Seventh: help towards endowing the Epis­ when sc many good causes are appealing copate and the schools. successfully to the charitable, there are none These wants we make known prayerfully to give in some measure, proportionate to the and trustfully to the benevolent. need, to facilitate the formation of new A few good Christian friends have aided Dioceses out of the Missionary Districts. us generously the past year. Miss Wolfe Dakota, Oregon, Montana, Utah, Colora­ has continued her generous benefaction to do, and Northern California, might thus Wolfe Hall. Various persons and parishes be given Diocesan representation and re­ have given and chiefly furnished the alcoves sponsibilities, and their Missionary appro­ of the new dormitory. Two ladies of the priations be increased by the amount of the Diocese of Massachusetts have helped me Bishops’ salaries. Let information be dif­ largely in Church building. A lady of fused on this subject. Let it be placed be­ Philipsburg, Central Pennsylvania, and her fore the people in its proper light. It can daughters, have been the largest givers for hardly be but that a response would come All Saints’, Denver. One lady of Trinity from some whom G o d has blessed, for an Church, Cleveland, has given me the sti­ object than which no other before the pend of a Missionary. Two liberal gifts for Church can appeal more justly or more the hospital have been received from Balti­ strongly to their liberality. more and New York, and another still We have about $1,500 towards an Episco­ larger is promised from Southern Ohio. pate fund for a Diocese that shall embrace Most of the Clergy have received valuable Colorado only, and efforts will be made this boxes of clothing and other necessary things year to increase it. for themselves and their families. Sister This report ought not to be closed without Eliza’s stipend has, as heretofore, been pro­ mention of some of the special and imme­ vided for. For all these and other gifts diate needs of the Jurisdiction. not specified, our sincere thanks are hereby F irst of all, we need six or eight more recorded, and we ask G o d ’s richest blessings Clergymen. If well-instructed young men, for each and all of the givers and workers of ability and devoted Christian energy and for His cause. enterprise, can be found, there will be no Respectfully submitted, great difficulty about their support. They J o h n F. S p a ld in g , will get most of it from their people. Still, Miss. Bishop of Colorado and Wyoming. [A p p e n d i x t o D o m e s t i c C o m m i t t e e ’ s R e p o r t —H.]

SEVENTH ANNUAL REPORT OF THE MISSIONARY BISHOP OF WESTERN TEXAS.

In my last report I held out the pleasing Hitherto, as I have advised the Board, hope that Western Texas, so long neglected the immigration into Western Texas has by the great moving forces of our time, was been far from equal to that rolling into about to be remembered. The result has those portions of the West occupied by the outrun my expectation. While I was mak­ railway enterprise of the country. Sud­ ing my report to the General Convention, denly, however, the attention of the great what I only anticipated had taken perma­ projectors of such undertakings has been nent form, and was being vigorously prose­ turned in this direction. Partially because cuted. Three powerful Syndicates, to use of its comparatively unoccupied condition, the word of the day, had begun to traverse but chiefly because through it lies the high­ this vase, but hitherto forgotten territory. way to Mexico and the lower ports of the The Southern Pacific, upon the one hand, is Pacific. moving rapidly in a southeasterly direction To what is taking place in immigration across the six hundred miles that separate we often see something analogous, here in El Paso from San Antonio, forging the last Texas, in nature. The streams in summer link between San Francisco and New Or­ are sluggish and insignificant; you can go leans. Upon the other, the great combina­ over them dry-shod; but presently up in tion known as the Gould system, is build­ the hills a water-spout has burst, and the ing with a rapidity that passes former meandering brook becomes in a moment a knowledge in a southwesterly direction bold and impassible torrent. So in pop­ (crossing the Southern Pacific at San An­ ulation, suddenly a trickling stream has be­ tonio), destined before two months to reach come an impetuous river. And we ask with Laredo upon our Mexican frontier, and thence the prophet, “ If we have run with the proceeding to the City of Mexico, is to footmen and they have wearied us . . . form a line having as it termini St. Louis what shall we do in the swellings of Jordan ?” and the capital of our sister republic. And The men and women of the Church hear yet another powerful company, having its this story so often, there is so much reitera­ centre in Colorado, has received ample con­ tion about it, that I am afraid such state­ cessions from the Mexican Government, and ments seem simply & missionary fagon de has to-day just completed its first link from paler. It is such a fashion of speech, be­ Corpus Christi to Laredo, and is rapidly loved, as are those words of the prayer, preparing to unite by a narrow gauge sys­ “ Thy Kingdom come.” It is of the tra­ tem, Colorado and the Northwest through vail of this coming Kingdom that we are Western Texas with the City of Mexico. telling, concerning which it is our business To what does this report, that reads al­ to be full of care and solicitude. How most like a prospectus of projected railway shall we so emphasize our needs as to escape lines, tend, you may ask. Brethren of the the criticisms of “ vain repetitions,” so Board, a most practical issue. To this: that that good people will not shrug their should­ at the stations upon these far-stretching ers over the old story of “ more help.” lines, as fast as a site is reached with prom­ Who will read these words ? the writer, ising surroundings, an auctioneer, standing full of the wants of a dozen outposts, asks upon a pile of crossties, maybe, sells off himself. No men are harder worked than the bald prairie, hitherto the uncoveted the Missionary Committees of our Church. home of the coyote and mustang, in town They live “ in committee.” It is, besides, lots, at extraordinary prices, and that means purely a labor of love. Can we expect these population; and population has in it respon­ men, living such full lives, to read thirteen sibilities, high cares, gentlemen of the reports from thirteen Missionary Bishops. I Board, for you and for me, because it means say in good faith and full sympathy, that souls over whom we jointly have supervis­ the proposition is monstrous. W ill these ion, and for whom the Incarnate Spji of words then be read and bear fruit, or simply G o d did die. fall by the wayside ? Whatever may be REPORT OF TEE BISEOP OF WESTERN TEXAS. 479 their fate, they tell a true story of present Consecration, I am happy to add that there and pressing need; of a future in which if have been thirty-two Confirmations since my we hope to reap, we must sow to-day. last report, and thirty persons added by first It may justly be enquired, Were you not Communion. The list of communicants has helped last year ? Yes, I say, from a full increased from 230 to 275. heart, thanks be to G o d and His almoners— Of the Missions of the city I have noth­ chiefly among the blessed women—helped ing further to report, except that I have last year more than any four years before put been able to purchase, through the munifi­ together. cence of a Philadelphia lady, a lot for one But realize the abnormal growth of the of our chapels just in front of the extensive country, so that ample arrangements in Janu­ officers’ quarters and barracks being erected ary seem quite inadequate in June. A immediately in the northeast of the city. I fresh railway combination upon Wall feel confident that a very short time will Street—the quick decision of a few capi­ show the valuable nature of the position talists widen instantly the whole front of that we have secured, and that -we shall be the work, and determine its direction. You able to build a cliapel upon the site which must be alert. Then for a few men of the will give a Sunday-school, and offer the right metal, and a little money to respond Services of the Church to the officers and to the demands of the time. Besides, so men and their families, besides caring for far behind is this field in many respects, the population of a suburb that promises to that extraordinary efforts, made not inter­ be the most important one of the city. mittently, but with a pertinacious and hard- I was so fortunate as to persuade my dear headed continuity, are necessary to secure brother, the Bishop of Northern Texas, a results. man much beloved in Western Texas, to go Leaving what is before us, I pass now to with me from San Antonio, to preach the speak of that which has been accomplished sermon at the consecration of the Church of during the year last past. I shall not re­ the Messiah at Gonzales, which took view the whole field, but only speak of place April 27tli, two days after the those places where there has been marked consecration of St. Mark’s Cathedral. advance or retrogression. At San Antonio Many friends will remember the strug­ it has been a year to be remembered, be­ gle made by a few brave hearts for the cause upon the 2nd of April, being the feast accomplishment of this, to them, most im­ of St. Mark, St. Mark’ s Cathedral was con­ portant result, and it will please them, I am secrated, the Dean, Wardens and Yestry be­ sure, to know of this happy consummation. ing able to testify that it was free from The design was furnished by Dean Rich­ all encumbrances. W e were rejoiced by ardson of San Antonio; it has a seating ca­ the presence of the Bishop of Texas, for so pacity of two hundred, a recessed chancel, a long exercising jurisdiction in this district ; comely tower, is finished in Calcosien pine by that of the Bishop of Tennessee, who varnished, and has no debt. was the preacher of the occasion, and of the During the past spring thirteen persons, Missionary Bishop of Northern Texas. some of them the most valuable citizens of The Diocese of Texas, Tennessee, the ancient town of Gonzales, have been Western New York, and the Mission­ confirmed, so that the Rev. Mr. Fuller, like ary Districts of Northern and Western Dean Richardson at San Antonio, has seen Texas, were represented by Clergy and laity, important accessions to his flock at the mo­ and the Parish of Christ Church, Houston, ment when the edifice itself was given to sent under the direction of its able Rector G od . its choir of boys to illustrate the occasion Upon the 19th of June, being the First It was a time of rejoicing and thanksgiving Sunday after Trinity, I had the great joy of to G od. And we are very grateful to the opening St. Helena’s Church, Borme. After brethren, who, at great inconvenience to my return from the General Convention, I themselves, came to assist us in making this was able to offer the Rev Mr. Allen such beyond comparison, the most memorable substantial help, that he felt encouraged to religious festival ever seen upon this go on and endeavor to collect the rest. In border. this he largely succeded, and although un­ As a fitting pendant to this feast of the finished, and not free from debt, it gives us 480 REPORT OF THE BISHOP OF WESTERN TEXAS. at this health resort of our district a much rection of the Rev. Dr. Clark, enjoying a needed place of worship. The money I put season of quiet prosperity. I confirmed twelve into this building came, in large part, from persons, eight of them being men. a loved and liberal man of New Y ork; and The Church of the Advent, Brownsville, its name is given in memory of a dear child, having been for six months without a Rec­ now in Paradise, whose Sunday-school tor, is suffering for pastoral supervision; companions in Philadelphia contributed to but the indefatigable ladies maintain the its erection, and also in remembrance of efficiency of the Sunday-school, and provide the parish church in Beaufort, South Caro­ from it most excellent music for our Servi­ lina, of that name, around which my fore­ ces. May the Rector so much needed soon fathers lie buried. There are many memo­ be found ; we are trying to find him. ries bound up in this pretty chapel, built Last autumn I reported three points that also from a design by our Dean at San An­ needed immediate help: Uvalde, on the tonio. As I have said, it is unfinished; it projected line of the Southern Pacific; La­ needs doora and windows, and the benches redo, the western terminus of the Corpus are only temporary, being without backs; Christi and Rio Grande and International but we are happy over this advance, and and Great Northern Railways, and El Paso, thank G o d and take courage. At the open­ at the junction of four great lines running ing Service of St. Helena’s I confirmed four east and west through Arizona and Texas, persons. and south and north through Mexico and St. James’ Chapel, Hallettsville, thanks New Mexico. I am able to report more or to the goodness of certain friends in New less progress at all these points. During Jersey who know how to devise liberal January of the present year I was enabled things, is being built, and at my next visi­ to send the Rev. T. C. Stanley of the Dio­ tation I hope to be able to officiate in it. In cese of Georgia to Uvalde. He found at June, at this point, the Rev. Mr. Corbin, this place, and in the county of the same our Missionary, presented two persons for name, twelve communicants. The only Confirmation. public buildings in the place were the Possibly it may be remembered that I Court House, and a wretched apology for a said I had promised to help our people at school-house. He secured the former, and Goliad, in the Missionary field of the Rev. soon had, for a place of four hundred in­ F. R. Storr, to the extent of $400, and that habitants, very remarkable congregations. I thought it would result in a church. The In order to become acquainted with the ability to meet my promise was given me by children of the place, he for a time took a noble society of ladies in the city of New charge of the public school. This repaid York, having as its two fold aim the ad­ him by filling his Sunday-school with his vance of G o d ’s Kingdom, visible and invisi­ day scholars. Fierce sectarian opposition ble. The light shed over their souls from was aroused ; but the evident purity of in­ the upper sanctuary is seen reflected by tention, definiteness of teaching, and all good works; chapels and churches erected pervading charity and kindliness won the to G o d ’s great glory, upon distant borders. day. and when upon my visitation in July, It is to contributions of this association I confirmed eighteen persons, among them, that we are largely indebted for the fact probably the three most influential citizens that St. Stephen’s Church, Goliad, is now of the place— old Texans— it was acknowl­ being erected, and will, we trust, be fin­ edged on all hands that the Church was a ished during the autumn. At my last benefit and a blessing. Being able to offer visitation in March I confirmed in an upper them substantial aid in consequence of the chamber, used by the Presbyterians as a munficence of a lady, they soon raised ;<■ place of worship, three persons. subscription amounting to $1,200, and so At Cuero and Victoria, also under Mr. soon as the railway, now rapidly approach­ Storr’s charge, and especially at the former ing, arrives within a reasonable distance, place, our chapels have been further fin­ St. Philip’s, Uvalde, will be begun. But ished and rendered comely, by the labors the place is so far west of San Antonio (90 of the ladies and Sunday-school children. miles), is so peculiarly situated, that it must A t Corpus Christi I can report the parish always have an extensive territory tributary of the Good Shepherd, under the wise di'- to it; and Uvalde must have, in order to REPORT OF TEE BISEOP OF WESTERN TEXAS. 481 carry on the work so auspiciously begun, a body, to supply El Paso wdth a Clergyman. rectory and scbool-bouse. I would under­ The Rev. S. Wilkins Tays lived at this point take either for $1,500. The one would in 1872, ’73 and ’74, anticipating the arrival shelter a hardworking Missionary; the other of the railways now centering there; but mould in all good ways the children of the the financial crisis of 1873, for the time, prairie. Just now it is the most promising discouraged all such efforts, and El Paso field for judicious expenditure within my was deserted save by a few officials. Mr. knowledge, and I trust the golden oppor­ Tays, however, presented to the Church be­ tunity will not be lost. In six months the fore his departure, a block of land, now list of communicants has gone from twelve very valuable, and has now returned, hoping to forty-eight. to be able to realize his anticipations of ten In addition to Uvalde, the Rev. Mr. years ago. He needs everything. There is Stanley has been giving occasional Services no church of any sort in the place, and he at Fort Clark, a large ^rmy post, much to officiates so often as he can get the place in the gratification of the officers and men. a tent. Four trunk lines centre at El Paso. Laredo is fast becoming a place of im­ In a few months 2,000 people have gathered portance, being the point upon our frontier there, and we are without any equipment. I where what is known as the Palmer-Sulli- hope and trust we may be remembered by van combination, and the Gould system of those who read this Report. International railways must pass our borders Just as I am concluding, I am able to add and enter Mexico. W e have here a few that having found twenty-five English fami­ communicants, and there is no Protestant lies lately come to the vicinity of Kerrville, place of worship of any kind. Our people, Kerr County, I have been able to send the during my visit in February, raised $1,200 Rev. Charles McLaren Howard, of England, toward a church building, and we need ex­ to work up his scattered fellow-country­ ceedingly a Missionary. In order to show men, who have settled in that vicinity. Mr. some of the great difficulties of administra­ Howard takes Mr. Allen’s work at Borme, tion in this field, and the terrible isolation and adds this field to it. of its more distant points, I would say that For those who, anxious to do G o d ’s work in February I was traveling by stage three in the Mission fields, shall read what I have days and two nights continuously, to reach written and desire to help us, I append a Laredo, a distance that next winter I shall summary of our most pressing necessities. travel by Mr. Gould’s line in ten hours. SUMMARY. There is just now, no point between this At Uvalde we need a rectory and school- and San Antonio, distant 155 miles, of 200 house ; the church is provided for. inhabitants; but this feature is rapidly At Laredo we need a church and rectory changing, and we will be able— I say it with and a partial support for a Minister. The thanksgiving— to reach and work, with people purchased lots for these buildings reasonable outlay of time and money, this before the late great rise in property. great stretch of prairie. Again I am obliged At El Paso we need a church and rectory. to urge upon the Church our great need of Here we have a fine block, given to the assistance here. A church and a rectory Church years ago by the present Missionary. must be built in order to put us in any sort Besides these great and pressing necessi­ of condition to meet the necessities of the ties, for the want of which the Church is time. The question of priority of occupa­ sorely set and hindered in running the race tion is one of great force, and it is sad to that is set before her, there are many give place to those who, coming after us, are more that I forbear to mention, because I perhaps better equipped by the bodies from would not weary our people; but there is which they come. A church, rectory, and need of help in many other directions, and Missionary here will secure a hearing, a re­ we anxiously look for the assistance that spect, and a future for the Church, that will support the Church under the accession with a little postponement will be forever of opportunities thickening around her. lost to us. In conclusion, I add some account of our At El'Paso the conditions are exactly the school work, an account of the clerical same as at Laredo, except that I have been changes, and a list of the Clergy now labor­ able, through the aid of your honorable ing in the district. 482 REPORT OF THE BISHOP OF WESTERN TEXAS.

SCHOOLS. under the care of Messrs. Trevett and Corbyn, For the past year Miss W. M. Timberlake has had thirty-five boys. It is a parochial has had charge of the Montgomery Institute, school, and has accomplished the purpose Seguin, and in her report to me she says : for which it was established. Under the “ From what I can hear from the best peo­ present management the financial difficul­ ple, the standard and standing of the In­ ties have all disappeared. stitute are higher than heretofore. The In San Antonio I have fitted up St. classes are more advanced in some studies Mary’s so as to accommodate the teachers than the graduating class of last year, and a limited number of boarders. The though there is no class ready for that dis lower story contains a large and admirably tinction.” ventilated school-room, just furnished with As perhaps the Board is aware, there has improved desk, etc., and also a dining­ been no boarding department heretofore con­ room; adjacent, but opposite to this room nected with this institution; but in conse­ is the kitchen. Up-stairs there are domi- quence of the noble action of the Woman’s tories and a parlor. A tower and upper and Auxiliary of the Diocese of Connecticut, lower galleries have been added, and the “ Williams Hall,” containing rooms for the whole stone work newly pointed ; all this teachers and a number of boarders, has been at a cost of $1,650, a large part having been contracted for and is very nearly completed; given for this purpose by some very dear will in fact, I hope, be occupied by the friends of my own in Cambridge, Mass. time this Report is in print. Towards this This establishes, therefore, a school of good object the Auxiliary collected and sent me grade and character in San Antonio, and re­ $3,281 26, a sum nearly eight hundred dol­ moves the reproach of the necessity of a lars in excess of that for which I hoped, and Romish or a godless education, for which, to which has allowed me to put up a building our ever blessed L o r d and S a v io u r wre much larger, more comfortable, and of a yield perpetual thanks. far superior finish than originally con­ The number of teachers and scholars in templated. Upon the lower floor there is a these schools will be found noted in the reception-room, Matron’s room, Principal’s tabular statement accompanying this report. room, dining-room, pantry, closet, and CLERICAL CHANGES. kitchen; upon the upper floor six dormi­ During the past year I have transferred tories. The ventilation is secured by com­ the Rev. Wallace Carnahan to the Diocese of modious entries above and below, which Alabama, and the Rev. Nelson Ayer to the serve as lungs to the building. Diocese of Maryland. The young ladies of “ St. Margaret’s I have received the Rev. J. B. Trevett School,” Waterbury, have placed us under from the Diocese of Albany; Rev. J. W. many obligations by sending $75, to be Tays from the Diocese of Mississippi; Rev. used in supplying chairs and china, and C. E. Cabaniss from the Diocese of Ala­ two of the churches of the same generous bama. Diocese are furnishing linen for the equip­ The following Clergy are canonically ment of this new Hall. I hope great things resident or laboring in the D istrict: from this gift, and do now publicly thank Rev. W. R. Richardson, Dean, St. Mark’s, most heartily the Right Rev. the Bishop of San Antonio; Rev. C. E. Cabaniss, Mis­ Connecticut, at whose invitation I made sionary, San Antonio; Rev. J. B. Trevett, known our needs, and who so generously Seguin; Rev. F. R. Starr, Victoria, etc.; took this District by the hand, the Rectors Rev. Horace Clark, LL.D., Corpus Christi; in whose several parishes the collections for Rev. N. B. Fuller, Luling, etc.; Rev. J. W. this building have been made, and the Tays, El Paso; Rev. T. C. Stanley, Uvalde, women of Connecticut who have not spared etc.; Rev. W . W. Corbyn, Deacon, Halletts- themselves in the effort to do good upon ville, etc.; Rev. C. McL. Howard, Deacon, this border. May G od bless them one and Borme, etc.; Rev. W. E. Canington, • Dea­ all, and I earnestly ask personally for their con, Victoria; Rev. W. T. Allen, Deacon, prayers, and also on behalf of this school Sewanee. that we are endeavoring to build up. I am truly yours, St. Andrew’s Academy for boys, in the R. W . B. E l l i o t t , same town (Seguin), during the past session Missionary Bishop of Western Texas. SEVENTH ANNUAL TABULAR STATEMENT OP THE MISSIONARY DISTRICT OF WESTERN TEXAS, SEPT. 1st, 1881.

S u n d a y S c h o o l s CONTRIBUTIONS. CHURCH PROPERTY. +3CQ u> 00 to 00 to PLACES, PARISH OR RECTOR OR MISSIONARY MISSION. Missior Missioi Buildir Missioi Other Total Property. Contributioi Domestic Scholars. Foreign District Church Rectory. Adult. Teachers. District. Communican Parochial. Infants. Total. Confirmation 1 Indebtedness. 1 1 j Schools.j Total. j San Antonio, Cathedral Rt. Rev. R. W. B. Elliott, D.D and St. Mark’s Id 27 34 275 16 125 $3,706 50 $150 00 $50 00 $17 00 $74 90 $3,998 40 35,000 00 $2,000 00 $7,000 00 $44,000 00 $1,000 00 Rev. W. R. Richardson, Dean. “ St. Luke’s 11 11 4 V 7 25 11 25 625 30 15 54 90 750 00 300 00 1,050 00 “ St. John’s I 4 1 .i a it Seguin, St. Andrew’s . ... 4 4 74 3ti 499 37 is ÔÔ 517 37 3,500 00 1,500 00 7,400 00 12,400 00 San Marcos, St. Mark’s. 18 7 199 00 32 10 3 25 234 352,000 00 500 00 2.500 00 Rev. N. B. Fuller. Lockhart, Emmanuel... 8 0 9 19 65 00 65 00 1,800 00 1,800 00 3 ft 4 17 10 135 75 1,500 00 800 00 300 00 2,600 00 it >i Luling, Annunciation... 20 «7 118 65 u ii Gonzales, Messiah...... 8 16 19 13 29 5 1,157 00 27 00 8 25 1,192 25 2,000 00 500 00 2.500 00 Hallettsville, St. James’ a 2 2 15 8 27 700 00 700 00 Rev. W. W. Corbyn. 6 R 8 100 00 1.300 00 300 00 Rev. C. McL. Howard. 4 7 90 712 20 712 20 1,200 00 i( «( 1 1 2 10 3 3^ 7 13 20 18 48 7 45 275 00 275 00 100 00 100 00 Rev. T. C. Stanley. 4 4 25 1 1 ft 27 00 32 70 49 70 Rev. F. R. Starr. 1 1 1 600 00 U 14 Chocolate, St. Paul’s ---- 2 13 13 70 18 00 31 70 600 00 << U Victoria, Trinity...... 7 7 1 28 fi 35 157 35 35 00 6 25 198 60 1,000 00 1,000 00 Luvoca, Grace...... 7 12 50 5 75 18 25 (I «1 7 9 (& It Goliad, St. Stephen’s .. . . 1 h" a 15 60 246 75 15 00 3 25 6 45 271 45 1.500 00 300 00 1,800 00 u u Cuero, Grace...... 7 7 a U 10 70 415 55 25 00 7 45 448 00 1.500 00 4 ii tl 20 00 4 00 24 00 tl u 7 7 l 16 9 19 155 30 24 00 5 80 185 10 Corpus Christi, Good Shepherd. ? 11 12 no 7 60 1,536 45 56 00 1,592 45 4.000 00 2,500 00 400 00 6,900 00 1,700 00 Rev. Horace Clark, LL.D. A 6 32 9 70 250 00 19 25 269 25 4.000 00 200 00 4,200 00 1 1 1 18 6 45 6 45 6 00 600 00 9 ft R 1 12 5 90 125 00 125 00 a ? 10 Rev. C. McL. Howard, 1,000 00 1,000 00 Rev. S. Wilkins Taya. Sutherland Springs, Mis. 1*? 1 3 4 32 Total...... 37 187 164 95 904 103 755 49,474 67 $422 95 $67 75 $23 25 $191 65 $10,180 17 $59,650 00 $4,800 00 $5,825 00 $14,400 00 $85,175 00 $3,000 00 [A p p e n d i x t o D o m e s t i c C o m m i t t e e ’ s R e p o r t —I.]

SEVENTH ANNUAL REPORT OF THE MISSIONARY BISHOP OF NORTHERN

- CALIFORNIA.

T h e Missionary Jurisdiction of Northern past three years in consequence of “ the California has to-day an experience of seven hard times,” and hence the offerings have years, and her Bishop desires to lay before fallen off thousands of dollars in these the Church a record of work done to date, years, there being a difference of over and to report the situation of affairs as they $5000 between the years 1881 and 1875. at present appear to him. These facts have lessened the ability of the He has officiated at 3996 Services, and de­ few to maintain the Clergy in their posi­ livered 951 Sermons, Lectures and A d­ tions. So much for general statements. dresses. Perhaps a better idea of the present state of His Confirmation list shows that 928 per­ affairs can be formed by entering into par­ sons have received at his hands that Apos­ ticulars. tolic Ordinance. According to the Census Bulletin just He has administered the Lord’s Supper published, the largest and most flourishing 156 times, and Holy Baptism 120 times; city in the Jurisdiction is Sacramento, the 12 persons have been buried by him, and 20 capital of the State. The population of this couples united in Holy Matrimony. Three city is estimated at 21,420 souls, and hence church buildings have been consecrated and here should be the strength of the Church, two more are nearly ready for the same from which to draw aid and comfort for the solemn Services. During these seven years surrounding Missionary points in the Dis­ the Bishop has had the co-operation of trict. How has this expectation been justi­ thirty-three (33) Clergymen from time to fied ? The history of the Protestant Episco- time, of whom thirteen remain at present Church in this city, shows a state of affairs in the Jurisdiction, ten being closely en­ worse than in any other part of the Jurisdic­ gaged in parish and general Missionary tion. Indeed, the Parish actually became work. The Baptisms number 1195; the an object of charity, and until very recently scholars in the Sunday-schools 927; the was as near extinction as possible without church buildings 13; the communicants really having its light g o out in darkness. 580; the total offerings $112,995.56, averag­ There has been no Rector’s guiding hand ing $18,832.59 p er annum. The total prop­ since April, 1880, and there have been no erty is valued at $53,580, on which is an regular Services for more than a year. indebtedness of $3,815. There has been almost chaos. The church The great disparity between the number building, which cost $26,000, on land of confirmations and communicants shows valued at $5000, was lost entirely, but within the unsettled condition of the population. the past three months through the munifi­ To-day the number of communicants be­ cence of a few friends, it has been rescued for longing to the Jurisdiction, is less than at the insignificant sum of $5400, and at the ex­ the time of the setting off of the District of pense of about $1000 more is being put in Northern California, and yet nearly a thou­ perfect order. A new era seems to have sand have been added to the Communion by dawned upon the Parish, and if the right Confirmation. This mobility of the people man can be secured for the helm, the ship unsettles the Clergy, and during the year will soon sail out into clear waters with just ended no less than seven Clergymen some prospect of a successful voyage. I pray have been transferred to the Ecclesiastical G o d to send such a captain as may be the Jurisdictions. It is estimated that about means of leading the way out of the trouble­ 100,000 people have left the State in the some past, and of building up a strong REPORT OF THE BISHOP OF NORTHERN CALIFORNIA. 485

Parish. The prospect is bright and cheer­ gregation imagine they can not support a ing. We thank G o d and take courage. As Rector, and hence nobody has been called to soon as the hot weather is over and the fill a vacancy made last November. people return to their ■ homes, the building Although there is a population at Napa will be thoroughly repaired, and then conse­ City of 3731, yet our congregation is feeble, crated to the worship and service of Al­ there being only 12 families attached to the mighty G o d . We believe that the 120 parish. There are, however, 50 communi­ communicants will be gathered together cants out of this small number. The parish again, and the work of a Parish be begun has suffered in the last year by the removal and continued in the fear of G o d and to the of several families of prominence and influ­ glory of His Great Name. ence, and by a change of Rectors. At About one hundred miles to the south­ present the Rev. William Leacock is faithfully west is the City of Vallejo, the second town and acceptably administering the affairs of in population in the Jurisdiction, with 5987 the Church at this point. people, including the employees of the Naval Forty miles to the northwest is the town Depot at Mare Island. Here, on a high of Santa Rosa with a population of 3616. hill about the centre of the town, is a small The Parish here is weak, but still there are wooden building, called the Church of the seventy communicants, while 150 persons Ascension, capable of seating about 250 would crowd the building. Under the ef­ persons, and valued at $4000. The Rev. W. ficient charge of the Rev. Dr. J. A Shepherd S. Cochran is the Rector of the Parish, and the parish has grown, and should prosperity works in connection with the Parish Church, return to the business of the town, there a Mission (St. Alban’s) in South Vallejo, will be a necessity for enlargement of the and a Mission on board the receiving ship church, and the means will not be lacking. at the Navy Yard. The last reported num­ I confirmed a class of 27 persons there this ber of communicants is 60. Owing to in­ spring, which gave great joy to the Rector ternal dissensions for many years, there has and the members of the Convocation who been little or no growth in the Parish, but were present. A movement is on foot for a now there are hopeful signs of peace and Rectory Fund, and there are good reasons prosperity, although we must always expect to hope that the Parish will soon have a much change, from the fact that so many in home for its Rector. the congregation are connected with the The next town in population is Petaluma, navy. which is 16 miles south of Santa Rosa. Out The next town in size is Grass Valley, of 3305 people, our Church claims 95 com­ which is situated about two hundred and municants. There is a Rectory attached to fifty miles to the northeast, and contains a the Church property, which is nearly new population of 4880. Here is a church build­ and partially furnished. ing which I have consecrated, and which Away off to the northeastern part of the has for its Rector Rev. W. C. Powell. The State is the town of Eureka, with a popu­ communicants number 48. This is a mining lation of 2639. Here is an organized Parish town, and consequently subject to many with about 50 families and 25 communicants. changes every year. The congregation is There is a Rector, who, in addition to his now quite feeble financially and numerically, parochial work, has a private school. The and is not likely to regain the strength congregations are small, but the Sunday- which once it enjoyed when the mining school is well taught and growing in num­ interests were so prosperous in Grass Valley. bers. This town is in a lumber region, and Marysville, about 50 miles west, is next in has suffered very much in trade during the size, having 4321 people. Here is a church last three years. Should there be a heavy building which is perhaps one of the oldest demand for timber the place will rapidly' in the State. There is at present no Rector, revive, and of course the condition of the but the Services are continued by a very ac­ Parish would improve likewise. As present ceptable Lay-reader. There are 38 families there is great depression in business. and 54 communicants connected with the A t Chico (3300 population) and Red parish. There is great depression in the Bluff (2106 pop.), attempts have been made affairs of the town on account of the over­ at various times to establish the Church, flowing of the river every year. The con­ but thus far in vain. The same may be said 486 REPORT OF TEE BI8E0P OF NORTEERN CALIFORNIA. of Woodland (2257 pop.), Oroville (1743 are no less than 17 different religious bodies pop.), St. Helena (1339 pop.), Auburn (1229 in the town, it can scarcely be hoped that the pop.), Truckee (1147 pop.), Dutch future will develope any extraordinary Flat (939 p o p ), Jackson (1040 pop.), strength among the Episcopalians. Ukiali (933 pop.), Amader (824 pop.), Yreka, in Siskiyou County, has now a North Bloomfield (724 pop.), and Downie- church building, and as soon as a small ville (650 pop). In some of these places there debt is cleared, will be consecrated. The lias been manifested at times only indiffer­ Rev. Mr. Williams is the Missionary in this ence, at others aversion, and then again pos­ isolated mining town of 1059 inhabitants, itive opposition. If the Clergymen had been and has faithfully worked on for three years able to live, they would in all probability to see his wishes accomplished thus far. have settled dcwn in these towns, and in There are about 22 families connected with time have lived down all these difficulties the Church, 18 persons out of which are and triumphed over them,, and at this writing communicants. would have been able to report strong self- The smallest town of any importance, supporting Parishes; but being dependent, Wheatland, has a population of 635. Here they were compelled to move on to the next is another church which I have consecrated. place, and generally with the crowd, and There are about a dozen Church families, strive to erect the Standard of the Cross and 15 communicants, but no Clergyman there. ministers at the altar of Grace Church. At Placerville, in Eldorado County, is a There is, however, a Lay-reader in the town, population of 1851 souls. Here is a church who keeps up the Services when his health and a Missionary, who holds a weekly Ser­ permits. vice and a Sunday-school in the town, and Anew point for Missionary labor has opened does Missionary work in the neighborhood up this summer which excites much inter­ at several points. est and promises well for the future, pro­ The nest town of importance, and popu­ vided I can obtain an extra appropriation lation is Benicia, situated on Carquinez from the Mission Board. In Plumas County Straits. Here are gathered 1794 people, is a little town called Quincy, where are to most of whom are connected With the army be found several Englishmen and some few or with manufacturing interests. Here re­ Church families. The whole population is sides the Missionary Bishop, who is Rector clamoring for our Services, and I can answer o f the Church, and President of St. Augus­ this cry with the services of a Clergyman tine College and St. Mary’s Hall. Besides who is willing to go if $600 can be raised the pupils of the two schools of the Juris­ outside. There is only one quarter whence diction, the congregation is composed of there is any hope of getting it— viz., from members of another female school, and about our Church at the East. If the Board of 40 families from the Arsenal, the Barracks, Missions can be persuaded to send us aid and the town. The last report shows 43 at this favorable moment, I see some pros­ communicants. There is not much financial pect of accomplishing much good now and prosperity in the Parish, and for five years for eternity. past it has not furnished enough income to THE CHURCH SCHOOLS support a Rector. It is well however that at Benicia still live. They have struggled the Church is on such a good foundation, as through what I trust has been the darkest in a few years, the place will be a railroad hour just before dawn. A year ago I centre; and being on the highway of travel thought the time had come to close doors and trade it must grow in size, wealth, and and place the property in the hands of the importance. At present however, the par­ auctioneer, that the proceeds might go to­ ish work is attended with many financial wards paying $48,000 on the College of St. difficulties. Augustine, and $27,000 on St. Mary’s Hall, At Headsburg, a place of 1133 inhabitants, but by G o d ’s grace we have existed thus far, lives an infirm Clergyman, who, for threfe or and to-day there seems to be some hope of four years, has been holding occasional Ser- weathering the storm. The future alone Yices for a half dozen families. There are can tell the issue of this life-struggle. Can’t eight communicants. The town is not the Board appropriate something for this advancing, and when it is known that there work of Christian Education? It is the REPORT OF TEE BI8E0P OF NORTEERN CALIFORNIA. 487 most important feature of my Church labor time is now reported to the Church by the here. The most cheering hope seems to Bishop in charge. The past three years rest on the youth of this country, Old Cali­ tell a story full of trial and anxious solici­ fornians care very little for religion in any tude, but thanks to' a merciful G od , we hope form, but they do care to have their children for a better state of things in the near educated, and are willing to place them any­ future. The long looked for improvement where, if any kind of pressure is brought to in the financial and commercial, as well as bear on them individually. The Romish agricultural condition of California, is com­ schools abound and are full. All the sects ing, and we hope that the prosperity of the also have Institutions for the education of country will rest upon a more solid basis youth under their peculiar teachings. Why than when mining speculations ruled the then should not we, too, have our schools hour. We trust that the financial stringency well sustained, and if we ourselves cannot which has prevailed will gradually be re­ sustain them in this Missionary field, why moved, and that the Church will feel and should not the Church at large aid us to do acknowledge its results in the greater liber­ this all important work? It is the most effi­ ality of our people. cient work the Church can do, in the way of Meanwhile we pray G o d to move the preaching the Gospel to Californians. Let hearts of our friends at the East, and of the me then have the co-operation of my brethren Church at large, to stand by the Missionary at the East, and we will not only come out of Jurisdictions, and enable the Missionary this “ slough of despond,” but we will be Bishops to prosecute their plans and realize enabled by their aid to do a most encour­ their fondest expectations to the Glory of aging work for C h r is t and His Church on G od and the good of His holy Church. this coast. Respectfully submitted, The general statement and particulars of J. H. D. W ingfield, affairs in this Jurisdiction at the present Missionary Bishop of Northern California. [A p p e n d i x t o D o m e s t i c C o m m i t t e e ’ s R e p o r t —J.]

SEVENTH ANNUAL REPORT OF THE MISSIONARY BISHOP OF NORTHERN TEXAS.

A f t e r the close of the General Convention The balance of debt remaining on the I remained in the East for a short time, ground was paid off last Easter, which af­ preaching frequently, and giving informa­ forded great joy to us all. The building is tion as to the nature and needs of my field. not yet finished, and will also soon need the I was unfortunately taken ill, and obliged additional room provided for in the plan; to cancel many important engagements. but we must wait, I fear, some time before Through the mercy of G od and the gener­ the funds can be obtained which are needed ous care of sympathizing friends, I was soon for this improvement. so far recovered as to be able to return home The Cathedral Grammar School continues and set about my work without delay, since under the Rev. J. F. Hamilton. Our people which time I have not failed in an appoint­ are slow to avail themselves of the benefits ment or lost a day through sickness. To here provided. Free schools, denomination­ the railroad companies and hospitable friends al schools, private schools, are readily pre­ who have in various generous ways facilitat­ ferred by many parents. This is not because ed my work, I here make public mention of the teaching is better, for Mr. Hamilton’s my thanks. Were it not for the help thus qualifications are equal, if not superior, to afforded, the expense of travel would more those of any one here, but because of the low than exhaust all available means. stage of Church principle and the lack of PARISHES AND MISSIONS. parental control. Boys can generally de­ All the Parishes are now occupied save cide for themselves what school they may one, and as much work is being carried on prefer, and only a very languid opposition, as our friends will warrant. There is much if any, will be offered to their wishes. Then work of pressing necessity which ought to there are certain arts of a popular kind be taken in hand and vigorously prosecuted, which are frequently resorted to for in­ but we have no means wherewith to sustain creased effect, but to which we are, fortu­ the additional workmen needed. Hence we nately or unfortunately, but little adapted. are compelled to allow noble opportunities Our Clergy are, perhaps, a little over-sensi­ to pass by unimproved. Fully aware of the tive, and shrink from the use of methods great importance cf doing things at the right found effective by competing institutions. time, and also fully persuaded that the time Quietness and assurance may bring a man has come, it is especially painful to be peace at the last, but they will scarcely win obliged to preserve a “ masterly inactivity,'’ scholars in this land, though supplemented and wear out subsequent years in sighing by unquestioned ability to teach. A good over what “ might have been.” deal of “ drumming” must needs be done St. Matthew’s Parish, Dallas, continues by those who hope for success, but to this its noble work. Its Services are orderly high art our Clergy are strangers. and reverent, equally removed from the St. Mary’s Institute has been reopened un­ baldness of defective and the extrava­ der the care of Mrs. C. W. Carnegie. This gance of excessive ceremonial. The Guild lady has recently come to this country from is doing excellent work among the young Scotland, has had much experience in teach­ men, the Benevolent Association among the ing, and brings the record of success in the poor: the Furnishing Society continues to past. It is too soon to judge what measure beautify the Sanctuary, and the Sunday- of attendance she may be able to secure. We school teachers are faithful in their care of have provided for the comfort and conven­ the young. Open doors, free seats, and dai­ ience of the pupils to the best of our ability. ly Service offer facilities for spiritual growth The question of education on Christian equal to those supplied in any of our cities. principles or on a purely secular basis, is now REPORT OF THE BISHOP OF NORTHERN TEXAS. 489 presented to this community for decision. Rev. T. B. Lawson, D.D., hopes to carry We anxiously await the answer of time. But the building to completion during the au­ whichever way the answer may be given, the tumn. The people have promised help in duty of the Church and Faith will be still the way of labor, and also subscribed in the same. “ Onward. Christian Soldiers !” money according to their ability. I have We must take no backward steps, but con­ promised also such assistance as I can com­ tinue our work and labor of love, plant and mand. The Missionary will need liberal aid water, and die, if necessary; but knowing in this enterprise. Our people in Bonham that G o d will give the increase in His own are very few. They do not feel able to con­ good time and way. tribute anything tangible to the Missionary’s St. Stephen’s Parish, Sherman, has been support. He maintains himself by teaching. vacant since the removal of the Rev. G E. In view of these facts I fear the Church will Purucker to the Diocese of Missouri. Ser­ rise but slowly, unless generous help be ob­ vices were carried on by a faithful Lay-read- tained from the outside. The town is al­ er until recently, when this good man moved ready blessed with many church buildings, to another town, to the great loss of this and also with as disputatious a population Parish. I have appointed another Lay-read- as can anywhere be found. Dr. Lawson is er, and also a Superintendent of the Sunday- universally respected for his varied learning school. By this means I hope the flock may and wise treatment of all questions which be kept together until a suitable Rector can disturb the quiet surface of thought among be found. The Vestry consists of men of his townsmen. education and character, whose standard of St, Mark’s Mission, Honey Grove, is visit­ ministerial requirement is greater than their ed twice in each month by Dr. Lawson. Our pecuniary ability. The church is pretty, the people here are dwelling in tents, so to speak. Rectory comfortable, and the field most pro­ They use the Presbyterian church by the ductive. Few places are more desirable if kind courtesy of the owners. This is the work be the object sought. A man of suit­ best arrangment which they are able to make able character and ability couljl soon build at present. However pleasant for the time up a flourishing congregation; but a man to being, it does not conduce to the develop­ be successful would need some special quali­ ment of life and growth. A building of our ties of adaptation. The people require a own is absolutely necessary to successful man of genuine Missionary spirit, popular work. The people feel this themselves, but talents, broad sympathies, and small person­ they are so few and possessed of so little al needs. A young man with the ripe expe­ means, that they hesitate to attempt a rience of age, and without encumbrance, church as yet. I have a few dollars on hand would suit them best. I am looking for for their benefit, to which “ Ruth ” of sweet him, but unless this meets his eye, I have name, but unknown abode, added ten a small hope of finding him. Any good man, short time since. May the good L o r d in­ however, who has confidence in his mission, crease and multiply upon her His mercy has the courage of that confidence, and a hundred fold. thinks more of the labor and love of the The Rev. E. G. Benners continues his Priesthood than of its present reward, could good work at Paris on alternate Sundays. with patience and faith produce effects in Very little fruit indeed can be seen here of Sherman at which the world would wonder. his labors. He is universally and justly be­ The field is ready, but the right man has not loved and respected for his amiable character been found to cultivate it. and untiring devotion to his work; but it is The work done in St. Luke’s, Denison, not possible to gain much advantage over by the Rector, the Rev. J. Davis, is of the the world by such occasional Services in old best kind. The Parish is fruitful in every parishes and communities. The various good work, prompt in the payment of all Christian bodies have large houses of worship, dues, and effective in all relations. Mr. Da­ and in some instances able preachers, and in vis finds time amid his many duties to pay ail men who suit the popular taste. These occasional visits to Greeneville, where he is men, being always on the spot, have the ad­ sure of a hearty welcome. vantage of continued possession and the The corner-stone of Trinity Church, Bon­ sympathy of members. Churchmen of the ham, was laid on the ninth of May. The true sort are not easily moved by such con- 490 REPORT OF THE BISHOP OF NORTHERN TEXAS.

Biderations; but the outside world, and es­ The work is indeed of a purely Missionary pecially the rising generation, are strongly character, for we have only a very few souls influenced by them. Such, however, is the in all this region. If the Missionary did not financial condition of the Parish that the have some special privileges allowed him Vestry have not felt able to offer a living because of his venerable years and length of salary upon which to call a Rector. Hence service, it would be impossible even to de­ the ground must lie for the most part un­ fray the cost of visiting these points. Faith­ cultivated, and the labor bestowed upon it is ful work will tell here as elsewhere, and in largely lost. due time we shall reap if we faint not.« The Rev, A. M. Whitten renders effective Mineola, at the junction of the Texas and service at Clarksville. His excellent wife Pacific and the Internal ional and Great Nor­ materially assists their small income by thern railroads, has grown in population and teaching. They both enjoy, as they de­ wealth, but our people are fewer than for­ serve, the affectionate esteem of all classes merly. Mr. Benners visits the town occa­ of people in the community. The Church sionally. is steadily growing in the estimation of the Wills Point receives monthly visits from people as the good man walks among them, the Rev. J. Portmess of Terrell. It is ad­ an epistle of C h r is t known and read of all vancing steadily in material wealth and pros­ men. He holds occasional Services at Blos­ perity. Our people are exceedingly few, and som Prairie and Sylvan. The parsonage is can with difficulty defray the expense of the exceedingly neat and comfortable. I enjoy­ Missionary’s monthlv visit. ed the kind hospitality of these warm-hearted Kaufman has taken a new lease of life. people on the occasion of my visit, and I felt The Texas Trunk Railroad has just reached deeply thankful that so much had been so it from Dallas. The old buildings are being well done which my eye was privileged to remodelled and new ones erected. We have see. The class for Confirmation was special­ a few souls here, who always receive us cor­ ly interesting, as it was gathered from dif­ dially, and highly value the monthly Service ferent points in his field, and had all been given there by Mr. Portmess. won by a blessing upon personal influence Terrell, about thirteen miles north of Kauf­ and affectionate instruction faithfully min­ man, is a thriving and prosperous town on istered. the Texas and Pacific Railroad. The Church The Rev. Benjamin F. Newton has done of the Good Shepherd, under Mr. Portmess, most successful work in St. James’, Texar­ holds quiet possession of a certain definite kana. The town has grown greatly in popu­ influence amid the changeful and restless lation and wealth. The congregation has shiftings of religious opinion. The Mission­ felt the impulse, and even now needs a larger ary and his wife sustain themselves for the church. This I hope we may soon be able most part by teaching a private school. The to provide by an addition to the present congregation do not contribute to the sup­ building. The Vestry are energetic, prac­ port o f the Ministry among them in due pro­ tical men, quick to perceive what is required, portion either to their ability or numbers. and prompt in making such efforts as the The Sunday-school is efficient. case will justify. The Chapel of the Incarnation, Dallas, is There also existed a desire to have a Parish doing a quiet and useful work in a neglected School, which took definite shape upon the portion of the city. The Rev. J. F. Hamil­ occasion of my visit in May last. I rejoice ton continues in charge. The Mission has to report that the building has been erected suffered a serious loss in the death of its and paid for, and the school is now in suc­ most faithful and energetic layman. In a cessful operation. St. James, Brooklyn (af­ Mission where none could be spared, the ter which Parish this has been named), by a loss of the chief worker and a regular com­ Sunday-school offering, enabled me tu stim­ municant is keenly felt. The widow and ulate this effort. Mr. Newton also pays oc­ family remain with us and carry on in such casional visits to Mount Pleasant. measure as they can the work so well begun. Daingerfield, Pittsburgh, and Sulphur St. Thomas’ Mission, Ennis, has not made Springs, are towns of growing importance any healthful progress lately. Since the re­ on the East Line and Red River Railroad. moval of the Rev. Peter Wager to Missouri, Mr. Benners visits them as often as he can. there has been no one available for its ser- REPORT OF THE BISHOP OF NORTHERN TEXAS. vice. The people suffer from spiritual leth­ There have been no regular Services at St. argy in a way to be deplored. I hope that ]Paul’s, Gainesville, since Mr. Purucker re­ the new Missionary just arrived at Corsicana moved,j and I fear they cannot be resumed may be able to infuse into them a little of iuntil Sherman finds a Rector. The town has his own energy. grown j a great deal in wealth and popula­ The Rev. J. B. Linn, received from the 1tion. Some two or three Christian denomi­ Diocese of Mississippi, has entered upon his inations have built neat houses of worship. duties in St. John’s, Corsicana. The town ,A member of St. Peter’s, Germantown, en­ being the point of intersection of two rail- iabled me to offer our people five hundred roads—the Houston and Texas Cental and dollars < upon condition of their raising as the Texas and St. Louis Narrow Gauge—has imuch more as might be needed. They ac­ made great advances in material wealth and

B a p ­ S u n d a y C ommunicants . V a l u e o p P r o p e r t y . OFFERINGS. t i s m s . S c h o o l s . s NAME OF CHURCH 0) AND PLACE. o o WO .So* § o rQ

Holy Comforter, Cleburne... 2 10 12 18 $3,000 $3000 86 20 $9 30 $400 830 $96 00 $172 50 St. John’s, Corsicana 3 16 19 2500 $2000:. 4500 $140 45 600 00 740 50 $179 St. Matthew’s, Dallas...... 12,000 ; $5oo 12500 44 00 22 00 2 70 2654 80 1E00 00 4500 00 136 St. Luke’s, Denison...... 1 2500 1000 1000 4,500 21 00 5 00 115 22 850 00 867 72 40

St. Andrew’s, Fort Worth... 3000 1000 4000 3 do 320 40 575 00 955 30 48 8888 Holy Cross, Paris...... 1 2500 1000 3500 15 00 66 50 328 50 450 00 St. Stephen’s, Sherman 2 2500 1500 4000 144 50 St. James’, Texarkana 4 3000 800C 6000 6 50 345 00 600 00 981 50 Trinity, Bonham...... 2 200 200 5 00 6 00 Christ’s, Clarksville...... i 4 12 700 800 1500 450 00 465 00 St. Thomas’, Ennis St. Mark’s, Honey G rove___ 12 75 12 85 152 10 St. Peter’s, McKinney ...... 2 00 Grace, Mineola ...... 25 00 25 00 Good Shepherd, Terrell...... 2250 2250 *102 05 91 00 200 05 All Saints’, Weatherford ... 300 3900 70 2 35 25 36 05 St. George, Wills Points...... Good Samaritan, Eagle Cove 3 3 Albany...... Arlington...... Abilene...... 30 B row n w ood___ 23 Breckenridge ... Comanche...... Incarnation, Dallas...... 20 650 Decatur...... D en ton ...... Fort Griffin...... Greenville...... Glenrose ...... Gainesville...... Hillsboro...... Kimball...... Kaufm an...... 4 50 Stephensville... Sulphur Springs 17 85 17 85 Waxahachle. 10 00 H am ilton___ Graham ...... Morgan...... 50 P roctor...... Plano...... Lawrence___ Van Alstyne Total. .39 152 190 84 1005 111 75 88 20 1083 1411 244 214 1188 485 1500 7317! 7 102 $38,200 87600 $4700 $50,500 >105 70 $51 IB $9 70 $643 $3753 07 $5244 10 89580 02 $547 85 [A p p e n d i x t o D o m e s t i c C o m m i t t e e ’ s R e p o r t —K.]

FIRST ANNUAL REPORT OF THE MISSIONARY BISHOP OF NEW MEXICO AND ARIZONA.

It is now a little more than nine months cofet about $1,000, and is an exceedingly since I first set foot on the soil of New good investment. Mexico. During this time I have been able In Santa F6 we have been worshipping to visit every place of importance in both for years in an uncomfortable and dreary Territories. To some places I have been chapel, made out of two adobe rooms twice or oftener, and it is my purpose, be­ thrown into one. For this very unsuitable fore the close of the year, to go again to all building we pay $200 a year. of the principal points in Southern New It will be readily seen there is great need Mexico and Arizona. This, however, will for a church here. After long and thought­ depend on the speedy settlement of our ful deliberation about plans, material and present serious trouble with the Indians. expenses, we have concluded to build of Poor Red Man! armed and fed, plundered stone. W e have 60x30, inside measurement, and cheated, by the government, or those all we need at present, and all we can afford; who to him represent the government, he will cost when complete $6,000. We have wreaks his vengeance on the first white man in sight $3,000, enough to put up the walls; he meets. Without stopping to decide $2,000 more will be needed to put on the where in this matter the blame chiefly be­ roof. I can get another $1,000 from the peo­ longs, one thing is certain—the late out­ ple here, and we ought to get $1,000 from our rages check effectually all spiritual as well friends in the East. That would leave as temporal prosperity. $1,000 still to be raised here for pews and When I came into the Jurisdiction we had inside finishing. But this would be a small valuable property in three places, Santa F6, matter; if we only had the roof on we would Las Vegas and Mesilla; and in the last two, save rent, and have a much better place to chapels at present sufficient for our purpose. worship than at present. The congregation In the mean time I have been able to secure, can sit on rough benches until they are able as a gift, two lots each, in Albuquerque, So­ to put in pews; it is a good thing not to get corro and Raton. In Tombstone also, lots all of our luxuries at once. were donated; but in Tucson they had to be Albuquerque, in the Rio Grande Valley, is purchased. I am glad to be able to state an important and growing town. Here the that we have now lots in every place, in A. & P. R. R., now in process of construc­ both Territories, where it is likely to be an tion, crosses the A. T. & S. F. R oad; this of object to be beforehand in securing real itself, independent of the rich valley in estate. which it is situated, will certainly make I said we had two chapels, but only one, Albuquerque a flourishing city. Before that in Las Vegas, was erected for the pur­ this report is in print, work will have begun poses of public worship. It has lately been on a church here also. It will be of stone, very much improved by raising the chancel and cost about $5,000. The people of A l­ floor and putting in pews. It was built by buquerque have subscribed very liberally; Mr. Forrester, who having a just horror of but they all need some outside assistance, debt, only made improvements as far as he and they well deserve it. Mr. Forrester has had money to pay for them. The other is a a clear head for business; I am confident, house in Mesilla, part of which is fitted up therefore, not only that rigid economy will very neatly and makes a comfortable chapel. be practised, but also that no debt will be It waB secured to the Church by Mr. Forres­ incurred. ter through the liberality of Dr. Saul. It My appeal for Tombstone, in Arizona, was 496 REPORT OF THE BISHOP OF NEW MEXICO AND ARIZONA. answered with prompt and generous liber­ pluck, by working hard and living plainly ality. I had enough, and more than enough, for a couple of years, could, however, build with what could be raised on the ground, to up a Parish in many places in this Jurisdic­ build a church in that thriving town.' But tion; such as only a few have reached by what is over I have appropriated to the middle life in the older parts of the country. building of a church in Raton, and a par­ To sum up the facts stated in this report: sonage in Las Yegas. we have lots in eight of the most important Just as we were ready to commence work places in the Jurisdiction. on the church in Tombstone, a fire swept We have two temporary chapels, which away half the town. It was deemed wise, we own, besides others which we rent. therefore, not to attempt building until they Permanent stone churches are in process had somewhat recovered from the shock, of construction in Santa F£ and Al­ and business had again resumed its natural buquerque; for each of which $1,000 will channels. The delay, however, will not be be needed to enable us to put up the walls, long, and I feel confident before the winter put on the roof, and lay the floor. is over we will be worshipping in our own After that we can wait for the rest till we church in Tombstone. have the means wherewith to finish. In Tucson they are making preparations, And, lastly, we are making preparations to and gathering funds, but nothing will be build churches at Tombstone and Raton, done there until after my next visit. and a parsonage at Las Yegas. Our most pressing need at this moment is For these three objects I have the means parsonages. And to secure half a dozen on hand; I think all that will be required, modest homes for Missionaries, will be my except perhaps Raton, whose people are principal task for the next year or two. A poor and migratory. small house in most places rents at from $30 Grateful for the assistance I have received to $40 a month; and this is oftentimes more from many generous friends of Missions in than the Mission is able to pay in the way the East, and for aid and sympathy from of salary. It will be readily seen, therefore, the Board of Missions and its large-hearted that I am reduced to one of two alternatives Secretary, this report is — either to build parsonages or else employ Respectfully submitted, none but single men as Missionaries. G e o k g e K . D u n l o p , A young man of ability, earnestness and Miss. Bishop of New Mexico and Arizona. [A p p e n d i x t o D o m e s t i c C o m m i t t e e ’ s R e p o r t —L.]

FIRST ANNUAL REPORT OF THE MISSIONARY BISHOP OF MONTANA.

My first report for the Jurisdiction of Mon­ ritory. He came to Montana more than tana is the fifteenth Annual Report for this seven years ago, at a time when we had not Territory. I have entered into the work of another man in the field, and through hard­ a wise master builder, and find wherever I ship and discouragement has kept to his go evidences of the love in which he is held work. He has three Missions in Madison by all classes of people, and of the faithful­ County; and now, at my request, he has ness and wisdom with which he has planned added to his charge almost the whole of and wrought and builded. Bishop Tuttle’s Beaverhead County. Once a month he is to name is a household word in Montana, and drive fifty miles to hold Services in this new his memory will remain while the people field. Lots have been secured at Dillon, the who have known him live. county-seat of Beaverhead, and before a year I have as yet made but half the circuit of shall have passed, it is hoped a church will the Territory, and it will be November be­ have been built. Then, if possible, we fore I shall have seen the whole field. Even must have a resident Clergyman to take the then there will be three or four outlying work of this region. Stations to be visited at a later date. The Rev. C. O. Tillotson is at Butte, the I find the work of the Church in a hope­ county-seat of Silver Bow County. Butte is ful condition. There are discouragements at present the prosperous mining town of in this place and that, and serious obstacles Montana, and is growing rapidly. We are to contend with everywhere. But that is to building a stone church there which will be be expected. And, I doubt not, that there the largest and best church in the Territory. is as much to give hope and inspire courage The cost will be twelve or fourteen thousand here as in any Missionary Jurisdiction of the dollars, one third of which is likely to re­ Church. main as a debt to be worked off in the One year ago there were six Clergymen in future. Mr. Tillotson drives forty miles, this field; now there are eight. Bishop once a month, for Services at Glendale. Tuttle added two to the number before hand­ When a Clergyman is secured for Beaver­ ing the work over to his successor. These head county, Glendale will be likely to pass eight men are doing hard and faithful ser­ into his charge, and then Butte will have, vice for the Church. Their fields are exten­ what it ought to have now, Services every sive, each one including a whole county as Sunday. large or larger than one of the New England The Rev. H. C. Hutchings came from the States. They drive over these vast tracts in Diocese of Albany to Deer Lodge last De­ all sorts of weather, never thinking of cember. He holds Services in three places allowing storms or cold or bad roads to cause in Deer Lodge County, riding one hundred them to miss their appointments. Their sala­ and ninety miles each month for this pur­ ries are small, and they have to economize in pose. We have a neat and substantial stone every way to make the ends meet. The results church in Deer Lodge, paid for and conse­ of their labors are not always apparent. Yet crated. The next need is a Rectory. they work on without complaining, never The Rev. Mr. Stewart has been four years losing heart, because the spirit of the Master at Missoula. We have no church there, but rules their lives. The Church owes them a have twelve lots and six hundred and fifty debt of gratitude for such faithfulness. And dollars in hand for building. The time has sometimes I fear she will leave that debt to not yet come when we can raise the re­ be accounted for in a world where gold is mainder of the sum necessary to secure the not the highest standard of value. accomplishment of the project. Three Sun­ The Rev. E. H. Prout is, by residence, the days in the month Mr. Stewart gives to oldest Clergyman of our Church in the Ter­ Missoula, driving out in the afternoon for REPORT 01 TEE BISHOP OF MONTANA.

Service at the Military Post, four miles The Rev. F. B. Lewis serves at Bozeman away. Once a month he drives fifty miles and Fort Ellis with one or two outlying through the Bitter Root Valley, holding stations in the vicinity. They have a small Services in five different places. In two of wooden church at Bozeman, with lots for a these we have lots for church building, and Rectory and School-house, and several hun­ after a time, it is hoped, houses of worship dred dollars in hand for the building of the will be erected thereon. Rectory. The Rev. R. M. Duji came from Central The Yellowstone region I am to visit in New York to Helena in June, succeeding September. I know little about it at pres­ the Rev. M. N. Gilbert in the Rectorship of ent. But it is certain that we ought to the only organized Parish we have in Mon­ have a Clergyman in that field as soon as tana. The debt of $2,200 resting on the possible. Parish was paid at Easter, and it is ex­ The Domestic Committee appropriate for pected that the church will be consecrated Montana fifteen hundred dollars. It will in November. A Rectory is the next object require twice that amount from some source to work for, and already a few hundred beyond Montana to support the men already dollars have been secured for this purpose. at work. Two new mefi ought to be added Port Benton is the northernmost town of to our present force at the earliest possible the Territory. Here the Rev. S. C. Black- moment. I therefore earnestly ask that the iston settled last October. Since that time appropriation be increased to $2,500. The a substantial brick church has been built, needs of the work demand it, and the and is now occupied for worship. The cost Church in Montana deserves this additional has been about $3,500, eleven hundred of help. which remains as a debt to be paid off in We need money for church building. two years. Mr. Blackiston is the only Prot­ We need money for Rectories. We need estant Clergyman who ministers in Benton. money to purchase horses and carriages for He gives one Sunday a month to Fort the Clergy, that they may do more work, Assinnaboine, a Military Post seventy miles hold more Services, and reach more people. distant, where his services are gladly wel­ We have no Church Schools in Montana. comed. We ought to have a Parish School in each The Rev. H. E. Clewes came last fall one of half a dozen towns. If we could from Minnesota to take up the work of have money to erect the buildings (say General Missionary laid down by Mr. Black­ $2,000 .for each one) the schools would be iston when he settled at Benton. He has self-supporting. The Domestic Committee held Services in seven different places, and can not do this, but Church people can. All will add three more to the number the com­ I ask of the Domestic Committee is an ing fall. In doing this work he travels four increased appropriation. G o d grant the or five hundred miles every month. Hitherto treasury to be in such a condition as to he has done this by stage, but now he has a admit of the granting of this petition. horse and will make his journeys on horse­ back. He has won the good-will and con­ L. R. B k e w e b . fidence of the people wherever he ministers, and ia doing good work for the Church. Missionary Bishop of Montana. -ÄSJ9IO 1 1

Sunday Baptisms. Schools. Offerings. Value of N ame of Parish or Station. Church Property. Amount Given Total for given at outside of Church Station. Station. Purposes. Communicants. Infant. Adults. Total. Marriages. Marriages. Teachers. | Scholars. | Corner-stones | laid, j | Church Church Buildings.| | I Confirmed. I | Burials. 1 | St. Paul’s, Virginia City...... 1 1 3 3 24 4 3 7 50 $4,650 00 $708 67 $300 00 1,008 67 Trinity, Madison Valley...... 9, ?, 10 72 11 72 11 St. Luke’s, Sheridan...... 9 50 00 25 71 25 71 St. James’, D illon...... 6 3 20 41 80 41 80 St. Peter’s, Helena...... 1 1 18 6 24 16 118 15 25 13 120 12,000 50 5,270 72 475 00 5,745 72 St. James’, Deer Lodge...... 1 1 2 1 3 4 22 4 9 3 40 6,200 00 773 87 325 00 1,098 87 St. John’s, Butte...... 1 1 8 3 11 6 65 1 19 7 100 5,000 00 4,807 25 585 35 5,392 60 ------, Glendale...... 3 1 4 1 15 9 260 00 260 00 ------, Philipsburg...... 3 1 15 274 10 274 10 St. James’, Bozeman...... 1 1 3 2 5 40 10 7 9 86 2,200 00 2,145 70 557 25 2,702 95 Holy Spirit, Missoula...... 1 8 8 3 15 3 4 1 000 00 584 50 600 00 1,184 50 St. Paul’s, Benton...... 1 1 13 2 15 9 23 10 5 5 35 6,000 00 4,054 51 825 00 4,879 51 Fort Assinnaboine...... 1 19 150 00 150 00 Blackfoot ...... 3 10 50 10 50 Fort Shaw...... 1 ?, 10 4 9,8 . 400 00 235 00 635 00 Sun River...... 1 1 ?, 200 00 200 00 Jefferson and Boulder...... 1 4 25 00 25 00 Deep Creek and Centreville.. 3 74 25 74 25 Miscellaneous...... 1 1 ?, 13 1 106 72 106 72

Totals...... 8 5 1 64 16 80 41 897 49 73 52 489 37,100 00 19,985 41 3,902 60 23,888 01 [A p p e n d i x t o D o m e s t i c C o m m i t t e e ’ s R e p o r t —M.]

FIRST REPORT OF THE MISSIONARY BISHOP OF WASHINGTON TERRITORY.

On the 25th day of October, 1880, the in this Jurisdiction, and being now with ub. word came to me that I had been called by My last Service before leaving Brooklyn, the highest authority in the Church, to be was in St. Peter’s, on the 7th day of last the Missionary Bishop of Washington Ter­ March, when I gave my Gor>-speed to the ritory. After prayers for Divine guidance, new Rector, my successor, and held my first I felt it to be my duty to accept the high and Confirmation, forty-one receiving that Apos­ holy office. tolic Ordinance. On the 15th day of December, in St. Pe­ My first Services in Washington Territory ter’s Church, Brooklyn, N. Y., where I had were in St. Luke’s, Vancouver, on Easter been privileged to minister as the Christian Day. It added to the interest of the day to Pastor for more than a quarter of a centu- know that I began my ministrations in the ery, I was consecrated by the Presiding town where Church Services were first held in Bishop. the Territory, and where the first Parish was On the evening of my consecration I for­ organized. Here, as in every place where I warded a Pastoral Letter to the Clergy and have since ministered, I have been indebted Laity of Washington Territory. On the to Pastor and people for the most kind and following evening, in Grace Church, Ja­ cordial reception. maica, Long Island, I addressed a Convoca­ On the following Friday, the Rector and tion of the Clergy and Laity of Queen’s Vestry of Trinity Church, Seattle, met me County, on my new field and its needs. on my way and escorted me to their city. Thenceforward, until the time of my leaving On the morning of Sunday (1st after the East, I was constantly engaged in doing Easter) I addressed the Sunday-school, a part of that work which must be done by the preached and administered the Holy Com­ Missionary Bishop in those parts of the land munion. In the afternoon I visited the where the Church has commended itself to school in the Chapel of the Good Shepherd, the community, and become strong—seek­ a plain, neat building at North Seattle. In ing to awaken interest in the new fields to the evening, in the church, I confirmed be taken and held for Christ. I bear grate­ twelve and addressed them. The next ful testimony to the sympathy and kind in­ morning (St. Mark’s Day) I addressed those terest manifested by brethren o f the Clergy assembled at the Service, and afterward and Laity; and to them am indebted for pe­ visited the Parish School, which I was re­ cuniary aid most valuable in educational joiced to find begun in a building recently and Missionary work, and in the beginning erected for the purpose. of an Episcopal Fund. It is proper that I The following Sunday was appointed for should make record, that, among the Servi­ a visitation at Olympia. He who is Al­ ces held by me, was the Ordination to the mighty and All-Wise ordered that the hours Priesthood, in St. Ann’s Church, New York, be spent in company with bereaved children, of the Rev. Ernest E. Wood, on the 7th day in private meditation and prayer. She who of February, 1881; and on the 21st of the had sustained to me for twenty-five years same month, the Ordination of John C. the closest of earthly relations, who had Fair, to the Diaconate, in St. John’s Church, looked forward with ardor and delight to Clifton, Staten Island, these brethren hav­ work for Chbist and His Church in this ing accepted appointments as Missionaries Territory, was only permitted to see the REPOET OF TEE BISHOP OF WASHINGTON TERRITORY. 5 0 1 goodly land and to hear from the Mission­ about to be opened in the town, to be under ary Bishop of the work as begun. On Mon­ the supervision of the Bishop and the Min­ day, May 2d, from St. Helen’s Hall, Port­ ister of the Parish. On Sunday evening, land, where on our arrival we had been May 29th, I visited St. Peter’s, Tacoma, made the guests of Bishop Morris, the earthly distant about a mile and a half from the new remains were borne to Trinity Church, and town. The little church here, through a thence to St. Luke’s, Vancouver, and with period of discouragement and trial, has been the Church’s holy and comforting rites, laid kept up by the loving interest and energy of away in the quiet cemetery. The sympathy a layman, who is now privileged to rejoice and kindness shown by Clergy and Laity, in signs of increase and prosperity. This far and near, have been strengthening and marked improvement is due to the earnest cheering. May the good L o r d reward those, labors of Dr. and Mrs. Miles, who came who, by their words, deeds and prayers, from New York to devote themselves to the have helped to sustain and comfort his ser­ Master’s work in this Territory. A Church vants called to heavy trial. Hospital, I am happy to report, is about to I resumed my visitations at once, spend­ be opened by them, in which the sick and ing the following Sunday at St. John’s, needy will be cared for by those ministering Olympia. On conference with the Vestry, in the spirit of the blessed S a v io u r . I found them mourning the loss, by re­ The 17th of May was occupied with calls movals, within the last year or two, of val­ on residents in Waitsburg, in the eastern ued members of the Parish, making it seem part of the Territory, and with a Service in impossible to meet obligations to the Rec­ the evening in the Methodist House of tor. Through the aid given me by friends Worship. The following day was given to at the East, I was enabled to pledge, for like duties in Dayton, the Presbyterians this year, more assistance than the Parish kindly furnishing us the place for Service. had been receiving. Arrangements were On both these days I had the aid of Rev. made by which the church shall be opened Mr. Wells and Rev. Mr. W ood. Mr. W ood for lay reading in the absence of the Rector has since begun Missionary work at these for duty elsewhere ; and I had the joy of Stations, giving most of his time to Dayton. receiving, from a lady of the Parish, the On my first visit to Walla Walla on the offer of an eligible lot of land, if it shall be 4th Sunday after Easter, May 15th, two re­ found practicable to use it for a church, ceived Confirmation. During that week I school, or other institution. At other vis­ had the pleasure of welcoming Bishops Tut­ its to St. John’s, I have administered the tle and Morris, who kindly arranged to rite of Confirmation to nine persons. We meet me and such of the Clergy as might are all sharers in the regret felt by every find it practicable to assemble with us. one at Olympia, that the Rev. Mr. Abel has Services were held in St. Paul’s, with Ser­ felt constrained by ill-health, to resign his mons and Addresses, and most of the time charge. not thus occupied was spent by the Bishops My first visit to New Tacoma was made and Clergy in conference on the work given on Monday Evening, May 9th, when I offi­ us to do. The meeting was noteworthy as ciated in the Hall, the Rev. Mr. Abel, who the first gathering of three Bishops at any has had the oversight of the work here and one place on the west of the Rocky Moun­ at Tacoma, assisting. On the Sunday after tains. They united in sending to their Ascension I made another visit and con­ brethren in the Western portion of the Do­ firmed two. I have joy in stating that Chas. minion of Canada, the Bishops of Columbia, B.Wright, Esq., of Philadelphia, has offered Caledonia and New Westminster, a letter of to erect in this place, at a cost of $10,000, greeting, assuring them of interest in their a church which shall be to the glory of G od work, and of a wish to be more frequently and a memorial of a beloved daughter re­ united in official intercourse and brotherly cently called away from the scenes of earth. counsel. By all present the Convocation Who can estimate the blessed results of such will be remembered for the pleasure received a gift ! Several visits have been made by me and the profit gained. to New Tacoma, to look at lots tendered for Any Churchman visiting Walla Walla, the Church and for educational and charit­ must rejoice in seeing the boarding and day able purposes. A day school for girls is school for girls founded through the loving 502 REPORT 01 THE BISHOP OF WASHINGTON TERRITORY. zeal and perseverance of the Rector of the time, on every Sunday. The register of this Parish. That school has already done, and Parish, which he founded, and of which he it is to do, I trust, for generation after gene­ was the Rector until his removal to the East, ration, a blessed work in giving to the in April, 1868, tells of Services at Milwau­ young, sound learning and religious educa­ kee, Cathlamet, Wapatoo, The Cascades, tion. On Tuesday, June 7th, I attended in The Dalles, Olympia, etc. The testimony the Hall of the Institution, a musical recep­ which was borne of him by our brethren in tion, and listened to the essays of the two Oregon, is just. “ Self-ease and self-indul­ members of the graduating class, and on the gence formed no part of his nature. His following evening, after a brief Service in one thought was how he best could promote the church, I made an address and delivered the Master’s glory and the good of souls.” the diplomas. Through subscriptions from He deserves ever to be “ remembered with residents in the town, and by friends else­ love and gratitude as one of the pioneers of where, several acres of land have recently the Church on this North Pacific Coast.” At been purchased, on which will arise, I trust, the Memorial Service, his successor, the Rev. at no distant day, the new buildings requi­ Mr. Nicholson, gave an historical sketch of site for this Church Institution. W e need the life and labors of this good man ; and another like school for girls on the Pacific an offering was made for placing in the Coast, and schools of the highest order for church a memorial window. boys, in both Eastern and Western divisions On the first Sunday after Trinity (June of the Territory. May G o d move hearts to 19th), the tenth anniversary of the consecra­ make liberal offerings for the establishment of tion of the church, I had the pleasure of re­ such Institutions. Their power for good in opening with appropriate Services, Trinity, this new and growing community can hardly Seattle, which, during the few previous be overestimated; their influence, abiding and weeks, had been enlarged by an addition of extending, unceasing, will be found unto twenty-two feet, repainted, tastefully dec­ praise and honor and glory, in the day of orated in the interior and enriched with new the L o r d ’s appearing. chancel furniture. This good work tells of It was a pleasure to accept the invitation life and zeal on the part of Pastor and peo­ from Bishop Morris, to attend the Convoca­ ple. Before leaving, some lots were looked tion of his Clergy and Laity in Trinity at, and the assurance was given of aid in Church, Portland, on Thursday, June 2d, the purchase, if they should be taken for a and the three following days ; for with our Church Institution. brethren in Oregon, we desire to be linked The second Sunday after Trinity, June in closest fellowship, helped and helping, as 26th, was passed by me in Port Townsend, opportunities may be given. A t the desire and one person was confirmed in St. Paul’s. of the Bishop, I preached on the morning of During the last year, through the exertions Whitsunday, and, during the session of Con­ of the Rev. Mr. Davis, a lot has been pur­ vocation, made addresses to the assembled chased nearer the centre of the town, and it Sunday-schools and at Missionary Meetings. is proposed to remove the church to this In St. Luke’s, Vancouver, on Trinity Sun­ more eligible location. A begining has also day, June 12th, I took part in the Memorial been made of a fund for a Rectory. Since Service to the Rev. John McCarty, D. D., a my visitation, the Rev. Mr. Davis has ac­ Presbyter of this Jurisdiction. He died at cepted the position of teacher of the young, the residence of his son, in Washington, D. and Missionary to the Indians, on the Res­ C., on the 10 th of May, having attained the ervation at Shoalwater Bay, and resigned age of fourscore and three. More than a the Rectorship o f St. Paul’s. I am thankful quarter of a century since, he began minis­ to have work begun for the aborigines of terial work in this town, having received our land. Christian women, communicants the appointment of a Chaplain in the U. S. of the Church, have, during the year, been Army. Dr. McCarty was not content with holding a Sunday-school at the Quinault the discharge of his duties as Post Chaplain. Reservation for the children who may there On his first arrival he took charge of Trinity be gathered. Mr. and Mrs. Davis, from a Church, Portland, then a feeble Missionary connection of some years with our African Station, numbering but four communicants. Mission, have had experience in laboring There, and in Vancouver, he officiated for a among the ignorant and degraded. REPORT OF THE BISHOP OF WASHINGTON TERRITORY. 5 0 3

The evening of St. Peter's Day (June 29th) held Service in the parlor of a house at Clat­ was given to the Mission Station at New­ sop, Oregon. On the evening of August 14th, castle. This is one of the four Stations, the 9th Sunday after Trinity, I officiated in the others being North Seattle, Port Blakely Hall at Port Blakely. This is one of those and Renton, where Rev. Mr. Fair, has, with places, that have grown up on Puget Sound, encouraging prospects, commenced holding about the lumber mill, having a population Services. of two or three hundred. Of a congrega­ Having previously devoted a portion of a tion of fifty or more, four-fifths were men. day to calls on the few Church people at On Thursday evening, August 19th, I had a Kalama, on the 4th Sunday after Trinity, Service at the Territorial Hospital for the (July 10th) I officiated morning and eve­ Insane in Steilacoom. The Rev. Mr. Abel has ning in St. Andrew’s Church, and confirmed occasionally officiated here. Usually about one person, and on Thursday evening, one hundred patients are under treatment. August 3d, I read Service and preached. The first Convocation of the Church in The number of residents of Kalama is small this Territory, met in St. Luke’s, Vancouv­ and diminishing year by year. A few e r , on Wednesday, Aug. 24th. At the Christian women, with commendable zeal, opening Service seven received the rite of maintain a Sunday-school. The Rev. Mr. Confirmation. On the last day, Sunday, Sellwood has officiated occasionally. There Dr. E. F. Miles was admitted to the Diaco- is no other religious Service in the village, nate. Of the eight Clergymen belonging to and we shall continue to care, so far as we the Jurisdiction, seven were present during may be able, for those who else may have the sessions of Convocation, and twelve none to care for their souls. On the 5th Lay-delegates attended from seven Parishes Sunday after Trinity (July 17th) I preached and Mission Stations. A most excellent in Astoria, and on the following Tuesday, spirit prevailed. I find a few earnest Lay­ the Rector, Rev. Mr. Perkins, accompanied men scattered here and there, and a little me to Cathlamet, where, in the evening, we band of Clergymen thoroughly devoted to held Service in a Hall loaned for the pur­ the Master’s work. But the laborers are pose. This is another place where there is few. In a Territory of vast area, as large as no religious Service, except that occasion­ the States of New York, New Jersey, Massa­ ally given by our Church. The Rev. Mr. chusetts, Connecticut and Rhode Island Perkins has, with a true Missionary spirit, combined, we have but three self-supporting made several visits to Cathlamet, and, I hope, Parishes, nine Church buildings and eight will continue thus to minister. It was most Clergymen, in addition to the Bishop. We interesting to me to be in that place where minister regularly and occasionally at twenty- Bishop Scott, of blessed memory, 27 years two Stations. The. Territory is rich in re­ before, held the first Confirmation ever held sources ; railroads are in process of con­ in Oregon or Washington Territory. He struction, and rapid growth is to be ex­ then laid hands on seven, a mother, her four pected. New towns springing up here and daughters, and two grandchildren, while there will need the ministrations of the Gos­ there stood by them the aged husband and pel. With the help of G od , and with the father, who, 66 years before, in early youth, co-operation of the Church’s agent, the had been confirmed in Scotland by Bishop Board of Missions, we shall do all in our Kilgour, 'at about the time when the same power for this great and interesting Mis­ prelate consecrated Samuel Seabury the first sionary field. Bishop to these United States. J. A. P a d d o c k , On Sunday, July 24th, and July 31st, I Missi®nary Bishop of Washington Territory. 504 NUMBER 01 MISSION ARIES.

NUMBER OF MISSIONARIES

In thirteen Missionary Jurisdictions and thirty Dioceses, receimng Stipends from the Domestic Committee during the whole or apart of the year from September 1st, 1880, to September 1st, 1881.

AMONG "WHITE PEOPLE. AMONG INDIANS. Missionary Bishops...... 12 Missionary Bishop...... 1 Clergymen...... 288 White Clergymen...... 12 300 Native Clergymen...... 13 AMONG COLORED PEOPLE. White Catechist...... 1 White Clergymen...... 13 Native Catechists...... 9 Colored Clergymen...... 11 Teachers...... 3 Lay-readers...... 3 Women Helpers...... 13 Teachers...... 14 41 52 AMONG CHINESE. Chinese Clergyman...... 1 Total. 394

Appointments for Mission work in the Domestic field, and payments for such, work, are made as follows: 1. The Bishop of each Diocese is notified of the amount appropriated to his field, by the Board of Managers through the Domestic Committee, for the Missionary year which runs from September to September. a. The Bishop notifies the Committee of the manner in which he wishes the appropriation divided among certain Missionaries whom he appoints. 3. The Committee notifies each Missionary of his appointment, and of the amount of Stipend he will receive per quarter. 4. Reports of work for the three months preceding, according to forms furnished by the Committee are expected from the Missionaries at the end of each quarter. They should reach this office early m December, March, June and September. 5 Payments are made as early as possible after the receipt of Reports as the condition of the treasury will permit. ANNUAL REPORT OF THE COMMITTEE FOR FOREIGN MISSIONS TO

THE BOARD OF MANAGERS.

Ix submitting this, their Forty-sixth ing of a permanent Clinical Hos­ Annual Report, the Committee for For­ pital and a physician’s residence. By eign Missions find themselves on the the contribution of Mrs. Elizabeth A. one hand, filled with joy and thankful­ G-ammell, of Rhode Island, of one ness, which is only tempered, on the thousand dollars for building purposes other hand, by some degree of solicitude in Tokio, and by contributions through for the future. the Woman’s Committee (of the Dio­ Causes of rejoicing, not a few, there cese of New York) on Work for For­ have been. Early in the year, a mem­ eign Missionaries, and under their ber of St. Peter’s Church, Germantown, pledges, for Osaka, Bishop Williams Philadelphia (upon the representation has been enabled to acquire, it is be­ of the Rev. Mr. Hoyt, late of the China lieved, all the land that is at present Mission), set at rest the long-mooted necessary for Mission purposes in Japan; question as to how the growing congre­ while, by another single contribution gation at Wuchang was to be housed, (supplementing one made by the same by a contribution of three thousand lady in a former year for the same pur­ dollars for the erection there of a new pose), St. Luke’s Hospital in Hong Chapel of the .Nativity, and members Kew, Shanghai, has been re-opened in of the Woman’s Auxiliary have con­ new quarters, free from debt. By extra tributed largely toward its appoint­ contributions secured through the ments. On Christmas Day, last, Miss Rev. Abbott Brown, General Sec­ Lavinia Clarkson, of Kew York, drew retary of the Mexican League, exten­ her check for six thousand dollars for sive repairs have been undertaken for the building of St. John’s College the preservation of the valuable Church Chapel at Shanghai. Contributions of San José, in the City of Mexico; and (in return for services rendered by our by the contribution of a friend in Massa­ Missionaries) from foreigners residing chusetts, the Committee were able to in the field, and other resources at com­ put it in the power of Bishop Holly to mand, have enabled Bishop Scheres- acquire an estate in Haiti, near the city chewsky to put up a building on the of Port-au-Prince, for educational pur­ St. John’s foundation, to be known as poses. In a single sentence, your Com­ St. Mary's Hall, capable of accommo­ mittee find great cause for thankful­ dating the girls’ boarding-schools, or ness in the fact that, over and above all say, fifty scholars. A temporary dis­ usual offerings, there has passed through pensary has also been put up on the their Treasury during the fiscal year same property, awaiting the receipt of for the increase and improvement of a proposed contribution from a few real property (aside from the cost of all friends in Philadelphia for the build­ those matters of repairs that have been 5 0 6 REPORT OF THE FOREIGN COMMITTEE. accomplished under usual annual appro­ be included. That it should not would priations), no less a sum than fourteen appear to be the part of safety ; but on thousand two hundred and forty- the other hand, as the Board of Mana­ one dollars ; in addition to which, gers has already advised the Church, from his own “ Specials, ” Bishop the demands of the several foreign Penick has expended eight hundred fields require a schedule ample enough dollars in the increase and improve­ to aggregate even more than the total ment of the Cape Mount property in of the receipts (other than “ Specials,” ) Africa. for the year just closed; particularly The cause of the solicitude mentioned, so, since the need for increased appro­ is the outcome of the necessity for mak­ priations to the Mexican Branch of ing appropriations to the several for­ the Church, and to Haiti, has been ur­ eign fields some fifteen months in ad­ gently set forth more recently, and since vance of their termination. These ap­ no provision has been made, at this date, propriations have always to be made for the erection of the various buildings upon an empty Treasury, in faith that that are still absolutely required in G od will move His servants and stew­ China and Japan, other than the par­ ards to contribute largely for the on­ tial provision mentioned in the Sep­ going of that work which brought His tember number of T h e S p i k i t op dear Son into the world— the conver­ M is s io n 's where the subject is dwelt sion of the nations. upon.* This matter of solicitude will be fur­ The Committee especially call atten­ ther discussed in the succeeding para­ tion to the following “ Table Showing graphs. Receipts,” etc., and to their Treasur­ FIKAITOIAL STATEMENT. er’s Report, hereto appended, f By the From what is to be said under this table, it will appear that there has been a caption, the Committee doubt not that gain in the number of Parishes con­ the Board and the whole Church will tributing of but thirteen, as compared find occasion to join them in their re­ with last year. This is at once both joicing and their thanksgiving to encouraging and discouraging; the A l m i g h t y G o d , and, especially, in that former, because the average contribu­ for the first time in many years, if ever be- tion from the individual Parish has so before, the contributions for the general increased that $11,457 more than ever work of Foreign Missions have reached before have come from this source— the amount asked for in the Advent and the latter, since 1,783 Parishes are still Epiphany Appeal. This would not have non-contributing. Passing to the next been the case now (humanly speaking) item in the table, we find again, as were it not for a single gift received on compared with the last Report, a gain the 17th day of August, of thirteen of $17,611 from individual gifts, etc., thousand two hundred dollars, prob­ which is no less encouraging. The re- ably the largest single gift entirely at *At their meetings held on the 13th of September, the the disposal of the Board ever paid Committee and the Board took this subject into con­ into the Treasury. sideration, and after due deliberation, concluded, in dependence upon Divine Providence, to appropriate The question naturally arises, there­ in full for the buildings required in China and Japan; fore, whether, in forecasting the receipts to allow Bishop Holly six hundred dollars toward a building for school purposes upon his new estate of the coming fiscal year for the purpose near Port-au-Prince, and to continue the appropria­ of making appropriations (which are tions for current work at the rate tentatively fixed upon in June last—say $125,000 per annum. It is always made upon the basis of contri­ likely there will be needed for the new fiscal year to butions for the past twelve-month), this meet the obligations of the Committee (aside from “ Specials” ), about $180,000.—[S e c . munificent gift should or should not t See Appendix A. REPORT OF TEE FOREIGN COMMITTEE. 5 0 7 ceipts from Legacies have fallen off $4,- For account of the Afri­ 481, and from interest, $913. Lega­ can Mission, . $7,436 97 cies are always more or less uncertain, For account of the and the decrease in the latter item is, China Mission, . 7,23817 For account of the of course, attributable to the general Japan Mission, . 7,720 31 reduction in the rates. Particular at­ For account of the Hai- tention is called to the general increase tien Church, . 81 52 of total receipts since 1867, only inter­ For account of the Mexi­ rupted by the panic of 1873-4; those can Church, . 2,292 91 for this year, it will be observed, are $24,709 88 just about three times those for 1867-8. To which must be added balances Not the least encouraging feature of of numerous “ Specials” ac­ the Treasurer’s Report, by any means, counts, .... 4,900 20 is the fact that (leaving the secured Mexican Loan out of the question) Total, . . . $29,070 08 the Treasurer closed his books with The reduction for the fiscal year just cash on hand for the first time since closed was $16,995.77, besides $2,000 on 1873. Another encouraging feature in the principal of the Mexican Loan. This the same Report is the marked decrease last sum came from the amount raised in “ Specials ” other than those for by Bishop Riley in England. building purposes, which are always The assets of this Department of most welcome. Not that the Com­ Missionary work, available upon col­ mittee would discourage the giving of lection for current expenses, have de­ money for special purposes, if only the creased, nevertheless, but* $3,232.55. Church (whose representatives they are, They consist as follows : and who is bound by their action) would Cash on hand, . . . $ 243 24 first provide the means for meeting the Real estate (the proceeds of be­ engagements entered into by the Board quests, awaiting sale in Hart­ in her behalf. ford and Detroit) now held at 6,215 34 It must be well understood by this Note of the Rt. Rev. time ihat the Committee has been, for H. Chauncey Riley several years, steadily making an effort D. D., Personal to reach a point where, on the first day loan for the Mexi­ of September of each year, there shall be can Church, secured by lien on property in the Treasury a sum equivalent in in the city of Mexi­ amount to the aggregate of the out­ co, balance of prin­ standing {hut unmatured) liabilities for cipal, . . . 7,750 00 work performed abroad to that date, Interest to September which has been paid for in the field by 1st on same, . . 903 44 time drafts on London and New York. 8,653 44 Again for one moment placing the Specific bequests under wills ad­ Mexican Loan aside, we remark here mitted to probate and in course that the measure of success that has of settlement, a portion of attended this persistent effort is evinced which will certainly come into by the fact that such liabilities (includ­ the Treasury during the coming ing borrowed money), and the balance year, amounting to . . 18,850 00 The same, with one life inter­ of “ Specials” carried down, have been vening, .... 45,000 00 reduced in three years in the large sum of $39,825.91. These items stand to­ Total, . . ' . $78,962 02 day as follows: It should be further noted that, be- 508 REPORT OF THE FOREIGN COMMITTEE. sides the foregoing, there are large resid­ administration and collection, for the uary interests, under wills, .of which an year are six and three-tenths per cent, estimate is not here attempted; and of the gross amount administered for also the Mission property belonging to Foreign Missions. If those sums be the Society in foreign lands (which, of added which were received for subscrip­ course, is not in any way available for tions to the Publications, and for other current liabilities), as set forth beyond matters not embraced in the Treasurer’s under the head of each Mission. Report, the percentage is reduced to five and three -tenths .The “ Central Expenses,” or cost of five and three-tenths.The TABLE SHOWING RECEIPTS, ETC., SINCE 1867. No. of Parishes Amount Amount Amount Whole Contrib­ Amount received from T e a r . No. of uting to received from Miscellaneous received from received from Total receipts. Parishes. Foreign Parishes. Sources. Legacies. Interest. Missions.

1866-67 2,305 645 $55,725 41 $13,626 33 $12,000 74 t $81,352 48 1867-68 2,370 643 51,688 66 7,267 51 4,413 23 t 63,369 40 1868-69 2,472 752 67,391 11 10,024 88 10,925 92 t 88,341 91 1869-70 2,512 719 59,756 48 4,422 11 15,884 99 t 80,063 58 1870-71 2,605 794 76,819 93 17,218 07 18,799 25 t 112,837 25 1871-72 2,700 1,063 79,138 86 18,999 87 17,594 08 t 110,732 81 1872-73 2,700 972 81,073 94 15,240 17 17,795 97 t 114,110 08 1873-74 2,700 1,046 68,336 14 11,331 97 16,293 80 $4,038 47 100,000 38 1874-75 2,750 946 66,066 35 8,369 26 8,616 05 6,673 08 89,724 74 1875-76 2,800 931 75,429 59 7,509 24 9,737 75 4,950 98 97,627 56 1876-77 3,800 1,184 74,208 88 *35,941 84 1,597 82 3,227 73 114,976 27 1877-78 2,900 1,170 80,657 42 29,923 20 23,974 98 5,415 96 139,971 56 1878-79 2,900 1,163 179,436 00 J48,421 18 16,984 86 3,760 80 148,602 84 1879-80 2,900 1,217 91,269 44 39,714 29 27,458 33 3,642 ,19 162,084 25 1880-81 3,000 1,230 102,726 48 57,325 29 22,977 06 2,729 46 185,758 29

* From Special Committee for the Debt, $25,046.91. + Not made a separate item until 1873-74. X From Special Committee for the Debt, $6,624.57.

The particulars of the Legacies received are as follows : LEGACIES. $ 1,825 34Albany, Troy, Estate of Miss Fanny E. T u t t l e , ...... $ 1,825 34Albany, C. N. Y., Auburn, Mrs. Laura W i l l i a m s , ...... 125 00 C. Pa., York, . . Miss Juliana C l a r k , ...... 29 55 Conn., Pine Meadow Mrs. C. N. C h a p in ,...... 110 00 L. I., Brooklyn, . Harry Messenger, ...... 5,000 00 “ Glen Cove, Mrs. Elizabeth T. Somarindyck, . . 1,750 00 ‘ ‘ Greenpoint, Miss E. M. W o o d , ...... 86 30 Mass., Newton, . Mrs. M. C. B a u r y , ...... 83 34 Mich., Detroit, . Miss Charlotte S. H i c k s , ...... , 429 60 N. Y., Newburgh, Com. J. H. Graham, ...... 10,981 70 “ New York, Mrs. P. B e d e l l , ...... 240 00 Robert B arfe, ...... 144 50 Rev. W. A. Hallock, D.D., .... 100 00 N. N. J., Jersey City, Mrs. Sarah R a n d o lp h ,...... 250 00 O., Steubenville, . Mrs. Susannah B o s l e y ,...... 30 00 Pa., Philadelphia, Mrs. M. L. Harding, ...... 100 00 R. I., Bristol, . . Henry Codm an,...... 1,500 00 W. N. Y., Rochester, Allen Ayrault, ...... 191 67

$22,977 06 REPORT OF THE FOREIGN COMMITTEE. 5 0 9

EPISCOPAL" JURISDICTION. of the great English Societies were in This subject is one that has been at­ residence. tracting much attention in the Church While this subject belongs more at home. It was first brought to notice properly to the House of Bishops than by Bishop Penick’s statement at the to the Missionary Board, or its Foreign General Convention with regard to the Committee, it is one which could not “ intrusion ” of Bishop Crowther, and have been passed by without mention afterward upon letters from Bishops in this Report. Williams and Schereschewskv. The benefactions f r o m s o c ie t ie s a n d Bishop of Ohio has been much inter­ ASSOCIATIONS. ested. At the request of the Presid­ As always, so this year, we have to ing Bishop, he, representing the acknowledge with thanks, liberal grants American branch of the Anglican of books from T h e A m e r i c a n B ib l e Commission upon this subject (sug­ S o c ie t y , and T h e N e w Y o r k B ib l e gested by the Lambeth Conference and a n d C o m m o n P r a y e r -B o o k S o c ie t y . acted upon favorably by our Gen­ These have been made upon applications eral Convention), has been in cor­ from our several Mission fields, not the respondence with the Archbishop of least interesting of which, was a re­ Canterbury and his Suffragan, the quest from the Missionaries at Cape Lord Bishop of Dover. Mount for copies of the Arabic version Just what the outcome will be, it is of the Scriptures, to be used among impossible at present to state. Bishop the Mohammedan tribes with whom Williams refers to the matter in his they come in contact. Annual Report published herewith.* We said last year, “T h e W o m a n ’ s Bishop Schereschewsky’s words upon A u x i l i a r y is performing a work which the subject appeared upon page 272 of increases in vigor and substantial ser­ the June number of T h e S p i r i t of vice every year.” This remains true. M is s io n s . In the same connection, Over and above their usual efforts, they reference is made to the article in that have paid in a little less than one number entitled “ Our Mission to the thousand dollars under a pledge of four Heathen.” The English Bishops men­ thousand, to be redeemed before Sep­ tioned have replied to Bishop Bedell in tember 1st next, for the erection of a way which shows that, at least, at­ the proposed Hospital at Osaka ; they tention has been called to the subject have raised the means required for the in England and interest awakened. “ outfit,” travelling expenses and sup­ Those who have the matter in charge port of Miss Belle T. Michie, Missionary are agreed that, so far as we are con­ Teacher to Japan ; they have provided cerned, it will not do to consent that for the support of Miss Florence R. the English shall consecrate a Cathe­ Pitman ; the Calvary Church Wom­ dral in Shanghai, for thirty-six years the an’s Foreign Mission Association, of seat of an American Bishop; and, it New York, have paid in 6572 toward will be with great reluctance, if at all, the support of Dr. Henry W. Boone, that those representing the American Medical Missionary at Shanghai, and Church will consent to the relinquish­ the carrying on of his work ; and the ment of our hold upon either To- Maryland Branch have paid four hun­ kio or Osaka, in both of which places, dred dollars additional upon the en­ it will be seen, our work was firmly es­ dowment of the “ Bishop Boone” tablished before Missionaries of either scholarship in St. John’s College, Shanghai, undertaken by them. # See Appendix B. The amount received from the 510 REPORT OF THE FOREIGN COMMITTEE.

Woman’s Auxiliary during the last The Board of Managers, however, fiscal year for Endowments, “ Specials” when the present contract for the and current work, including a number stated publications was entered into, of new annual scholarships, has been employed Mr. David A. Arrow- $19,950.48; the value of boxes sent smith as the clerk for the General abroad has been $893.20. Missions Department. His duties are The Eev. Frederick R. Graves and those which pertain to the office-work Miss Elizabeth K. Boyd have been of the Board’s Periodicals and the placed upon the fund previously re­ clerical work which belongs distinc­ ported as raised by the Auxiliary to de­ tively to neither Committee. H is salary fray the cost of the “ outfit,” travelling is not a tax upon the contributions of expenses and salary for a time of a new the Church, nor does it come into Missionary to China. “ Central Expenses,” but is paid out The ladies of T h e M e x i c a n L e a g u e , of the receipts from subscribers for very much to their own gratifica­ “ The Spirit of Missions ” and ‘- The tion, as also to that of the Committee, Young Christian Soldier and the have been rewarded for their diligent Carrier Dove.” work by a decided increase in their re­ publications . ceipts. By the efforts of their Treas­ The Church will be much gratified urer and others, extra pledges have to learn by the Treasurer’s Reports been made, sufficient in' amount to war­ that the Periodicals of the Board are rant the Board in raising its annual ap­ no longer in any way a tax upon the propriation to Mexico in the sum of receipts for Mission purposes ; but, on $1,500 for the support of the Rev. C. the contrary, during the last eight E. Butler, who has gone out and as­ months, have been a source of revenue, sumed charge of the department of offsetting, in the case of this Commit­ Theological Education in the Mexican tee, fully one-half of the cost of the Church. The contributions from the “ occasional publications ” for the year. League during the year have been, to There is every reason to . suppose that, be applied under the appropriation, in the next Report of the Foreign $15,578.04; for building purposes, Treasurer, the item“ Publications ” (in­ $2,835.00 ; for personal benefit of work­ cluding cost of Reports, etc.,) will dis­ ers in the field, etc., $424.25, m aking appear entirely. A particular joint re­ together $18,837.29. port will be made upon this subject by The Piedmont and R a p p a h a n ­ the Secretaries. nock V alley Convocations, of Vir- appointment of missionaries.* gina, respectively, have continued to The Committee have been rejoiced provide in full for the support of the to recommend to the Board the ap­ Rev. John M’Nabb, and the Rev. proval of so many appointments during Curtis Grubb, Jr. the past fiscal year ; this rejoicing be­ Individuals and Churches too numer­ ing modified only by the necessary ous to mention, have specific pledges retirements from the field, during the for the support of Missionaries and for same period, so that there is still an several other definite purposes within absolute demand for three or four ad­ the scope of the appropriations, all of ditional ordained Missionaries in China, which are highly appreciated by your and a like number in Japan. These lat­ Committee. ter, Bishop Williams explains, areneces- OFFICERS, ETC. The personnel of the Foreign office re­ * The months given under this and the following captions refer to the numbers of The Spirit o k mains unchanged from the last Report. M i s s i o n s where full particulars will be found. REPORT OF TEE FOREIGN COMMITTEE. 5 1 1 sary to the holding of the two princi­ deaths. pal stations of Tokio and Osaka, in the A frica.— The Rev. T homas S. Savage, M.D. (The first ordained Missionary of this event of the retiring of the English Church to Africa.) [February.] Missionaries from that portion of the JuLirs W. Y. David, M .D., and Mr. John field. F a rr . [March.] Bishop Penick is anxious for the ap­ H aiti.— The Rev. Jacob W illoavbe. pointment of another married Mis­ [April.] sionary for the Cape Palmas District, movements of missionaries. and of a medical man for the Cape A frica.—Bishop and Mrs. P enick, and Miss E. L. Dabney. Left New York, June Mount District. 15th; arrived at Monrovia, July 23d. [J uly The appointments haye been, to and October.] Africa.—Mr. G. W. Christian Schmidt. Mr. G. W. C. Schmidt. Left Baltimore, [April.] May 12th, and, with Mrs. Schmidt, left Miss Elizabeth L. Dabney. [April.] Plymouth, July 11th, and arrived at Mon­ rovia the 27th. [July and October.] China.—W illiam A. Deas, M.D. [Janu­ Miss Margaret T homas. Left Cape ary.] Mount, April 2d; reached New York May The Rev. F rederick R. Graves. [July.] 25th. [July.] Prof. Edwin K. Buttles. [July.] Miss A nna. Steyens. [July.] China.— Henry W. Boone, M.D., and Miss Elizabeth K. Boyd. [August.] family. Reached Shanghai August 31st, Japan.—Miss Belle T. Michie. [Febru­ 1880. [January.] ary.] Mrs. R obert Nelson. Left Shanghai Miss Margaret L. Mead. [May. J October 30th. [February.] W illiam A. D eas, M.D. Left New York Haiti.— Stipends have been assigned to December 7th; arrived at Wuchang March two Clergymen of the Church in Haiti, added 1st. [February, April and May.] by ordination to the staff: The Rev. Dr. Nelson, and Miss Mary C. The Rev. Sadrach K err. [June.] Nelson. Left Shanghai January 13th, and, The Rev. Theodore F. Holly. [Sep­ with Mrs. Nelson and children, reached tember.] their home in Virginia, March 10th. [April Mexico.—Bishop Riley has appointed and May.] the Rev. C. E. Butler. [June.] (A sti­ The Rev. and Mrs. Daniel M. Bates. pend has been assigned to him as explained Left Shanghai April 6th; reached New in the paragraph above, relating to the York June 12th. [July.] Mexican League.) The Rev. F. R. Graves. Left Geneva, ordinations in the field. N. Y., August 19th; Prof. E. K. B ut­ Ha it i.—Those of the two individuals tles left Cleveland, O., August 22d; before mentioned. Miss A nna Stevens and Miss E. K. Boyd Mexico.—Mr. Pioquinto Orihuila, Mr. left New York, August 22d; all purposing Luis Canal, Mr. J. R amirez A rellano, to take the steamer “ City of Peking ” from and Messrs. Jacinto and Joaquin Hernan­ San Francisco, September 6th. [October.] dez. [June.] (These gentlemen were all Japan.—The Rev. and Mrs. J. H. Quinby. receiving stipends before ordination, as Lay- Left Tokio August 27th, 1880, reached New readers, etc.) York September 29th. [January.] retirement of missionaries. The Rev. and Mrs. E. R. W oodman. Ar­ China.—A lbert C. Bunn, M.D. [Janu­ rived at Tokio September 22d. [January.] ary.] Mr. J. McD Gardiner. Arrived at Tokio Mrs. R obert K elson. [February.] October 12th. [January.] The Rev. R obert N elson, D.D. (After Miss Belle T. Michie. Left New York an honorable service extending over about December 22d, reached Osaka February thirty years.) [April.] 11th. [February, April, and May.] Miss Mary C. N elson. [April.] Miss Margaret L. Mead. Left New York The Rev. and Mrs. D aniel M. Bates May 11th; arrived at Osaka June 24th. [June and July.] [June, July, August, and September.] Japan.—Miss Ellen G. Eddy. [May.] Miss Ellen G. Eddy. Left Osaka June 14th; arrived at South Bend, Ind., July 22d. MARRIAGE OF MISSIONARIES. [August and September.] Africa.—The Rt. Rev. Dr. P enick and Miss Mary Hoge. [June.] Mexico.—Bishop R iley. Left England Mr. G. W. Christian Schmidt and Miss October 31st, reached New York November C. C. von Skwariunsky. 9th; left this city December 10th; arrived 5 1 2 REPORT OF THE FOREIGN COMMITTEE.—GREECE. in Mexico January 21st. [February and from NewYork April 21st; arrived in Mexico March.] in due course (date never given). [June and Rev. Carlos E. B utler, and family sailed i July.]

GREECE. Staff.—Miss M arion M uir. Nine assistant teachers (Greek) and four pupil teachers (Greek). Pupils 700. Estimated value of Mission Property, $4,341.88.

It will be remembered that in the first par­ Greece, and to add that, by this, national agraphs of the Annual Report last year, thanks are also inscribed to you and to your friends by whose aid the true education of reference was made to the appointments of the female sex in Greece has had its fitting the first Missionaries to Greece in 1880. impulse and succor. Among these were the now venerable Rev. In conclusion, acknowledging also my Dr. and Mrs. Hill. It appears that the personal gratitude and high respect, I sub­ recognition of their long residence in that scribe myself country was not to be confined to this side The Minister. of the water; for in July last they re­ (Signed) S. C. R oma. ceived a copy of a Royal Ordinance expres­ A thens, June 16, 1881.” It maybe interesting to some of our read­ sive of the King’s approval and the nation’s gratitude for the educational work done in ers to know that the issuing' of this Ordi­ Greece for the past fifty years by the Church’s nance was one of the last official acts of Missionaries. This remarkable document, “ the Minister,” who died within a few very which we embody here, has already appeared days thereafter. Simply to correct any possible misappre­ in several of the Church weeklies, but it is hension, let us say that the document is in certainly worthy of permanent record in this error in stating that Dr. and Mrs. Hill, report to the Board. ‘ ‘still continue and direct ” the Mission work. Upon its receipt the Churchman said: Their active participation in it ceased in The King of Greece performed a graceful act in making the fiftieth anniversary of Dr. 1869. Hill’s work at Athens the occasion of a pub­ With regard to the work of the schools at lic acknowledgment of the great service he present, it is prefered, as usual, to let Miss had rendered to the kingdom by the labors Muir speak for herself, as it would be that the of himself and his devoted wife. Fifty Missionaries of other fields should were they years of service in a foreign land by husband not so numerous as to render it impossible. and wife is not an oft-told tale. The Church REPORT OF MISS MARION MUIR. herself gladly recognizes the honesty of W e can truly say God hath made all purpose and the diligence with which her things work together for our good during servants have carried on this portion of her the past year. With heartfelt thankfulness work. I announce to you that we have closed Translation. another successful year. Our schools have “ Kingdom of Greece. Bureau of Ecclesiastical been examined in the presence of men of Affairs and Public Instruction. To the Ret. learning and piety, and all have expressed John II. Hill, Presbyter of the Episcopal entire satisfaction. Church, in the TJ. S. of America, and Mrs. The programme of the examination is as F. M. Hill: follow s: It is with great pleasure that I communi­ First Department. The teacher is a young cate to you, on the occasion of the completion Jewess, who was educated in our school, and of fifty years since you established, at the finished in the Greek training-school. Her expense of your friends and those of Greece, classes were examined on the first and second your most excellent school for females which chapters of the Acts of the Apostles, the you still continue and direct, and from twentieth chapter of Exodus, and a part of which female education has been systemati*- the one hundred and nineteenth Psalm. Also cally spread throughout Greece. His Maj­ in Reading, Grammar, Geography, Arithme­ esty, the King, desires to express to you his tic and Music. Royal approbation, given yesterday by royal Second Department. This department was decree. examined in the New Testament, History, In communicating this to you, I consider Reading, Dictation, Parsing. Geography, it my duty to congratulate you on the just Arithmetic, Declamation and Music. royal appreciation of your benefaction to Third and Highest Department. The REPORT OF THE FOREIGN COMMITTEE.—AFRICA. 5 1 3 scholars were examined in a Catechism on W e continue to have a few Jews in all the the Baptismal Promises, the Ten Command­ classes, who study the same Scripture les­ ments and the twelve articles of the Creed; sons as the other children. in Sacred History, Reading, Dictation, Last but not least, Parsing, Geography, Arithmetic, Greek The Industrial Department. Every child History, Declamation and Music. is required to make a shirt and sampler be­ The Infants were examined on Bible His­ fore she leaves the infant room. And in tory from the Creation to the giving of the the higher classes, every child is required Law on Mount Sinai; followed by various to be a thorough seamstress, before she is exercises and dialogues, which were both allowed to do any kind of fancy work. amusing and instructive, and music. W e shall continue the school, but on a We have had our usual number of seven smaller scale during the months of July and hundred pupils under our care during the August, in order to meet the wants of poor past year; some of them from the Islands and mothers who have to go out to earn a Provinces and some from Turkey andthe East. living.

AFRICA. Missionary Staff.—Bishop, 1; Presbyters Alonzo Potter Dowe (native), Teacher, Hoffman Sta tion. (white 2, Liberian 5, native 1), 8 ; Deacons Richard Killen Nyema (native), Teacher, Rocltboo- (white 1, Liberian 3, native 2), 6 ; Candi­ kah. dates for Holy Orders (native), 2; Postu­ A. H. Vinton Foda (native), Teacher, Cavalla. E. W. Appleton Wade (native), Teacher, Fishtown. lants (native), 3; Lay-readers, 2; Mis­ T. C. Brownell Gabla (native), Teacher, Cavalla. sionary Physician (native), 1; Business Joseph Elliott Nim’ne (native), Teacher, Cavalla. Agents, 2; white female Teachers, 6 ; Also three student Teachers. Catechists and Teachers (Liberian 5, na­ Sinoe and Bassa District. tive 6), 11. The Rev. L. L. Montgomery (Liberian), Bassa. The Rev. J. G. Monger (Liberian), Sinoe.* The Rt. Rev. C . C l i f t o n P e n i c k , D.D., Missionary Bishop, Cape Mount. Mr. George A. Dunbar (Liberian), Lay-reader, Sinoe.* J. A. Herring (Liberian], Lay-reader, Bassa.* Cape Palmas District. The Rev. S. D. Ferguson (Liberian), Cape Palmas. Monrovia and Cape Mount District. The Rev. R. H. Gibson (Liberian), suspended. The Rev. G. W. Gibson (Liberian), Monrovia.* The Rev. M. P. Valentine Keda (native), Cavalla. The Rev. A. F. Russell (Liberian), Clay-Ashland.* The Rev. William Allan Fair, Cape Palmas. The Rev. J. W. Blacklidge (Liberian), Monrovia.* The Rev. O. E. Shannon Hemie (native), Hoffman Sta­ The Rev. Edward Hunte (Liberian), Crozierville. tion. The Rev. John McNabb, Cape Mount. The Rev. Harry C. Merriam Nyema (native), River The Rev. Curtis Grubb, Jr., Cape Mount. Cavalla. Mr. G. W Christian Schmidt, Cape Mount. Henry W. Dennis Hne, M.D. (native), Missionary Mrs. Penick, Cape Mount. Physician,Cape Palmas. Mrs. Grubb, Cape Mount. Mrs. Fair, Cape Palmas. Mrs. Schmidt, Cape Mount. Mrs. S. J. Simpson (Liberian), Teacher, Cape Palmas. Miss Margaret Thomas (at home). Mrs. Ann Toomey (Liberian), Orphan Asylum, Cape Miss Elizabeth L. Dabney, Cape Mount. Palmas. Miss Sarah Johnson (Liberian), Teacher,Cape Mount.

ESTIMATED VALUE OF PROPERTY, f Cape Mount.— We have spent upon it a b o u t ...... $2,000 00 Babsa.—Property is worth not over...... 300 00 Sinoe.—Property is worth not o v e r ...... 250 00 Cape Palmas.— Orphan Asylum, about . . . . 3,000 00 Hospital, a b o u t...... 1,00000 St. Mark’s Church, a b o u t ...... 2,500 00 Hoffman Station.—All told, about ...... 2,000 00 Cavalla Station.—All told, ab ou t ...... 4,000 00 Out-Stations.—All told, about...... 850 00

Total, about...... $15,900 00

Bishop Penick writes: “ We could not realize half of this if sold for money.” J

* These are not supported by the Board. Tin addition to this $800 was drawn by Bishop Penick during the year, from his “ Specials,” for the erec­ tion of another house at Cape Mount, which is supposed to be completed and occupied, and $400 has been expended at Bassa for a chapel at Fishtown. + In a heathen country it is utterly impossible to come anywhere near what property will realize. 514 REPORT OF THE FOREIGN COMMITTEE.—AFRICA.

As the Bishop has been in the United Bishop Auer, made translations of parts of States during the whole of the last Mission­ the Scriptures and of other books into the ary year (ending with June),no report has yet Grebo tongue. come from him; should one come to hand it Hoffman Station. The Rev. O. E. Shannon will be published as an Appendix to this Re­ Hemie (native) reports having conducted port, with those of the other Foreign Mission­ Divine Service 166 times, with an average ary Bishops. The following review of opera­ attendance of 81 natives. There have been 12 tions at the various stations is derived from Baptisms. The number of communicants is the letters and reports of the Missionaries in 71, a loss of three since last year. Mr. charge. The Bishop has now returned to Hemie’s report is full and frank, and is Africa, having arrived at Monrovia (as stated especially interesting in its account of the above) on the 23d of July. witchcraft superstitions which have so strong Cape Palmas District. The severe illness an influence over the native mind. of Dr. H. W. Dennis Hne, the native Mis­ Cavalla Station. The Rev. M. P. Valentine sionary Physician at Cape Palmas, has pre­ Keda (native) in charge. A very full and vented him from sending his annual report. precise account of the studies and discipline Dr. Hne is still sick. of the Hoffman Institute and the High St. Marie's Church, Cape Palmas, Rev. S. School, was published in The Spirit of D. Ferguson in charge, Minister and people Missions for January, 1881. Liberians. The Sunday-school has 190 The number of Communicants at this sta­ pupils. The offerings amounted to nearly tion has fallen to 102, from 128 reported $300. Most of this sum is to be ap­ last year. Mr. Keda, without further par­ plied to erecting a building for the parish ticulars, states that this reduction is “ on school. Mr. Ferguson speaks of having an account of removals, deaths and suspen­ interesting Confirmation class awaiting the sions. ’ Divine Service has been held at the return of the Bishop. principal station twice on every Sunday, on Orphan Asylum and Girls'1 School at Cape every day in Lent, upon Holy Days, and on Palmas. In charge of Rev. f m . Allan 105 other occasions. Sunday Services have Fair and Mrs. Fair. A letter from Mr. Fair, also been held at each of the nine sub-sta­ containing an interesting description of the tions. There is a large proportion of young work of this school, was published in The people in all the congregations. Spirit o f Missions for October, 1880. There The Rev. H. C. Merriam Nyema, one of are now 34 pupils. Divine Service is regu­ the native Deacons, is at work in three towns larly held, and there have been four adult on the Cavalla River. He sends an encourag­ Baptisms. Both Mr. and Mrs. Fair are ing report. suffering in ways which require them to give SINOE AND BASSA DISTRICT. up teaching for the present, at least; the Sinoe. No report has been received from former having a throat difficulty and the this place, but it is known that the Rev. Mr. latter inflammation of the eyes. Mr. Fair Monger (Liberian) is going on with his work intends to try to get the needed rest while there. As has been before stated, Bishop Pe- remaining in Africa, instead of returning to nick admitted this Liberian Candidate for this country. He thinks he will be able to Holy Orders to the Diaconate some time be­ pursue the study of the Grebo tongue, and fore his return to America, with the express direct the studies of one of the native understanding that his support was to be Deacons, even when debarred from more provided by the people to whom he minis­ active duties. He believes it to be best to re­ tered. He receives, therefore, no stipend sign the charge of the school, and on his re­ from the Board. covery, with the Bishop’s approbation, to Bassa. At this Liberian station the Rev. L. devote himself principally to preaching the L. Montgomery continues his labors, assisted Gospel among the Grebos. The Grebo is by a Lay-reader only. He sends particu­ by far the strongest and most influential lars of his work at a new place, Fishtown. tribe, and its language the most generally (This is to be distinguished from the town spoken of any upon this part of the coast. of the same name in the Cavalla District, It will be remembered that this tribe was where Mr. E. W . Appleton Wade is sta­ first reached by Bishop Payne and his co­ tioned.) Mr. Montgomery has for a year laborers, and that they, and subsequently held Services at this place, aiad believes it to REPORT OF THE FOREIGN COMMITTEE.—AFRICA. 5 1 5

be an important and hopeful one, but a transient and seemingly justifiable cause church building is needed there, and will may influence her prematurely to deviate or cost $600. The contributions during relinquish this rather . slow and trying, but the Missionary year from the Bassa Station withal glorious task, because divinely im­ posed. And as a Liberian Clergyman—I amount to $459.22, a noble showing! and trust humbly and thoroughly devoted to my of this amount $400 were raised especially life's work—willing and ardent to spend for the chapel at Fishtown. and be spent for the glory and triumph of The principal station under the charge of Christ and the Church, I do earnestly ash Mr. Montgomery, is Buchanan, and there and entreat awakened attention to the endeavor also a church building is greatly needed. to plant the church in Liberia—the outcome Some twenty years ago an effort was made of American philanthropy, and doubtless divinely ordained for the accomplishment to erect such a building, and contributions of a great Christian and political work in to the amount of $469.26 were made for the Africa, when in the time not yet come purpose in this country. But the removal Ethiopia shall quickly stretch out her hands of the then resident Missionary caused the unto God. enterprise to be abandoned. Some five years ago, however, the Christians of the MONROVIA AND CAPE MOUNT DISTRICT. town made a strong effort to build a church, Monrovia and vicinity. It is earnestly contributed money and labor, dug a cellar, hoped, since the three Clergymen here lo­ laid the foundation, and got a portion of cated and their congregations have so cheer­ the necessary material upon the ground. fully accepted the advice of the House of At this point their resources failed. Bishops and returned to their allegiance to During the past year the Foreign Committee the Protestant Episcopal Church in the determined to regard the amount of the con­ United States, that another year reports from tributions above spoken of, and still in their them may be received so that the Board may hands, as a special deposit at compound in­ be able to present to the Churchfull statistics terest, and, upon Bishop Penick’s under­ of “ The Cape Palmas Mission.” taking to complete the Buchanan church St. Paul's River. Rev. Edward Hunte without debt, have appropriated the whole (Liberian), though a good deal hindered by sum, amounting to $1,327.55, for the pur­ sickness, has, in addition to his work at pose. In this connection we quote from a Crozierville, where Sunday Services are letter from Mr. Montgomery. v regularly held, preached the Gospel daily in “ During the year covered by this Report neighboring towns. He has gathered a there has been no abatement of effort to little flock of 11 communicants, and has a secure contributions for the church buildings, Sunday-school of 24 scholars at Crozierville. attended with a fair measure of success. He believes that among his congregations, By a recent resolution of the Foreign Com­ which average 60 persons, there is a serious mittee, the sum of $1,300 and over spirit which promises future conquests for has been placed at the disposal of the Missionary Bishop for the completion of Christ. the church, for which we have been strug­ Gape Mount. The work here, begun only gling a long time to raise means to rear the in 1879, is progressing in a way which superstructure. Permit me to remark, in speaks well for the wisdom of the enterprise this connection that it is calculated to be and the spirit in which it is conducted. It is an inestimable blessing to this African almost exclusively among the native popula­ country and the regions beyond, to have the tion. Duringthe year there have been 31 Bap­ Protestant Episcopal Church planted in its integrity, here in Liberia. And how necessary tisms, of which 11 were of adults. There are that this should be done before the coming 95 pupils in the Sunday-school, 92 in the of the "Romanists, with their abundant Day-school, and 89 in the Boarding-school. means, cunning and fatal casuistry. This A detailed report upon the Cape Mount infant negro nation should have a full schools was published in The Spirit of and fair chance to learn and adopt the in­ Missions for March, 1881. telligent, sober and spiritual worship of the The Rev. JohnMcNabb and the Rev. Curtis Church of the past ages and the future cent­ uries. And may the Divine Head of the Grubb have carried on the Cape Mount Church grant that it may be so. That work, assisted in teaching by Miss Mar­ honor, privilege and duty, nolens volens, de­ garet Thomas, Miss Charlotte Hogan, a volves upon our American Church, and no native, and Miss Sarah Johnson, a Liberian. 516 REPORT OF THE FOREIGN COMMITTEE.—AFRICA.

The attendance upon public worship has rarely seen or heard of a Missionary institu­ been regular and increasing. tion in South Africa -which did not, by its The prosperity of this Mission in each of measure of success, fully justify the means its departments calls for the deepest thank­ employed to carry it on. The worst man­ fulness to Almighty G od. aged and least efficient Missionary institu­ Information has been received of the re­ tions he had seen, appeared to him far cent death of Mr. James Moore, of the firm of superior as agencies for civilizing and Gabriel Moore & Sons, the Society’s business raising the natives to anything which could agents at Monrovia. He was regarded as be devised by the unassisted secular power the active man of the firm, and was the one of the Government. with whom Bishop Penick’s relations were It is believed that these statements will the closest. His loss will be seriously apply as fully to the Mission of this Church felt. and to all Missions upon the West Coast. The attention of the Committee has been Without underrating the difficulties which called to a remarkable testimony to the have from the first attended this work, value of Missions in South Africa made by Christian Missions have been, and are the Sir Bartle Frere at a meeting of the Royal most efficient of all civilizing agencies among Colonial Institute, held in London in Feb­ those unhappy people. This is putting the ruary of this year. After referring to the matter on the lowest ground. If then this relations between the European and native be true, how gloriously true is it when re­ races, he observed that, as a whole, he had garded from a strictly Christian standpoint.

STATISTICS AFRICAN MISSION.

CO Baptisms fl Scholars. P SS à a ö 10 S'S Pi g ’S AFRICAN MISSION. $ p o £ëno a Vu

Mission Houses, American built, 6. 3 “ “ Native *' 4. Ph _ School Houses, American built, 3. >

ó ____ d 'S

¡z; Native. : Q 6 |z¡ __ 1 Native. Native. 1 j Liberian. | Contributioi J I I Liberian. | Adults. 1 j Deaths. | Marriages. | Native. j Liberian. j j | 1 American. 1 | Adults. 1 Children. 1 1 | Liberian. J ! 1 American. 1 | j Liberian. | 1 Confirmatioi 1

CAPE PALMAS DISTRICT. oso 88 1 10 84 R 1 42 190 $289 83 Cape Palmas, Orphan Asylum... 109 2 4 2 4 1 31 13 52 00 Hoffman Station, St. James’ ...... 166 81 1 11 U 71 5 2 53 31 68 90 Cavalla, Church of the Epiphany CÔ and nine adjacent villages...... 703 100 3 9 OJ 102 6 3 49 42 43 18 50 Fish town (Fair Haven) and two © 104 175 »*3 4 1 1« tHalf-Graway (Spring Hill) and CUD 45 fl P! 15 15 'u 20 20 Kabla and two adjacent towns— 104 60 O 4 1 30 19 fl SINOE AND BASSA DISTRICT. 0) 5í> •s 31 5 39 4 Qi 16 4 35 459 22 Bassa (Buchanan and Fishtown).. 97 70 © MONROVIA AND CAPE MOUNT DISTRICT. X s St. Paul’s River (Four Stations)... 469 45 16 4 11 2 3 21 72 23 109 03 107 395 2 11 17 3 R 18 1 1 89 3 RB __ ___ .— Total...... 2200 5 601 176 21 37 1 21 8 205 144 28 13268 45 162 13 208 308 $997 48

»There are, so far as reported, Day-schools, 10; Boarding-schools, 5; Sunday-schools, 7. + No report received, we give last year’s figures. X Statistics for Monrovia and vicinity not reported. REPORT.'r OF TEE FOREIGN COMMITTEE—CHINA. 517

CHINA. Missionary Staff.—Bishop, 1; Presbyters The Rev. Hong Neok Woo, Shanghai. The Rev. William S. Sayres. Wuchang. (foreign 3, native 3), 6 ; Deacons (foreign The Rev. Sung Tsz Yang, Wuchang. 1, native 3), 4; Divinity Students (seven The Rev. Sung Lu Chuu, Shanghai. The Rev. Zu Soong Yen, Shanghai. of whom also act as Teachers and Lay- The Rev. Frederick R. Graves (in passage). readers), 15 ; Missionary Physicians (for­ Henry W. Boone, M.D., Missionary Physician. Shang­ hai. eign), 2; Missionary Teachers (.foreign), William A. Deas, M.D., Missionary Physician, Wu­ (Male 1, Female 7), 8 ; Medical Students, chang. 6 ; Catechists, Teachers, Bible-readers, and Prof. Edwin K. Buttles (in passage). Mrs. Schereschewsky, Shanghai. hospital assistants (native), 31. Mrs. Thomson, Shanghai. The Rt. Rev. S a i t j e l I. J. S chekeschewsky , D.D., Mrs. W. J. Boone, Shanghai. Missionary Bishop, Shanghai. Mrs. H. W. Boone, Shanghai. The Rev. Elliot H. Thomson, Shanghai. Miss Josephine H. Roberts, Wuchang. The Rev. Kong Chai Wong, Shanghai. Miss Anna Stevens (in passage). The Rev. William J. Boone, Shanghai. Bliss Elizabeth K. Boyd (in passage). The Rev. Yung Kiung Yen, M.A., Shanghai. Miss Wong, Shanghai. ESTIMATED VALUE OF MISSION PROPERTY. Shanghai.—Christ Church, City (brick), s a y ...... Taels 2,500 00 Three lots in Hong Kew, and m aterials ...... 38,000 00 St. John’s College, grounds (13 acres), five residences, and St. Mary’s H a l l ...... 23,500 00 Church of Our Saviour (brick), Hong Kew, and grounds. . . . 1,300 00 St. Luke’s Hospital, H ong K e w ...... 4,000 00 St. Paul’s Chapel, K ong W an, and s i t e ...... 1,000 00 St. Stephen’s Chapel, San Ting Kur . 700 00 ------71,000 00 W uchang.—Clergy-house (brick)...... 2,400 00 Two Bungalows and Hospital...... 740 00 Jane Bohlen School-house and residence (brick)...... 2,000 00 Bishop Boone Memorial School-house (brick)...... 550 00 Chapel of the Nativity...... 2,000 00 The ground on which these six buildings stand is worth. . 2,350 00 Fu Kai Street Chapel and l o t ...... 1,800 00 ------11,840 00 Hankow.—St. Paul’s Chapel (brick) and l o t ...... 2,060 00 School-house (brick) on same l o t ...... 200 00 Native house and l o t ...... 200 00 House Fund (now loaned tem porarily) ...... 2,280 13 ------4,740 13 Peking.—Mission H ou se ...... 4,000 00

Total valuation ...... Taels, 91,580 13 From which deduct the sum of obligations entered into by the Bishop as trustee, under authority of the Board of Managers, for the St. John’s College property: payable from the income of the Hong Kew property ...... 17,989 36

— * Taels, 73,590 77 The Shanghai Station is severely crippled Kew without a Rector, the Services being by the withdrawal during the past year, of conducted by Clergymen from the College two Clerical Missionaries, the Rev. Dr. Nel­ several miles away, who are altogether un­ son and the Rev. Mr. Bates, with their fami­ able, on account of pressure of duties for lies. The Rev. Mr. Thomson must also,before which they were especially appointed, to ex­ long, leave his important work for a time, ercise any pastoral supervision over this to seek in this country the rest and renewal congregation of their own countrymen. In of strength he so much needs. For ten Mr. Bates’ place a Professor is needed in St. years he and his wife have pursued a work John’s College. Mr. Thomson’s departure of constant and absorbing usefulness, deny­ will leave not only a vacant Lectureship in ing themselves the rest they were every way the College, but also a pastoral, evangelis­ entitled to, because there was no one to take tic and translating work, which cannot, their places. W ill not such devotion, such without ¿at ioae, be suffered to lapse. The self-sacrifice, lead others to emulate their need for active young, or middle-aged Cler- example ? Dr. Nelson’s retirement leaves "gymen, to fill these vacancies is the most the English speaking congregation at Hong urgent possible. The appropriations for *The present value of the Tael is about SI .30. 518 REPORT OF TEE FOREIGN COMMITTEE.—CHINA. their support are already made, the work during the Missionary year having been 3,874 waits only for the workers. (this being a record of individuals, and not The Committee seize this occasion to say of the aggregate number of visits). He re­ what was unknown to them at the time that ceived 47 patients into the hospital, and the April number of T he Spirit op Missions performed 38 operations. It will thus be seen went to press, viz.: That upon the eve of his that he has very energetically taken up his sailing from Shanghai, Dr. Nelson was the work. Letters of Mr. Sayres, written pre­ recipient of a testimonial signed by the vious to the arrival of Dr. Deas, have shown various Missionaries and the foreign resi­ that great credit is due to the Chinese stu­ dents of the city. At the same time he was dent who had charge of the Hospital in presented with a considerable sum of money the interim, after Dr. Bunn’s departure. by the latter, in substantial token of their The apparent progress in this station regard and esteem. during the past year has not been consider­ The progress of St. John’s College is able. The large number of Baptisms and marked by the organization of a Medical Confirmations during the previous year Department, and the appointment of a gen­ awakened high anticipations of its success, tleman who will soon begin a Scientific the fulfilment of which is delayed. There Department. Of the importance of these has been no abatement, however, in the movements too much can not be said. Both energy exerted by the small band of work­ are in the line of substantial and rapid prog­ ers, and there is every reason to believe ress. Dr. Boone’s Report will be pub­ that the more abundant blessing of the lished. An account of the appointments of Lord of the Harvest may be counted upon Prof. Buttles and of other Missionaries, as a “ hope deferred” but not misplaced. and of their departure for China, will be And it must be remembered that during a published in the October number of The large part of the last Missionary year, Mr. Spirit of Missions. Sayres was entirely alone in the charge of The Bridgman Memorial and the Emma this important work. With all the disadvan­ Jones Schools for girls have been trans­ tages it is really much to say that no work ferred to St. John’s, and will both be under before undertaken has been abandoned, the care of Miss Anna Stevens, one of the that 17 persons have been baptized, there new appointees just alluded to. The two are still 20 candidates, and that three new schools are maintained as separate depart­ stations have been opened in the country. ments, but under one roof, in the new St. In reference to these Mr. Sayres says : Mary’s Hall. The Rev. Prof. Boone has, in “ It is proposed to establish a chain of addition to his duties in the College, con­ stations at a distance of say twenty or tinued his efficient work as Treasurer of the thirty miles from this city, inclosing it as a Mission; has conducted Services temporarily circumference, the city being its centre. It at the English Cathedral (so called), and at will then be practicable for the Missionary the Church of Our Saviour, as related in on setting out from the city to find a sta­ the Bishop’s report, and is Chaplain to tion at the end of each day’s travel. The the Girls’ Schools. three stations at present established were The Rev. Prof. Yen is also doing much selected in accordance with this plan, and outside work in attending at the Dispensary, an addition of three or four more would and at the new stations lately established in complete the circle, the stations being twenty the country near St. John’s. From the other to thirty miles apart.” Chinese Clergymen are received, also, full re­ Miss Josephine H. Roberts, who arrived in ports of their work. The Rev. Hoong Neok Wuchang early in the year covered by this Woo shows less rapid progress than in some report, went out with the expectation of former years ; but his courage is no bemg associated with Mrs. Sayres. The less firm. The Rev. Zu Soong Yen has death of the latter left Miss Roberts charge of five stations, from which 26 per­ to begin her work as Matron and sons have been confirmed during the year. Teacher of the school under very trying cir­ He reports hopeful progress. Rev. Mr. cumstances. Later, Mrs. Schereschewsky W ong, the Senior Chinese Presbyter, has went to her relief, a help for which Miss Rob­ presented 19 candidates for Confirmation. erts has expressed her grateful appreciation. Wuchang. In addition to the Bishop's The appointment of Miss Elizabeth K. Boyd report written from this place, and to the to the same station, will now give Miss letters from him and from Mr. Sayres, fre­ Roberts a permanent associate in the im­ quent extracts from which have appeared in portant work among the women and chil­ T he SpiftiT of Missions ; full reports are at dren of that city. We recur also with great hand from Mr. Sayres and from Dr. Deas, satisfaction to the appointment of the Rev. portions of which will be published. Dr. •Frederick R. Graves to the Wuchang Sta­ Deas treated, during his first four months of tion, in the supervision of which he will service, 1,517 cases; the whole number seen divide the work with Mr. Sayres. REPORT OF THE FOREIGN COMMITTEE -CHINA.

Hankow. Regular Sunday Services and men and Catechists are doing a work too daily preaching have been maintained little appreciated, and which none but they at the Chapel in Hankow. Mr. Sayres can do well. Familiarity with Chinese has conducted the Sunday Morning ways of thought and statement, with all the Services, and administered the Holy Com­ idioms of the language, and the ritual of munion once a month. The remaining politeness, with traditional superstitions and Services aud preaching have been con­ usages, with a thousand things which no ducted by the Rev. Sung Tze Yang, the one not a native of the land can ever learn aged Catechist ordained to the Diaconate thoroughly, are essential to the success of a last year. It may be here remarked that preacher to miscellaneous congregations of the preaching done daily in our chapels is a Chinese. very different thing from the delivery of set In concluding this part of our Report, we sermons. As a general thing it is rather in give one of several interesting cases cited by the character of instruction to an ignorant Mr. Sayres m his recent report : and constantly changing congregation, to “ Among the candidates for Baptism are whom the elementary principles of Chris- two Taoist priests, one of whom was convert­ itanity have to be patiently explained. The ed by the preaching in the little village in preacher is constantly interrupted by ques­ the outskirts of Han-Yang. He was tions, often frivolous, sometimes ill-tempered, the village priest in the temple, and did but frequently devout and eager. If literary all the daily worshipping for the people, men or Buddhist priests are, as often hap­ being supported by their common offerings. pens, in the congregation, the preacher may He has left the place, gone home to his have to defend his positions one by one family (he is about 50 years old), put off against their counter-arguments. His po­ his priest’s garb, and donned the common sition is therefore a difficult and important dress of an ordinary citizen, and is now one, and it is here that our native Clergy­ awaiting Baptism.” STATISTICS CHINA MISSION.

SCHOLAKS. B a p t i s m s . 0 Qj Cß

CHINA MISSION. 5 £ a. D ©CO u o ÛTa) a f h 6 o K ,o o

SHANGHAI DISTRICT. St. John’s College and Chapel, and St. Mary’s Hall...... 1526 160 4 ... $117 30 Nan Ziang, two Chapels. Tsuns:.. Zu, Fall W ha...... !...... 535 121 106 Hong Kew, Church of Our Saviour (European)...... 82 50 8 3 40 78 50 Hong Kew, Church of Our Saviour, native work, Lau-Zak, Ing Zang Kong, Tsing Ka Long, Sen Kong-Ou, Cha Ka Pang, Hong Tsang, and St. Luke’s Hospital, Hong Kew ...... 1128 200 125 238 06 Kong Wan, St. Paul’s, San Ting Kur, St. Stephen’s, and King Vong Zak, Bah-Z-Jau, and Dah- Dzang...... 595 250 116 .... 79 00 Shanghai City, ChristChurch, West Gate, Zion Chapel, Pagoda Sta­ tion, and West Gate Cnapel . 561 200 140 25 391 46 WUCHANG DISTRICT. Wuchang, Chapel of the Nativity, Fu Kai Chapel, Hospital, Lung-Hwa Au, Pas-Au, and 1427 140 5 2 20 65 00 T WuLi-Kai...... 1 Hankow, St. Paul’s Chapel...... 132 70 3 .. 3 70 Total. 598611141 60! 36 19 2212 158 599i 44) $973 02 The Sunday scholars are usually the same children counted as Day and Boarding scholars, n n . ere are> so far as reported, 29 Day-schools, 6 Boarding-schools, 20 Sunday-schools, Ibesides the ooiiegiate, Theological and Medical Departments of St. John’s College. 5 2 0 ¡REPORT OF THE FOREIGN COMMITTEE.—JAPAN.

JAPAN. Jfl«™*» ^.-Bishop 1; (foreign), 6, Deacons (foreign), 1, Can J -^ev. jq^ McKim, Osaka,

didates for Holy Orders, 3; Missionary j The Rev. Edmund R. Woodman, Tokio. Physicians (foreign), X; Foreign Teachers j c>salta' j Mr. James McD. Gardiner, Tokio. (male 1, female 9), 10; Catecliists, Teach­ Mrs. Cooper, Tokio, ers, and Bible-readers (native), 8. Mrs. Blanchet, Tokio. Mrs. Tyng, Osaka. Mrs. Quinby (at home). The Rt. Rev. 0. M. W i l l i a m s , D.D., Missionary Bishop Mrs. McKim, Osaka. Tokio. Mrs. W oodman, Tokio. The Rev. A. R. Morris, Osaka. Miss Florence R. Pitman, Tokio. The Rev. J. Hamilton Quinby, (at home). Miss Belle T. Michie, Osaka. The Rev. William B. Cooper, Tokio. Miss Margaret L. Mead, Osaka. VALUATIONS OF BEAL ESTATE. O s a k a . 1. Dwelling-house, No. 14 Concession ...... $1,559 86 2. School-house for Girls on same l o t ...... 342 91 Lot No. 14, on which they stan d ...... 100 00 3. Dwelling-house and Lot, No. 7 Concession...... 1,400 00 4. Japanese Dwelling-house, No. 1 YorikiSt. (not on Concession) 390 47 $3,793 24 T o k io . 1. Trinity Chapel, at Great B r i d g e ...... $470 00 2. Christ Chapel, at K a n d a ...... 250 00 3 Two lots p u r c h a s e d ...... 1,129 37 1,849 37

Total c o s t ...... * Mexican dollars, 5,642 61

From Japan comes again the cry whose < thority to its precepts. This effort is but frequent iteration may itself be one of the slightly successful, and is destined in no reasons why it is so insufficiently regarded, way to improve upon the dying religions. In the call for more Missionaries, and more ap­ the mean time absolute infidelity is spread­ pliances for work. Yet the call must be re­ ing. The influence of the European advis­ iterated, for the necessity was never more ers of the Japanese Government is generally, urgent. It seems to the Committee that the when not negative, opposed to Christianity. Christian world has made at least two im­ The language of the Bishop’s reportf on this portant mistakes in reference to “ New subject under the heads of “ Education” Japan.” It has, in the first place, accepted and “ Clergy” is earnestly commended to unqualifiedly rose-colored reports which have the consideration of the Church. That and represented Japan as ready and willing all indications show that if Christianity is to to receive the Gospel, and as a conse­ become the religion of Japan it will be, so far quence of this has had expectations of great as man’s exertions are concerned, the result and rapid results from slight exertions. A of a hard-fought battle in which the Church greater and more nearly fatal mistake could shall not have spared to furnish men and hardly be made. Religion is indeed in a munitions of war. state of chaos in Japan, and old supersti­ The second mistake has been the failure tions are losing their power. But the Ene­ to realize the magnitude of the emergency my of souls has in no degree relaxed his en­ in Japan. The present religious chaos can­ ergy. The new Government has endeavored not long endure. A spiritual kingdom will to establish a State religion which resembles be set up. Shall it be C h r i s t ’ s or Satan’s ? the Confucianism of China, but lacks the Shall it not be claimed for C h r i s t ? The prestige of the great sage’s name to give au­ part of this which belongs to this Church

* Last year’s figures. Unofficial information tells of the purchase of three additional lots in Osaka, and of the completion of, at least, one of the new houses at Tokio. —[Sec. t See Appendix B. REPOBT OF THE FOREIGN COMMITTEE.—JAPAN cannot thoroughly be done, by station­ infidels. We can hardly expect to find our in g only a few heralds in two cities of that future Clergy to any extent among their great Empire. To thirty-five millions of graduates. But most of their chief oppo­ nents will undoubtedly be found there. To people the message must be declared and ex­ meet, and to be compared with these well- plained. There is no reason to doubt that equipped men shall we send men half equip­ full success will attend all exertions put forth ped ? Against men armed with the most in the L o r d ’s cause. His arm is not shortened approved modern weapons, shall we send that it cannot save in Japan as elsewhere. men who will be frightened by the first dis­ His blessing upon the work is assured. But charge of guns which they know nothing upon the Church’s part the emergency calls about ? In our own country the Clergy are for men and for money, and for both of able to hold their own against any opponents who may be sent out to meet them. Where these now. Emergencies are opportunities will the victory be when all the learning and to the wise only. dialectical skill are on the side of the oppo­ Let us beware, lest when this has passed nents of the Church ? With God, in the we have to lament that we have trifled with end, of course; but that does not absolve us this opportunity, for we, as well as Japan, from the duty of making ready for the fight will be the losers. with all available weapons. In one word, For use by the Missionaries at present in we must have a College! We cannot more than half do our work without it. For our the field, money is especially needed, duty is not merely to enlist soldiers, but to as the Church is already informed, for a arm them; not merely to build the city, but to Boys’ School-house, a Girls’ School-house, fortify it as well. The expense of maintain­ and an additional dwelling-house at Tokio, ing a College, although great when com­ and for additional ground for a Girls’ pared with that of a school of lower grade, School, and for building and furnishing a is still not really great. We do not need a Hospital at Osaka. The aggregate amount University. We do not need to turn out specialists in any department of science ex­ needed for these purposes is f 15,000. The cept Theology, and perhaps Medicine. A Woman’s Auxiliary of the Diocese of New part of the work, an increasingly larger part York is undertaking to raise the greater as time goes on, can be done by Japanese. part of the money needed for the Hospital, Another part Clerical Missionaries can do, and a lady in Massachusetts hopes to do the provided, of course, our force is sufficient. same for the Girls’ School at Tokio. It is An hour of daily contact with Japanese col­ hoped that specific gifts may be made to pro­ lege students would be a help rather than a hindrance to the spiritual work of most of vide for each of the other objects indicated. us. For the rest, four foreign professors The Committee desire to call attention to would be ample to do all that is necessary the resolution of the Conference of Mission­ in carrying our students through a course aries held in Tokio that “ it is necessary to equal to the literary course in the Tokio the thorough carrying out of Mission work in University. Surely it ought not to be a dif­ Japan that a well-equipped College, with, if ficult matter to get the $12,000 or $15,000 a possible, four foreign professors in addition year that would be necessary to support these and pay the general expenses of such to the Clerical Missionaries, should be estab­ an institution.” lished as speedily as possible.” Bishop In a letter accompanying the above paper, Williams’ endorsement of this resolution is Mr. Tyng says that it was the general opin­ expressed in his report. This action of the ion among the members of the Conference that Conference was taken after hearing and dis­ it would be unwise to attempt to carry out cussing a paper by the Rev. T. S. Tyng of Osa­ a project like this by a general appeal to the ka, entitled “ Mission Schools and their Re­ Church at large, since contributions of hun­ lation to Mission W ork.” After discussing dreds or even single thousands of dollars in the value of the lower grades of schools as any number in which they are likely to be Missionary agencies, Mr. Tyng asks: received, will be either inadequate to the “ Is it enough if we prepare our boys and young men simply to enter the Government purpose, or else operate to cripple other colleges, and then, if they are to study for the work which depends, and must depend,upon Ministry, transfer them directly, without these offerings. He adds: further preparation, to the theological ‘ ‘ The appeal must be made to those who are school ? Surely not. We know what is the able to give largely, and for sums somewhere tendency in these higher Government schools; near in amount to those which are given tu that they turn out few Christians and many Colleges at home. To strengthen such an 522 REPORT OF THE FOREIGN GÙMMlTTËE.—HAITI. appeal we have every argument which can better than to consecrate it to His glory and ordinarily be urged in favor of endowing the good of the Japanese people in this way. Colleges in America, with many besides.” For particular information of the work The Committee lay this project before the of the Mission during the past year, refer­ Church, which has indorsed with such general ence is made to the Bishop’s report appended approval the College for the Chinese at hereto ;* to that of M r. Blanchet, to be pub­ Shanghai, hoping that some of those to lished in the October number of T h e S p i r i t whom G od has intrusted wealth may pon­ o p M is s io n s , and for statistics to the table der upon the question whether they can do which here follows : STATISTICS JAPAN MISSION.

B a p t i s m s .

d22 ©

oa) ® 3-3 JAPAN MISSION. '4-i*<£ a) Occ o3 « m. ® S 3 & if ® i £ o 5 . fc S A

Osaka (and out stations) 765 Tokio (and out stations). 14 26 275 12

Total...... 18 1468 300 27 79 22 $435 44

HAITI. S ta ff.— Bishop, 1 ; Presbyters, 10 ; Dea­ The Rev. St. Denis Bauduy, Port-au-Prince. cons, 8 ; Candidates for Holy Orders, 2; The Rev. Pierre E. Jones, Jérémie. The Rev. Charles E. Benedict, Aux Cayes. Postulants. 2; Lay-readers and Catechists, The Rev. Louis Duplessis Ledan, Torbeck. 20; Day-school Teachers, 18; Sunday-school The Rev. Alexander Battiste, Port-au-Prince. Teachers, 26. The Rev. C. O. Myrthil, Gros Mome. The following Clergymen of the Church The Rev. F. J. Brown, Acul. in Haiti receive stipends out of the appro­ The Rev. H. Michel, Trianon. priation of the Board of Managers : The Rev. Sadrach Kerr, Cape Haytien. The Rev. Jean J. Constant, Buteau. T h e Rt. Rev. J a m e s T h e o d o r e H o l l y , D.D., Port-au- The Rev. Theodore F. Holly, Port-au-Prince. Prince.

ESTIMATED VALUE OF PROPERTY. The Bishop reports that there are eight church buildings, and two others in the course of construction ; and gives the total value of the real estate belonging to the Church in Haiti, as $14,350, of which $6,000 is located in Port-au-Prince.

To the very full report of the Bishop of work as a Medical Missionary will be an Haiti but little need be added.f unchallenged passport to the confidence and It will be seen that important additions affection of the people among whom he have been made to the Clerical staff. Dr. has recently taken up his residence. Medi­ Love’s brilliant speech before the General cal Missions have now become an important Convention, in October last, has made him department in two, at least, of the great known to many who will follow his career Mission fields of this Church, and there with much interest. It is hoped that his seems no reason why they may not be made so in Haiti. * See Appendix B. t See Appendix E. REPORT OF THE FOREIGN COMMITTEE.—MEXICO.

Particulars about the Normal Industrial list will show the character of some of the School, spoken of in the report of Bishop principal problems, with the practical solu­ Holly, are given in letters from him pub­ tion of which the Church in Haiti is occu­ lished in the January, April and September pied. numbers of The Sp i r i t of M issions for 1881. While aid to this branch of the Church is The establishment of this school on an effi­ still necesssary, assurance is given that the cient basis seems well assured. people are exerting themselves in acquiring In T h e S p i r i t o f M issions for April,1881, church property, building chapels, and was published a list of the topics discussed carrying on schools, so that the Church’s at a Missionary Conference held at Jcrimie, help is given to those who are industriously on the 10th of January. A perusal of this helping themselves.

STATISTICS HAÏTIEN CHURCH.

B a p t i s m s . 0) : ^ . j cg .25 ! •--3.2 S®l .a |.a Ö.2 ö 0 e h a ït ie n c h u r c h . w a 0) ! ■gœ: U E© e ß a ¡a !» Port-au-Prince, Holy Trinity, English Service...... 270 300 B 91 28 French “ ...... 150! 268 00 Leogane, Good Shepherd...... 230 ; 260| 81 68 Gros Mome (Gonaives), Resurrection. 521 127! 63 48 Jérémie, St. Luke’s ...... 156] 92 75 00 Aux Cay es, Holy Saviour...... 156! 70 215 00 Torbeck (Cayes), St. Paul’s...... i 1 5 2 j 40 237 00 Cape Haytien, St. John’s...... I 1 156 50 150 00 Petit Fond, Holy Saviour...... j 1 52 29 Trianon, St. Andrew’s...... 3 52 43 4 50 “ Circuit of the N. and N. W .” ...... 1 “ Circuit of the Grand Anse ” ...... 3 208 115 *s6*ôô Total...... 21 1384 1276 39 356 4 29 247 . 261 $1,205 92

*Some of these may be adults, the distinction is not m ade—[S e c . + There are 9 Sunday-schools, 10 Day-schools, and 1 Boarding-school.

MEXICO. S taff.—Bishop, 1; Bishop-elect, 1; other The Rev. J. Ruiz, Mexico. Mr. A. E. Mackintosh, Business Agent, Mexico. Presbyters, 12; Theological Students, 20; Mr. J. Ramirez, Lay-reader, Mexico. Lay-readers, 12; Teachers in Orphanage, Mr. R. Betancourt, Lay-reader, Diocese of the Valley. 5; Professors in Seminary, 5; other Teach­ Mr. J. Linares, Lay-reader, Xochitenco. Mr. E. Lopez, Lay-reader, Amecameca. ers and Workers Reported, 32. We give Mr. J. Flores, Lay-reader, San Pedro Martir. the names of the more prominent workers: Mr. H. Lozada, Lay-reader, Tetelco. Mr. J. Alvarez, Lay-reader, Amecameca. The Rt. Rev. H e n r y C h a u n c e y R i l e y , D.D., B is h o p Mr. A. Carrion, Lay-reader, Nopala. of the Valley of M exico, Mexico. Mr. I. Bustamante, Lay-reader, Nopala. The Rev. P r u d e n c i o G. H e r n a n d e z , Bishop-elect of Mr. M. Bejarano, Lay-reader. Cuernavaca. Mr. F. Puerto, Lay-reader, Atzala. The Rev. Tomas Valdespino, M. A., Mexico. Mr. A. Prieto, Lay-reader, Xochitenco. The Rev. I. Maruri, Mexico. Mrs. Herman Hooker, Girls’ Orphanage, Mexico. The Rev. J. L. Perez, Mexico. Miss Anna Grut, Girls’ Orphanage, Mexico. The Rev. Pioquinto Orihuila, Joquecingo. Miss Clench, Girls’ Orphanage, Mexico. The Rev. Luis Canal, Mexico. Mrs. Ramirez, “ Sister,” Mexico. The Rev. T. Ramirez Arellano, Xochitenco. Mr. J. Trujillo, Teacher, Cathedral Boys’ School, The Rev. Jacinto Hernandez, Cuernavaca. Mexico. The Rev. Joaquin Hernandez, Cuernavaca. Mr. Ponce de Leon, Cathedral Boys’ School, Mexico. The Rev. Carlos E. Butler, Divinity School, Mexico. Mrs. De Leon, Cathedral Boys’ School, Mexico. The Rev. Prof. T. Medina, Divinity School, Mexico. Miss De Leon, Cathedral Boys’ School, Mexico. The Rev. J. Gonzalez, Divinity School, Mexico. Mr. F. Villegas, Teacher, Puebla. 524 REPORT OF THE FOREIGN COMMITTEE.—MEXICO.

Mr. J. De Corral, Teacher, Acapulco. Mr. A. Vega, Teacher. Mexico. Mr. F. Candanosa, Teacher, St. Joseph’s School, Mrs. Martinez, Teacher, Mexico. Mexico. Miss Alcantara, Teacher, Orphanage, Mexico. Mr. J. Marroqui, Teacher, Mexico. Miss Roldan, Teacher, Orphanage, Mexico. Mr. F. Priego, Teacher, Mexico. Miss Ruiz, Teacher, Orphanage, Mexico. Mr. L. Prieto, Teacher, Mexico. Miss Candanoza, Teacher, Mexico. Mr. M. Perez, Teacher, Mexico. Miss Pinto, Teacher, Mexico.

The speech upon the Mexican Branch of Missionary work in interior places is re­ the Church made by Bishop Lee, of Dela­ ceiving an impetus from the extension of ware, before the General Convention, in railway communication, connecting distant October last, was published by the Board of points with the capital. The different edu­ Managers in pamphlet form, and sent cational institutions are prosperous. throughout the Church. In T h e Sp i r i t of Yery many inquiries are made of the offi­ M issions also, very full extracts have been cers of the Foreign Committee, with respect given from letters and papers relating to this to the inner workings of the Mexican Church, work. the Servicès in common use, etc., etc. It Attention is particularly called to the re­ should never be forgotten that these ques­ port, published in the January number, of a tions, which touch upon the matter of diplo­ Special Committee of the House of Bishops, matic relations between two independent on the relations, historical and present, of the Churches, pertain to the Commission of the Protestant Episcopal Church in the United House of Bishops, and in no sense to this States to the Mexican Branch of the Catho­ Committee or to the Board of Managers. The lic Church ; to important letters from Mrs. relations of the Domestic and Foreign Mis­ Abbott Brown in the May, and from the Rev. sionary Society, represented by its execu­ Abbott Brown in the June number; to ex­ tive organizations, are altogether those of tracts from a pamphlet entitled “ Church demand and supply—the giving of material Work in Mexico, by an Independent Wit­ aid by the stronger to the weaker body. ness,” in the September number, and to the Nevertheless, your Committee have given to letter of the Rev. C. E. Butler in the October the Board and to the Church at large, from number. The pamphlet above referred to, time to time, all the general information which gives the most valuable testimony to about the work that has come to them the work of “ pure religion and undefiled,” directly or indirectly. They have very often now being carried on by the Mexican Church, regretted that it was not more copious and and a paper by the Rev. Abbott Brown, circumstantial. containing an account of his recent visit to In the appendix * will be found the report, Mexico, where he inspected every part of in behalf of the whole Church, of the Rev. the work, entitled “ Some Account of Prudencio G. Hernandez, Bishop-elect of the Church in Mexico,” are published by Cuernavaca. the League in Aid of the Mexican Branch of The statistics which here follow, and are the Church. The League has also pub­ fuller than ever before, were furnished by lished several numbers of a paper, The him. Touching them, he writes : S avoy, in the interests of the same work. ‘ ‘The statistics of our Church have not been An interesting incident showing the con­ regularly formed, and it is very necessary to do so, in order to find out her real position fidence given by those in high places to this which may enable us to efficaciously pro­ movement, was the Confirmation in the An­ vide for all her necessities. The data which glican Chapel in the city of Mexico, on the I have been able to gather these last two 19th of June, by Bishop Riley, of three months have served me to draw up this members of the family of Mr. Morgan, the report, which is not as extensive as I could American Minister. desire.”

* See Appendix F. REPORT OF THE FOREIGN COMMITTEE.

STATISTICS MEXICAN CHURCH.

B a p t i s m s .

CHURCH IN MEXICO.

E.S: — >

Ul O

Diocese of the City of Mexico___ 03 125 70 162 192 62,000 00 Diocese of the Valley of Mexico. 139 139 Diocese of Cuernavaca...... 16 97 97 Mission in Puebla...... Mission in Nopala...... - ! 5

Total...... 52 3301 ... *323 ...... '+64|$12S!------¡38 35! 300 162 428] $2,000 00

* Some of these may be adults, and some foreigners, no distinction appears.—[S e c . t At least three of these were foreigners—[S e c . % It will be observed that the number of Communicants is only furnished from the City of Mexico. It is regretted exceedingly that the whole number can not be shown.—[S e c . § There are 1 Theological Seminary, 4 Boarding-schools, 1 Girls’ Orphanage, 11 Day-schools (Boys, 9; Girls, 2), and 10 Sunday-schools.

CONCLUSION. I t will have been manifest to the Fewer than usual of the workers have friends of Foreign Missions who have been taken away by death. No im­ read this Keport, that the Committee portant Station has been given up, nor had ample reason for declaring at the is any likely to be, while, at the newer outset that in the review of the year posts— notably at Cape Mount— there they found occasion at once for re­ is very commendable activity and the joicing and for solicitude. prospects are hopeful. If it be considered that the year now The want of reenforcements, it will closed has not been in some of the Mis­ have been remarked, is more urgent at sions one of rapid progress, it has been Shanghai, just now, than elsewhere. one, nevertheless, free from great mis­ Heretofore the Committee have been fortunes. Humanly speaking, any lack saying this of Wuchang, but, by the of progress that may be discovered is time this Report is published, that Sta­ to be attributed to the financial straits tion will be more fully manned than it in which the Committee have found has been in a long time. themselves during the past eight years, There is no lack of faith or thought which prevented, particularly in the of failure in the language with which earlier of those years, the proper rein­ Bishop Williams and his devoted co­ forcement of the several staffs ; but the laborers in Japan implore the Church debt is a thing of the past, and if the to come to the help of the L o r d contributions of the Church continue against the mighty. to increase as they have done latterly, Since Bishop Riley’s return to Mexico those who come after will not have the work there has progressed rapidly, this explanation to make. so that the authorities of the Mexican 526 REPORT OF TEE FOREIGN COMMITTEE.

Church, have been sorely troubled to in her capacity as the great Missionary know how to take care of the increase Society, has since seen and recognized with the means at command. It is but the results. justice to conclude that the devotion In a word, putting aside any solici­ and self-sacrifice of the consecrated tude, there is to your Committee, and leader has had much to do with the im­ to the whole Church, much reason for petus of the work. thankfulness, every reason for faith At home, the General Convention and hope, a louder call than ever be­ spared no less than four days of its fore for the re-consecration of all they valuable time to the Meetings of the are and all they have to the greatest of Board of Missions, of which its own all works—that of proclaiming the G-os- members composed the greater part— pel of Salvation in all the world for the Meetings characterized beyond any held purpose of bringing men to their previously by engrossing interest, unity S a v io u e . of action, inception of great plans, and By order and in behalf of the For­ recognition of the practical needs of eign Committee, this Church and this age. This is as Joshua Kimber, Secretary. true of the Convention, as such, as of Mission Rooms, 23 & 25 Bible House, thq Board of Missions ; and the Church, September 1st, 1881.

1880-83. The Rt. Rev. H. POTTER, D.D., LL.D., Chairman. Rev. John Cotton Smith, D.D., Mr. F. S. Winston, H. Dyer, D.D., “ Lemuel Coffin, Charles H. Hall, D.D., “ Charles R. Marvin, E. A. Hoffman, D.D., “ Cornelius Vanderbilt, ‘ J. H. Eccleston, D.D., “ James M. Brown, ‘ W . Tatloek, D.D., ‘ ‘ R. Fulton Cutting, “ Joshua Kimber. “ Howard Potter, “ C. M. Conyngham, “ Jos. W. Fuller.

Rev. Joshua K im b e r , Secretary, 23 Bible House, New York. Jambs M. B row n, Treasurer, 23 Bible House, New York.

Boxes and Parcels for Foreign Missions. U3T Boxks and parcels of books, clothing, and materials of all kinds, may be forwarded to the Rev. Joshtja Kimber, Sec­ retary 23 Bible House, New York. Notice of shipment should in all cases be sent by letter to the Secretary as above, s ta tin g contents and value o f each package. This information is absolutely necessary for use at the Custom House. Rates of Postage to our Mission Fields. GREECE.—Letters, each half ounce or fraction thereof...... 5 cts. CHINA.—v S K r o . " [Steamers leave Sain Francisco every 25 days.] Letters, each ¿¿if ounce or fraction thereof 5 cts. ^ S k ^ ^ tot^ ^ h 'tw ó ounces "or fraction thereof...... 2 cts. JAPAN-—Via San Francisco. [Steamers leave San Francisco every 26 days.] Letters, each half ounce or fraction thereof 5 cts. B oS^w ^t^each'tw o ounces or fraction thereof...... 2 cts. HAITI —Steamers [Fortnightly], Postage 5 cents. Newspapers and Books free through the Mission Booms. MEXICO.—[By steamers weekly.] Letters...... 5cts. Papers, one cent for each two ounces or fraction thereof, and m addition one cent for each paper. LIBERIA.—Via Southampton [thence weekly]. Letters, each half ounce or fraction thereof...... 5 cts. Newspapers, each...... 2 cts. THE FOREGOING RATES APPLY TO ANY POST-OFFICE IN THE UNITED STATES. j j j } T0 m ake sure o f the proper address on letters fo r A frica [as steamers touch only at certain points on the coasfl, it will ha best to attach the proper amount of Stamps, and enclose the letter in a separate envelope to the Secretary of the Foreign Committee Protestant Episcopal Church, 23 Bible House, New York. MI8SIÓNAK.Y BOX ASSOCIATION.—Our Missionary Boxes are issued, free of cost, to destination, singly [by mail], or In lare-er auantities, as required, packed in Cartoons of ten each [by Express]. Returns are to be made Semi-annually, at Christmas and Easter. Remittances to be addressed to J a m k s M. B row n , Treas­ ure r of the Foreign Committee, Protestant Episcopal Church, 23 Bible House, New York. [A p p e n d i x t o F o r e i g n C o m m i t t e e 's R e p o r t —A.] The Committee fob Foreign Missions in aeeount with James M. Brown, Treasurer.

1880. 1881. S e x is t . Treasury overdrawn...... $24,938 91 Sept. 1st. By Cash received since-Sept. 1st, 1880 on account of— Mission to Greece...... $73 75 Sept. 1st. To Cash paid out since Sept. 1st, 1880, on account of— “ Africa ...... 7,998 03 Mission to Greece ...... 8,800 00 “ China...... 14,681 08 “ Africa...... 14,717 44 “ Japan...... 10,275 79 “ China...... 48,043 42 Haitien Church...... 709 70 “ Japan ...... 24,814 44 Mexican Church...... 16,959 91 Haitien Church...... 6,02148 General Fund...... 107,227 88 Mexican C hurch...... 27,761 96 $157,990 fci ------124,168 69 Mexican Church, toward paying off loan to Bishop Interest on Loan to Bishop Riley 569 87 Riley...... 2,000 00 Interest account...... 2,714 67 Mexican Church, towards paying interest on loan Investment account 64 75 ^ Bishop Riley...... 60 00 Legacy Expenses...... 188 23 8,050 00 8,527 52 Specials for Greece...... $275 00 Specials for Greece...... $275 00 Africa...... $3,020 02 Africa ...... $2,938 56 “ Bishop Auer Memorial Fund, “ Bishop Auer Memorial Interest...... 807 88 Fund and interest, for “ Bassa Church Building Fund investment...... 5,675 76 Interest...... 858 29 ------8,614 82 4,686 19 “ China...... 1.837 53 China ...... 2,559 00 “ for Building purposes. 9,740 00 For Building Purposes. 9,740 00 11,577 53 12,299 00 “ St. John’s College, China. Perma­ St. John's College, China, nent Fund, for investment 1,816 87 Permanent Fund, for Investment 1,369 00 “ Japan...... 261 80 Japan...... 868 08 “ Haitien Church...... 422 07 Haitien Church...... 494 61 “ Mexican Church...... 428 06 Mexican Church ...... 458 06 “ for Build­ “ “ For Building ing purposes:...... 2,885 00 Purposes...... 2,835 00 8,883 06 ------3,288 06 “ Foreign Missionaries Fund (a)...... 936 62 Foreign Missionaries’ Fund (a)...... 7.r>4 10 Jane Bohlen “ Book Fund 320 22 Jane Uohlen “ Book Fund ’ 807 A4 Other Speciais (of which for investment, $95.74). 1,962 91 Other Specials...... 2,016 17 28,950 40 25,788 05 Publications...... 1,610 44 Balance at debit, carried to new account ...... 7,506 76 Less amount, defrayed by the “ Stated Publications ” ...... 1,000 00 ------010 44 Woman’s Department (i>)...... 834 7K Salaries...... 6,750 00 Board of Managers (c)...... 329 34 Missionary Box Association (d)...... 147 45 Rent of Mission Rooms...... '...... 1,071 50 Travelling Expenses...... 302 96 Office Expenses (ej...... 1,232 43 Systematic Offering Plan...... 857 71 library of the Foreign Committee...... 58 92 11,695 53 $193,265 05 $193,265 05 1881. Sept. 1st. Treasury Overdrawn. Represented by balance of Bishop Riley’s note due Jan. 1st, 1883, secured JAMES M. BROWN, by lien on Mexican Church property, say...... $7,750 00 Treasurer for Foreign Missions of the Less cash on hand for general purposes...... 243 24 Domestic and Foreign Missionary Society of the Prot­ 7,506 70 estant Episcopal Church in the U. S. A. The undersigned Auditing Committee have examined the account of the Treasurer of the Foreign Missions, and believe the same to be correct as expressed in the above statement. £. R. MARVIN I Auditing Committee. New York, September 1st, 1881. F- s - WINSTON, | The Treasurer has in his charge, Bishop Bedell and Mrs. Benjamin’s special deposit with him of sav: nm no Three Brooklyn City water Loan donas...... • • - • XX One Central Railroad of New Jersey Consolidated Mortgage Bond 1,000 00 $4,000 00

(a) Contributed by the Woman’s Auxiliary for Insurance on the lives of married Missionaries. (b) Salary of the Secretary, printing, postage, and stationery ; Foreign Committee’s proportion, (cj Printing Reports, postage on same, etc., etc.: Foreign Committee’s proportion. la) Cost o f “ Family Missionary Boxes,” and their distribution. (e) Including furniture for office, freight, insurance, postage, stationery, etc., etc. [A p p e n d i x t o F o r e i g n C o m m i t t e e ’ s R e p o r t —B,]

THE FOURTEENTH ANNUAL REPORT OF THE MISSIONARY

BISHOP OF YEDO,

For the year ending June 30th, 1880.

R epo r t s are not easy to write, and gener­ place over a month, till within a short time ally they are not the most pleasant reading; before the the close of the school. but they must be written, for we wish to One of the students has been regularly tell each year of the progress and needs of the twice a month to Gyotoku, a town ten miles Church’s Missions, and the members of the off, to hold Services on Friday evening, and Church cannot desire less to learn how they remained all day Saturday to instruct those can intelligently aid the Missions by their who were interested. At this place a Phy­ prayers and by their gifts. sician, baptized several years previously by CHANGES IN THE MISSION STAFF. Mr. Cooper, lived, and allowed the Services During the past year the Rev. W. B. to be held in his house. He became very Cooper, after an absence of two years, came earnest, and intending to give up his profes­ back to Japan, and the Rev. J. H. Quinby sion, joined the Theological School, and returned home— which left the Tokio Sta­ prepared himself to become a Catechist— tion in numbers the same. This Station hoping that he might eventually be able to has been strengthened by the arrival of the enter the Ministry. But God called him to Rev. E. R. Woodman, and Mr. J. McD. the higher service. After a short illness in Gardiner, the Principal of the Boys’ Board­ the spring he entered into rest, but almost ing-school. to the last, he hoped that he might live, and The Osaka Station has been reinforced by be prepared to preach the Gospel to his own Miss Belle T. Michie and Miss Margaret L. people. Mead, who have already entered on their Two chapels were opened in Yokohama duties in connection with the Girls’ School. by Mr. Cooper, but he found it a hard field Miss Eddy, after seven years of most faith­ to work, and did not meet with much en­ ful, self-denying labor in the Girls’ School, couragement. As Mr. Cooper has moved to has retired from the Mission. Her uniform Tokio, the rented chapel has been given up, kindness, and unselfish devotion to her work but he hopes to keep up the services in the have won the affection and esteem of her pu­ building purchased by the Mission. Both pils and many Japanese friends, and she in Osaka and Tokio, cottage lectures have will be long held in grateful remembrance been held, once or twice a week, in private by those she has left behind. houses when informal services and simple NEW PLACES OCCUPIED. expositions of the Scriptures or lectures have Since the last report work has been begun been given by the Catechists. at several new points. Soon after the Theo­ HOSPITAL. logical School closed last session, two of the The number of patients seen by Dr. Lan- students were sent about 30 miles up the ing, at the Dispensary during the past year, river to see what openings for work could has been about one-fourtli more than the be found. They visited Koga, Tatebayashi, year previous. This growing confidence in and several other towns, and determined to his skill, on the part of the Japanese, seems spend most of the time at Tatebayashi, as to show the necessity of building the Hos­ one of them formerly lived there, and the pital as soon as possible. The Church women people seemed desirous of being taught. of New York have nobly pledged the money, They remained over a month, and during the and there can be no doubt of the fulfil­ past session one of them has visited the ment of their pledge, but if some to whom 5 2 8 REPORT OF THE MISSIONARY BISHOP OF YEBO.

God has given wealth would advance the poisoning the minds of the youth of Japan, money, or better, give it, we could begin to prejudicing them against Christianity, and build at once. The lot has been secured, sapping the foundations of the little restrain­ but the sick, who might be soon relieved, ing moral influence, which Buddhism exerts. must wait a long time, for the building can The largest and most popular private school not be begun till the money is in hand. in Tokio, while professedly indifferent to all MISSION CONFERENCE. religions, and having contempt alike for all. At the beginning of July, a Conference of is in reality antagonistic to Christianity, our Missionaries was held in Tokio. The teaches Spencer’s philosophy as the highest notice of this would properly come in next Gospel, and holds up Mill, Buckle, Huxley year’s report, but it is thought advisable to and Tyndal as the great Apostles of the new embody in this one the opinion of the Con­ faith. ference on several important subjects. The University has for some years past JURISDICTION IN JAPAN. been removing the professors who exerted The Conference was unanimous in the an influence in favor of Christianity, and opinion that our Mission should continue to filling their places with those who were en­ occupy Osaka, where we were first in the tirely indifferent, or in some cases active field, and where we have always had a opposers of religion. Young Japanese, edu­ stronger force than the English Mission, and cated in England or America, are now tak­ a resolution was passed that “ whereas the ing the places of the foreign professors, Bishop of Yedo has long actually resided and it is a sad fact that there is not one and had jurisdiction in Japan . . . and among them who is favorably inclined to whereas also the Mission of the Protestant Christianity, while several are open and Episcopal Church of the United States of avowed enemies. America is now in actual operation, with Under such circumstances, it will not do Clerical and Lay Missionaries, and various for the Church to withhold her helping appliances in both the cities of Osaka and hand nor be tardy in building up schools in T ok io: Resolved, that in the opinion of this Osaka and Tokio, where as good an educa­ Conference it is not desirable that the Bishop tion—if not better—can be gotten, as in of Yedo should renounce jurisdiction over such schools as have been described. To either of the two cities mentioned, nor over this end we must have for the school in the intervening country.” This is only an Osaka, a well-qualified teacher at once, and expression of opinion on the part of the we shall need another teacher for the school Missionaries in the field; of course it is in Tokio if it succeeds well. understood that the settlement of the ques­ A majority of the members of the Con­ tion is in the hands of the authorities of the ference, feeling that the young men, who Churches at home. may have finished their course in our EDUCATION. schools would be exposed to great danger The need of a Boys’ school of high grade, in the University, passed a resolution that in which youths might be brought under it is necessary to the thorough carrying out Christian influences, and, should they become of Mission work in Japan that a well Christians, be prepared to enter on a course equipped College with, if possible, four of theological study to fit them for Catechists foreign professors, in addition to the Cleri­ and Ministers of the Gospel, has been cal Missionaries, should be established a? felt from the beginning of the Mission, and speedily as possible. the establishment of such schools has always This may seem too large an undertaking, been kept in view as a matter of primary and not likely to be carried into effect, but importance. Both at Osaka and Tokio there are many in our Church abundantly schools have been started and we have able to give the money, and there are some good hope that they will be brought up to in the Mission here, who have faith enough a high degree of efficiency, and become suc­ to believe that there are those in the Church cessful under their present management. whose hearts are large enough to give the It is absolutely necessary that the Church money to found a Christian College in should enter with earnestness and heart on this land just waking up to a sense of the the work of education in this country, to life and activity of the 19th century, and counteract the infidel influences which are eager to adopt the learning of Western na­ REPORT OF THE MISSIONARY BISHOP 01 YEDO. 5 2 9 tions, but unable to distinguish between any time. Others must be sent to get ready what is true and what is false. to take their places— for it must be borne in CLERGY. mind that it takes two or three years of Our need of Teachers for educational work thorough honest hard work, to fit one to be is great, but our need of Clergy is much able to preach. more pressing to enable us to carry on Most earnestly, therefore, do I beg for the efficiently the more direct Missionary work love of Christ, for the love of these immor­ of preaching the Gospel. The field is white tal souls, hurrying down to death without a to the harvest, but the laborers are all too knowledge of Christ Jesus, their Saviour, few. In this one city there are 1,219,499 and the blessed hope He brings to the weary people, and our Church has, at present, but and heavy laden, that three clergymen—of one Bishop, two Presbyters, and one Deacon good abilities, good common sense, and well to minister to this immense multitude. In educated, but above all sound in the Faith, of all Japan we have only a Bishop, five Presby­ deep piety, holy, earnest self-sacrificing, ters and one Deacon to preach the Ever­ ready to spend and be spent for Christ and lasting Gospel to a nation of thirty-five the souls He came to save— be sent out this millions of people, and of this small number year to help on the great work in Japan. of Clergy, two Presbyters and the Deacon How many hundreds are there in our be­ have not been in the country long enough loved Church, who know and love the to preach. One man now is worth to us as blessed Saviouk, who cannot come to Japan much as fiv e men will be ten years hence— to labor for Christ— whom God has richly now is the critical* period in the history of blessed and made stewards of His bounty— this country. who could easily undertake to send one in A few years will decide what Japan is to their place. This has been done in several become religiously. She cannot remain cases already, and I pray God to put it into Buddhist. The Buddhist Priests, alarmed at the hearts of others of His servants to follow the activity and energy of Christians, are their example, and send Missionaries using unwonted efforts—by lectures, preach­ as their representatives to lead these poor, ing, newspapers and schools—to retain the blind, wretched, wandering heathen to people in the old faith, but the days of Bud­ Christ their Saviour. dhism are numbered, and Japan must become One thousand dollars can be secured to Christian or nothing. The question to be increase our clerical force here, if nine decided is, what sort of Christianity shall others can be found to give a like sum each, she have ? Rome and Geneva are putting and then before the year has passed, the forth their strength to possess the land, while much needed help can be in the field. our pare and Apostolic Church—though the One request more. Brethren pray for us— first on the field—is now lagging behind, that the rich blessings of God may rest on and letting others preoccupy the country. the Mission— that health, wisdom and grace If I could gain the ear of the Church I may be abundantly given to the Missionaries should ask that ten Clergymen be sent to — that numbers may be gathered into the Japan this year, but knowing that this re­ fold of Christ—that the Christians may let quest would not be granted, I only ask that their light shine and walk worthy of their tfoo Clergymen for Tokio and one for Osaka high calling, and that men full of faith and be sent out immediately. the H oly Ghost may be raised up here to The workers now in the field will not last preach the Gospel of Christ to their own forever—in fact there are not wanting evi­ people. Respectfully submitted, dences that the health of several is such C. M. W il l ia m s , that they may be compelled to return at Missionary Bishop o f Yedo. [A p p e n d i x t o F o r e i g n C o m m i t t e e ’ s R e p o r t —C.]

FROM THE MISSIONARY BISHOP OF CAPE PALMAS AND PARTS ADJACENT. No formal report has been received from tions of the Protestant Episcopal Church Bishop Penick; but as the following let­ therein. Thus, thanks be to G od , after ter (sent for publication in T he Sp i r i t o p long years and bitter strugglings of misun­ M issions and The Churchman) is in so many derstanding, He has again given us the particulars suitable, it is thought well to in­ unity of brethren, causing our hearts to re­ sert it here. joice with the blessings thereof, and to sing C a p e M t . M issio n , August 10th, 1881. with David, “ Behold how good and pleas­ D e a r B r e t h r e n in C h r is t : By G od' s ant it is for brethren to dwell together in blessing I am permitted to stand once more unity.” on Africa’s soil and to send forth this my 2. It is well to state here that there should fourth Pastoral Letter. To His holy Name be a constant looking forward to and get­ be ascribed all praise and honor for the vic­ ting ready for the setting apart and inde­ tories of the past, and to His strength alone pendence of the Protestant Episcopal Church do we look for all success that must crown as now known within this Jurisdiction of the future. Cape Palmas and parts adjacent, i. e., to say Though but one short year has sped by within the bounds of Liberia, and contigu­ since an account of our work was taken, ous or sympathetic heathen tribes. The yet great have been the changes thereof. time is surely coming when the Missionary For while no fast-driving cars or flashing of the mother Church will move on with the telegrams hurry men forward with furious advance guard and plant the standard of the speed here, yet the strides of time as even Cross in regions beyond—to preach where and rapid, the flight of opportunities as Ch r is t as yet has not been named. fearful, the dropping of life’s sands as quick, For forty-five years now the Story of the and our speed to the great account as rapid Cross has been told and lived with greater as amid the full blaze of civilization’s daz­ or less power along this coast and through zling glory. The destiny of man moves on these parts. The seed has certainly been under the hand of God with an even flight, sown and watered with the tears and blood and he who cannot by all his searchings add of good men and women. A generation one cubit to his stature can no more hold has been raised up, taught to read, in whose the rivers of time back now than in the be­ hands an open Bible has been placed. It ginning. I therefore find on my return to remains now for the L o rd of the harvest to this “ dark continent,” where external na­ see and pronounce upon the seed sown, and ture holds her sway with such monstrous for the sower to pass on with the W ord of severity, such changes in our little commu­ Life. My work, therefore, among you will nity as would start the inhabitant of ever- probably partake more of preparation for changing civilization. self-sustaining and propagating life than of 1. We thank G od for the reconciliationimmediate Church extension. My feelings and full understanding of the parties that are more those of St. Paul when he went to were for a time separated from us. The pay his last visit and to deliver his instruc­ brethren in Messurado County, by comply­ tion for the future guidance of the Ephesian ing with the recommendations of the House Elders ‘ ‘ whom G od had made overseers of of Bishops, are now brought into full and the flock,” than when he entered that city canonical communication with us, and stand to. plant the Church of Ch r is t there. in the same ecclesiastical relations to this Not that I know of any near or set time Jurisdiction as any other of the congrega­ for the independence of the Church here FROM THE BISHOP OF CAPE PALMAS. 5 3 1

planted, but because I am so deeply con­ resources. Oh, do remember that the king­ vinced the future of this work and Church dom of God is not in outward show, but in must depend far more on the temper, tone, inward life, and those congregations which prayers, patience, sufferings and works of may have more should be careful not to dis­ Christians already here, than on any new courage the hearts of those who have less. enterprise a Missionary may now start. For Remembering our Lord and Master, who, the accomplishing of God’s work, the though He were rich, yet for our sakes be­ strengthening and perpetuating of His came poor. Let us teach by life as well as Church, I would recommend the increasing word that God is a Spirit, and they that and strengthening of the ties of brotherly worship Him in spirit and in truth alone are love and Christian communion between the the true children of the kingdom, and that Liberian and the native Christians. This is the widow with her two mites can do this as a matter of vital importance. “ There is grandly as Solomon in all the glorious mag­ neither Jew nor Greek, bond nor free, but nificence of his temple. all are one in Christ Jesus. The union of 4. The condition of the Mission is in Christian hearts is the only power that can some respects encouraging. At Cape Mount form a front that can and will advance into God is bringing good out of evil. The and across this vast sin desolated land, con­ wars which have so scourged and wasted quering and to conquer, until the kingdoms this portion of the country have reduced the of this world are become the kingdom of natives to great suffering, but caused them our God and His Christ, and the wilder­ to see and realize the care we take of their ness shall blossom as the rose.” children—not only supplying them with The principles of Jesus Christ rising up food, but actually saving many from being and knitting human hearts into one form captured and carried into slavery by the the only safeguard to this or any other gov­ marauders; this has caused them to trust us ernment, and can move it forward with in­ the more freely with their children, and domitable purpose and invincible power to especially the little girls. So now we can possess the land for God. secure as many as we can teach, and we, as If there is ever to be a great nation formed well as the heathen, are realizing that to here, it must be formed around the Cross, teach Christianity trials, perplexities, wants, built on the foundation of the Apostles and sorrows, and sufferings form just as good Prophets, Jesus Christ Himself being the text-books as A B C cards do. It is a blessed . chief Corner-stone. No people can now be thing to realize that no combination of cir­ great without Jesus, and it is not so much cumstances can prevent the true servant of emigration across the sea that divides Jesus from reflecting the life of his Master America from Africa, as emigration across before men; and that life must ever be the the sea that divides the sinner from Christ light of men. So if we are called from the which is needed. It is not humanity that more quiet order of the pulpit and school­ Africa needs, but Christianity. Not the room to battle with the uncertain horrors man of flesh and blood, but the man of the and sufferings of war, we can as really tes­ spirit, of wisdom, of power, truth, and right. tify of Jesus there as in ease. The Cross Africa can furnish humanity enough for shows Jesus as gloriously as the Mount of Christendom to work on for centuries to Transfiguration or the Last Supper. come. Let the little band of Christians But beyond this the Spirit of God appears that is here bend all its might to increase its to have blessed the work of the Missiona­ numbers, rolling forward as the stone which ries. Some of the scholars, with some of Daniel saw in his vision, ever increasing, the adult natives, have professed Jesus, and and crushing every obstacle until, it became some' of the Americo-Liberians have also a great mountain, and filled the earth. cast in their lots with us. The Church may 8. Next I would call attention to the im­ be said to have been planted here at Cape portance of gauging all expenses of salaries, Mount, so that at the northern as well as at buildings, etc., according to the ability of the southern end of the republic we may be the people to meet them. No Church can said to have planted the Protestant Episco­ ever be a positive aggressive power so long pal Church. May the favor of God rest on as it is itself a beggar, and a beggar it must it and make it a great glory to His Name. ever be until its expenses come within its 5. There is also a hopeful prospect of 532 FROM THE BISHOP OF CAPE PALMAS. strengthening the work at the centres, Mon­ temperance. While the Churches of England rovia and Grand Bassa. From these two and America are bestirring themselves as points we look for much from the colonist never before, should we be quiet in this Christians; one being the political, the battle ? To-day we know that this demon other the commercial centre of Liberia, it is of drink threatens our work on every side, but reasonable to look to them for the and lays his foul hand on the most sacred strongest elements of help the republic can and cherished hopes—social, political, com­ afford. mercial, and religious. Let God’s Ministers I would earnestly recommend to the set forth in God’s Name what our holy re­ brethren laboring at these points to pray ligion requires of men, and require of their and look out for fresh laborers to come for­ Church members to walk worthy of the ward and take up the standard when the old same. standard-bearers fall. Since beginning to write this Pastoral I 6. The work at the southern end of the find that four out of seven of the white Mis­ Jurisdiction is as favorable as the limited sionaries * in this Jurisdiction will return to amount of laborers would warrant. It is America for their health this year. Thus is but reasonable to expect a certain falling brought oui in bold relief the necessity for away when the headquarters of the Mission, the African element within the Church here with all the personal attention accompany­ to exert itself to the uttermost to assume the ing them, have been removed. Yet I have work. It is simply impossible, with the reasons to believe that there is real growth limited number of white laborers obtainable and steady progress toward independent and the irregularities sickness causes in Church life. their movements and work, to keep every­ 7. At Sinoe there are some few faithful thing systematically moving forward. White strugglers who are steadily working for­ men must grow fewer and fewer in propor­ ward. These faithful souls have my ardent tion to the workers from among their negro sympathy and admiration. As weak as brethren, until the whole shall be turned their efforts may seem to some, they are in over to the people whose home is here. the true way on toward independence first, 9. In conclusion, let us unite our minds and aggressive work next. I have looked ( and hearts more than ever, and pray, with­ on this place with more interest than some out ceasing or wavering, for God’s blessing others, because of their being the first under to rest upon all that has been done, and to my administration to assume the support of guide on in every step of the future, to the their own Clergyman, and building of their joy of our hearts, the encouraging of His own church with so little help. May God’s Church, and the glorifying of His holy blessing guide them on more and m ore! Name. 8. There is another matter that calls for Your Bishop and brother in Jesus, the gravest consideration, the most prompt C. Clifton P enick. action, and fervent prayers of God’s people * The Rev. Mess. Fair and Grubb and their wives.— here, of whatever name or creed—it is in ­ [Sec. [A p p e n d i x t o F o r e i g n C o m m i t t e e ’ s R e p o r t —D.]

ANNUAL REPORT OF THE MISSIONARY BISHOP OF SHANGHAI,

For the year ending June 30«A, 1881.

WUCHANG, July 6th, 1381. Chapel where there is daily preaching by a To the R ev. J. K imber, Native Catechist, and recently Mr. Sayres Secretary, etc., etc., has been several times weekly to preach. I lay before the Committee through you HANKOW. my report for this year. The work is going on as usual at Hankow. •w u c h a n g . During the past year the son of the Deacon, Upon visiting this Station last August I Mr. Yang, one of our Candidates who has saw the necessity of having a married family studied at St. John’s, has been associated residing here, and I returned to Shanghai with his father in the daily preaching and with the feeling that as there was no one in the work connected with St. Paul’s else that I could well detach from the work Chapel there. The Boys’ Day-school there at Shanghai, my probable course of duty is a large one, consisting of sixty pupils who would lead me to remove my family here attend Service daily at the chapel. There for temporary residence until some other are also a number of Catechumens. Mr. provision could be made. Another reason Sayres conducts Divine Service every Sun­ that influenced my decision to remove here day and administers at set times the Holy was that a sum of three thousand dollars Communion. having been contributed by the liberality of COUNTRY STATIONS. a member of St. Peter’s Church, German­ As I have written you in previous letters, town, Pa., to build a church in Wuchang, we have opened some country stations it seemed best— especially as I could secure where work has been begun. no architect—that I should be on the spot myself to superintend the building of the, THE JANE BOHLEN BCHOOL. church. The Jane Bohlen School, owing to unto­ ward circumstances, has diminished its CHURCH AT WUCHANG. I accordingly left Shanghai with my numbers, and at one time I thought of family early in November last, and soon closing it, but I have decided not to do so. after my arrival here the contract for build­ I am in hopes that under Miss Roberts’s care ing the church was drawn up. The ground the prospects may improve and the number was broken in December and the work has of pupils be increased. been progressing—although slowly— ever BISHOP BOONE MEMORIAL SCHOOL. since. The building is still unfinished, but The Bishop Boone Memorial School con­ I am in hopes that two or three months tinues its usual routine, and from time to more will see it completed. The church time the most promising among the elder when finished will hold over three hundred boys are selected and sent down to St. people. I will not now enter into particu­ John’s College to pursue their studies as lars as I hope to forward a full description theological students. of the plan, dimensions, etc., with a draw­ THE MEDICAL WORK. ing or photograph when the church is done. The medical work here is now under the CHURCH SERVICES AND PREACHING. ' care o f Dr. Deas, whom we had the pleasure In the mean time our daily and Sunday of welcoming to this field last March. Upon Services are continued as usual in the little his arrival we at once proceeded to put the chapel already on the premises, the Sunday Men’s Hospital in order, and although I am Services being conducted by myself. There not at all satisfied, nor is Dr. Deas, with the are daily Services at the Fu Kai Street situation, accommodations, etc., neverthe­ 534 REPORT OF THE BISHOP OF SHANGHAI. less it must serve the purpose for the present. and I had looked forward to his accom­ During last summer the ground for the plishing much in this as in other depart­ Woman’s Hospital (Elizabeth. Bunn Me­ ments of Missionary work. Mr. Bates’ de­ morial) had been purchased in the im­ parture threw an additional burden upon mediate vicinity of this “ compound,” and Messrs. Boone and Yen, and while I re­ I am only waiting for the completion of the gretted to see them thus overtaxed, there church when, with the assistance o f Dr. seemed to be no help for it. Deas, I propose to draw up a plan and be­ ENGLISH CLASS. gin the buildings at once. In order to make the College better known TRAINED NURSE FOR WOMAN’S HOSPITAL. among the native mercantile class, I thought The Woman’s Auxiliary has most kindly it would be well to have English taught. To undertaken to furnish a trained nurse for teach this branch the services of Mr. Koeh Ah this Hospital, and I trust that we may have Szi were secured. He was a student at Ken­ the pleasure of welcoming one here before yon, and was later a Candidate for Orders, very long. from which he withdrew. There are now For fuller particulars in connection with 22 paying pupils in this class. They attend the schools and the medical work, I refer the daily Services, and we trust that the in­ you to the respective reports of Miss Roberts, fluences brought to bear upon them may, Mr. Sayres, and Dr. Deas. with God’s blessing, lead some among them PROSPECTS OF WUCHANG STATION. at least to receive and acknowledge the I have now been residing at this station truths of our Christian religion. nearly nine months and I feel obliged to theological cla ss. state that I have met with many disappoint­ The Theological Department of the Col­ ments and discouragements in connection lege began the year with twelve students, with the work here. This station has never five o f whom were graduated at the Chinese been—owing to the lack of Missionaries— New Year, and have begun work as Cate- properly manned and organized, and the chists in preparation for Ordination should work shows it. This discouraging experi­ they prove to be the right kind of men. ence has not been limited to ourselves: there These, with the two in Wuchang, make are other Missionaries here who have met seven engaged in active Missionary work. with the same want of success and owing We expect to make selections from the to the same causes. On the other hand it schools in our Mission o f promising youths is but fair to state that with able men to to take the places thus left vacant in the sustain this station, we may have as good Theological Class. hopes of making an impression here, in the DORMITORY NEEDED. fixture, as in other parts of China. Since we have added the English class wc SHANGHAI— MEDICAL WORK. find the sleeping accommodations are not St. John's College. Last September we sufficient, and another dormitory is very had the pleasure of welcoming Dr. Boone to much needed. I should be very grateful to this field, and shortly after his arrival a Medi­ any friend of the College who should fur­ cal Department was begun in connection with nish means to do this. the College. A dispensary has also been APPOINTMENT OF MR. BUTTLES. built at the entrance of the premises at St. m r . Tho m so n ’s s e r v ic e s . John’s, so that the natives about can re­ I am truly glad to hear of the appoint­ ceive medical aid as well as listen to the ment of Mr. Buttles, and trust that our best preaching of the Gospel, several times a hopes may be realized in regard to his use­ week. Dr. Boone has also begun a medical fulness in the College. In closing these class in connection with which he gives lect­ remarks upon the College, I desire to ures in chemistry and natural science. record my special appreciation of Mi. DEPARTURE! OF MR. AND MRS. BATES. Thomson’s services in connection with it. The saddest event in the record of the In addition to his lectures to the Theo­ past year at St. John’s College has been the logical class he has also rendered valuable departure of Mr. and Mrs. Bates from this assistance in the general management and field, necessitated by the failure of Mr. superintendence of the College. Bates’ health. Mr. Bates had always shown ST. MARY’S HALL. a remarkable aptitude for literary work, In February last the Emma Jones School REPORT OF THE BISHOP OF SHANGHAI. 5 3 5

was removed to St. John’s, occupying tem­ different Missionary subjects, and reports porarily a portion of the house left vacant made upon the progress of the work. These by our departure to W uchang; the Rev. W. J. meetings, thus far, have proved a source of Boone and family occupying the rest of the mutual encouragement to those engaged in house. In the mean time the building for the work, and useful and profitable in every the proposed united schools was in the pro­ way. cess of erection, and being completed about ST. LUKE’S HOSPITAL, HONG KEW. the middle of June, the Emma Jones and The Hospital in Hong Kew, now known as the Bridgman Memorial schools were trans­ St. Luke’s, has been removed to a commo­ ferred to their new quarters. This building dious building excellently adapted to the is remarkably well adapted to the purpose, end in view, and is now the property of the being the best and the most complete of its Mission. Dr. Boone is in charge of it, and kind that we have yet had in our Mission. for all details in connection with this w ork, It is to be known as St. Mary’s Hall. I refer you to his report. The money for erecting it was partly ob­ KONG WAN. tained from the English community, for The Rev. Hong Neok W oo is as usual taking the charge o f the English Church at occupied in carrying on his faithful work at Shanghai, by Messrs. Boone and Bates for Kong Wan. He has also the superintend­ some months during the absence of the ence of San Ting Kur where the Rev. Zu English Chaplain, the Rev. C. Butcher, D.D., Soong Yen is stationed, Ta Zang, and two and partly from other disposable funds smaller Stations, which have been recently which were on hand. Mr. Boone, as established, and where a few Baptisms have Treasurer, will give you, I suppose, a full taken place. statement of these particulars. ENGLISH WORK AMONG THE FOREIGN COM­ WING ADDED. MUNITY IN CONNECTION WITH THE A wing has been added to one of the new CHURCH OF OUR SAVIOUR AT houses for the accommodation of Dr. Boone, HONG KEW. so that we now have besides the Bishop’s A few words in reference to the English House (so called) and wing, four residences services and pastoral work among the for­ and room for several unmarried Missionaries. eign population of the Church of our Sav­ This has been accomplished at a moderate iour at Hong Kew. Since Dr. Nelson’s expenditure. withdrawal Mr. Boone has had charge of st. jo h n ’s ottt- s t a t io n s . the Sunday Morning Service here; the Even­ The out-stations at present connected ing Service, at which there had been a very with St. John’s are three in number; they small attendance, having been given up. have only been established recently. Dea­ To attend to the work properly, the pas­ con Chun liiis charge of the principal one, toral visiting, etc., would require the whole that at Nan Ziang. These are all under time o f any one man, which the Mission the superintendence of the Rev. Yung Kiung can but ill afford to spare, the more so when Yen. our force in the field is never sufficient to WORK IN HONG KEW. carry on satisfactorily the especial work of Hong Kew. The Church of our Saviour the Mission itself. has been repaired, and the work proceeds REINFORCEMENTS FOR SHANGHAI AND WU­ as usual under the faithful care of the Rev. CHANG. Kong Chai Wong, who has under his charge We are terribly disappointed that there a large number of day-schools and out-sta- seems to be no speedy prospect of any tions. The preaching on week days, and Clerical reinforcements for Shanghai. Of the Sunday Services are kept up, and the course I appreciate the efforts that have attendance is satisfactory. W e have rented been made to secure men, but I am at the house next door to the church to be my wits end to know what to do. Two used as church-rooms, and this arrange­ Missionaries have already left and one is ment we find very convenient. shortly to leave, and there is no prospect, CONVOCATION. apparently, of any one coming to take their I have instituted a Convocation of all our places. What shall we do ? I trust, at least, Missionaries and Catechists to meet once in that the prospective reinforcement, accord­ two months, when essays are read upon ing to the letters received by the last mail, 5 3 6 REPORT OF TEE BISHOP OF SHANGHAI. for Shanghai and "Wuchang, will not fail different Catechisms in use in our Mission, us. I sincerely hope that the lady of -whom i. e. : 1. Catechism on the Creed; 2. Ten you wrote, whose appointment at that time Commandments; 3. L o r d 's Prayer; 4. Sac­ had only to be confirmed by the Board, raments. will arrive in Shanghai in the Autumn.* I have also been occupied, as far as m y We shall have especial need of a Mission­ other engagements would allow, in transla­ ary lady for St. Mary’s Hall, as Miss W ong ting the different works mentioned in my is expecting to leave us shortly. She is to report last year. be married to a Mr. Laisun, a member of a BUILDING OPERATIONS, AND LOSS OF TIME well-known native Christian family in ATTENDANT THEREON. Shanghai, of whom you have heard, as Mr. A considerable portion of my time has and Mrs. Laisun, Sr. have been in America, been taken up with superintending building as well as the members of their family. It operations, and these have been a source of is hardly necessary for me to say that when constant interruption, attended with much I proposed Miss W ong’s regular appoint­ annoyance and vexation. Although I am ment, this marriage was not anticipated. no architect, I have been called upon to be It is the renewal of an old engagement architect-in chief of the Mission, and apart which had been entirely given up, as we from the fret and worry, I have greatly re­ supposed, some years since, but which has gretted the attendant loss of time, which I now been renewed at the earnest solicita­ cannot but feel might have been employed tion of the future husband of Miss Wong. not only in more congenial work, but also Miss W ong has been very faithful and effi­ in that for which I am better qualified. cient as a Missionary, and it will not be PROGRESS OF THE WORK. easy to supply her place. You will observe the progress of the work MY ESPECIAL WORK, SERVICES AND PREACH­ for the past year as exhibited in the enclosed ING. synopsis, is far from indicating an eminent During the past year I have held six Con­ degree of success in this field; but in what­ firmations at the different places in connec­ ever light the past history of our Mission tion with the Shanghai Station, having con­ may be regarded, the Church need not be firmed in all fifty-six (56) individuals. I discouraged as to the future. The field have not mentioned in my previous reports, has never been more promising than now, but I may as well do so now, that I have the opportunities for successful work never been conducting services and preaching in greater. Chinese every Sunday wherever I may hap­ VIGOROUS ACTION NEEDED ON THE PART OF pen to have been, either in Shanghai or W u­ THE CHURCH. chang. As I have mentioned before, on This Church ought to take more vigorous Sunday I take now the two Services at the hold on the work than she has done in the latter place, while Mr. Sayres goes over to past, and to emulate other Christian bodies Hankow and conducts the Services there. who keep up large and steady supplies of TRANSLATIONS MADE. their ablest and best men in their respective I have furnished the translation of the fields of operation. whole Prayer Book and Psalter in the easy I bring this somewhat lengthy report to literary style, and these are now in use at a close, with the earnest hope and prayer all our Stations wherever services are held. that such men may be raised up to do the I have also gotten out, in the same style, the M a s t e r ’ s work in this vast and important field. Respectfully submitted, * The reference is to Miss Stevens, who left New York in August.—[Sec. S. I. J. SCHERESCHEWBKY. [A p p e n d i x t o F o r e i g n C o m m i t t e e ’ s R e p o r t —E.]

ANNUAL REPORT OF THE BISHOP OF HAITI,

For the year ending June 30th, 1881.

DEATH OF A MISSIONARY CLERGYMAN. us by this temporal loss, has given us in re­ Sin c e my last annual report death, has turn an abundant consolation. In the midst again invaded our clerical band of laborers, of judgment He has remembered mercy. and carried to his last earthly repose the Hence during the Missionary year now Rev. Jacob W illobé, the Missionary Deacon closed, four ordained laborers have been who had been in charge of the Station at added to our band of workers in this field. Petit Fond. His death took place on the The Rev. Léon Pons, transfered to this jur­ 25th of last January. He died as a coura­ isdiction from the Diocese of New York, geous soldier of the Cross, at his post, and in has taken charge of St. Luke’s Church at the triumph of faith. His meek, Christian Jérémie, and the Rev. J. Robert Love, M. D., life, his earnest Gospel labors, and his hap­ transfered in like manner from the Dio­ py death in the full assurance of a joyful cese of Western New York, has entered resurrection, furnish another o f the many il­ upon the charge of the English congrega­ lustrations of the fruits of early piety, im­ tion at Holy Trinity Church, Port-au-Prince. bibed under the paternal roof, where the The Rev. Sadrach Kerr, made Deacon and practice of household religion prevails, and advanced to the Priesthood, has charge of children grow up surrounded by the atmos­ St. John’s Church, recently organized at phere of a living Gospel faith. The father Cape Haitien, and the Rev. Theodore Faus- of our deceased Deacon was a pious man who tin Holly has also been admitted to Deacon’s emigrated to this country in 1820; o f ster­ Orders to aid the Rev. Dr. Love in his labors ling Protestant convictions, and although he in the English congregation, and at the married a Roman Catholic woman, a native same time to conduct the worship of the of the country, and removed into a country* French congregation of the Holy Comforter district where he alone held such a faith, on the Bel-air in this city. Thus the four yet unlike too many others, who deny or dis­ Clerical laborers whose deaths we have had grace their Gospel profession under such to deplore since 1879, have been fully re­ circumstances, he remained a true, faithful placed by others whom G o d , in His mercy,has and unwavering disciple of C h r is t ; and not been pleased to send down to us from abroad, only reared up his children in the way that or to raise up among us from those already they should go by household instruction, in the field. but also made his house a centre of public ANOTHER AFFLICTION IMMINENT. worship to which his neighbors were invited, And yet our joy and thankfulness at this some of whom were thereby brought to consolation in G o d ’ s merciful dealings with the confession of the true faith. To the us is not without a note of sadness, which devoted labors of this solitary man, who now comes to us. A letter just received gained his livelihood in the mean time by from the Rev. F. J. Brown, the Deacon in shoemaking and cultivating the soil, we owe charge of the Station at Acul, near Gros- under G od the establishment of the Mission Morne, informs us that the Rev. C. O. Myr- at Petit Fond, which his faithful son, whose thil is now lying dangerously sick, with loss we now mourn, presided over until the but slight hope of recovery, and the prayers day of his death. of our whole Church at the Throne of Grace, ACCESSION TO OUR CLERICAL STAFF. for his restoration to health, if it be G o d ’s We are, however, thankful to say that will, are earnestly desired. We respond Divine Providence, W ho has thus afflicted to this request with all our heart, through­ 538 REPORT OF TEE BISHOP OF HAITI

out all our Missionary borders ; for if this At Trianon, St. Andrew’s School, taught by earnest and devoted brother should be taken Mr. Daniel Michel, is doing a very useful away from us, we would indeed be' greatly and important work among the children of bereaved. that rural district. At the Capital there are EPISCOPAL VISITATIONS. four infant schools, taught by female mem­ During the Missionary period which we bers of Holy Trinity Church, in different are now considering, I have made four visi­ sections of the city, of which the Bishop is tations to different parts of this jurisdic­ visitor and patron. tion ; two in the north and two in the south. Abroad, I am thankful to say, a work of In the north, Gonaïves, the Cape, and Borgne education in the interest of the Church in were visited. Haiti is pursued by the kind aid and sym­ At Borgne a chapel was dedicated and Con­ pathy of friends of our struggling cause. firmation was administered. The accession Mr. F. H. Mercier, a native of Antigua, of the Rev. Mr. Kerr, and the organization and Candidate for Holy Orders, transferred of St. John’s Church were the results of my to this jurisdiction with the highest recom­ visit to the Cape. mendations from the Archdeacon of Anti­ In the south, Jérémie, Cayes and Torbeck gua and the Bishop of Barbadoes, occupies were visited. A Missionary conference was the Theological Scholarship at Codrington held at Jérémie ; a chapel dedicated at College, generously sustained for the Church La Passe, two miles from that city, and of Haiti by the joint concurrence of the Confirmation administered, and another S. P.G. and the S. P. C. K. One of the Haï­ rural chapel nine miles from Jérémie was tien students who has been pursuing his ceded to us, that had been used for Ro­ classical studies at Harrison College, Barba­ man Catholic worship, of which I took does, under the patronage of the Bishop of formal possession on the 11th of January, that island, is now at home waiting to suc­ and held at that time and place a Mission­ ceed Mr. Mercier in the Theological scholar­ ary meeting that was largely attended by ship at the close of his studies at the end of the country people of the surrounding dis­ 1882. The other Haitien student who was trict. At Cayes I held a Missionary Con­ also at Harrison College, has now gone to ference, and administered Confirmation. At England with the Bishop demissionary of Torbeck I dedicated a neat chapel that had that island, under his kind patronage, to just been completed and paid for by the continue his studies at an English College. earnest labors of the Rev. Mr. Ledan, Mis­ Two of the young girls who were at school sionary in charge of that Station. The Rev. in the United States returned home last Mr. Pons, who had just reached this field, fall. The third still pursues her studies, accompanied me in my visitation of Cayes being employed in the mean time as a pupil- and Torbeck, and took an active part in the teacher. various religious exercises. This work going on at home and abroad EDUCATION. in the interest of the educational department The work of education in connection with of the Church, necessitates the immediate es­ our Mission operations is still prosecuted at tablishment o f an institution at the Capital, home with untiring pertinacity, under many which shall be able to gather up into one difficulties, privations, and pecuniary embar­ focus all these scattered efforts, systematize rassment. At Cayes the Rev. Mr. Benedict the same, utilize the capacities of the stu­ devotes all his spare energies to keep up St. dents, thus being prepared at home and Augustine’s School. At Jérémie the School abroad, and make itself felt as an import­ of St. Matthew, for boys, maintained by the ant factor in the community where our lot exertions of the Rev. Mr. Jones, has recently is cast, in working for the moral regenera­ been united with St. Luke’s School for tion, industrial progress, and intellectual Girls, founded by Ex-Judge Villaire, Lay- development of the people among whom we reader of that parish, and the Rev. labor. Mr. Pons has been associated with them in The Normal Industrial School which is the direction of the j oi nt schools. Mrs. Pons, projected, and for which we have received who is expected soon to join her husband at aid and encouragement from the Church in Jérémie, is also to give her co-operation to the United States, is designed to respond to the work of education in the girls’ school. these wants. As has been previously re­ REPORT OF THE BISHOP OF HAITI. 5 3 9 ported we are about acquiring farm-land EXTRACTS PROM THE REPORTS OP LOCAL within four miles of Port-au-Prince, where MISSIONARIES. this school is to be established. There has I cannot do better, to make the view of been a delay in executing the title deeds of the state of the work in this field more com­ transfer to us, owing to legal formalities to plete, than to quote short observations from be fulfilled in the interest of heirs who are the annual reports made to me by my vari­ still in their minority. The final order of ous Missionary co-operators, charged with the court has just been obtained, and the the ministry of the Gospel in different local­ legal transfer is to be made to us in the lat­ ities of this Republic. The Rev. Mr. Jones ter part of the present month. speaking of a rural school recently founded To make a beginning of our work in this at Basse-Guinaudé, near Jérémie says: establishment, we shall need the immediate “ This school is sustained by contributions and generous aid of American Churchmen collected in the city of Jéremié, and conse­ to provide rude edifices for its installation, quently has no assured stability, because and agricultural implements for manual people become very soon fatigued in man­ occupation. We indulge the hope that by ifesting this sort of sympathy. Ten dollars such aid we shall be able to make a small per month suffice, for the moment, to main­ commencement at the beginning of 1882, tain this work. Mr. Romeo, Jr. who directs the school is our Lay-reader at Ducêhne, when the school year commences in Haiti. and he conducts thither the scholars to at­ tend public worship. He is a worthy young WORK AMONG THE ENGLISH-SPEAKING POPU­ man who might be inscribed among our LATION. Candidates for .Holy Orders. Ah! if we Port-au-Prince, Cayes, Jérémie and Cape could only do something to help him on, I Haitien are the centres where we have de­ assure you that he would gain for the holy voted a part of our Missionary activity in cause a great many of the benighted souls caring for the spiritual well-being of our scattered throughout the woods of Basse- Guinaudé ; for he exerts a very great influ­ English-speaking population. In my last ence over them. The responsibility that report I had to deplore grave disorders that rests upon me is great. I cannot do now as had interrupted the work among this class I did formerly ; my receipts are not so much. of people at the Capital ; I am now happy to But I do not complain.” say that by the arrival of the Rev. Dr. Love The Rev. Mr. Benedict says : among us, the work has been undertaken “ We have encountered many obstacles, with more auspicious prospects. The D oc­ but the way begins to open before us, thanks tor is an undefatigable worker, and to the L ord. We need a church edifice and spares not himself in putting forth all his a good organ for public worship. ” energies among this class of people in his The Rev. Mr. Brown, writing for the Rev. double capacity of pastor and physician. It Mr. Myrthil, the sick pastor in charge of the is with great satisfaction that I add here the word at Gros-Morne, says : fact that the Rev. Mr. Kerr is prosecuting “ In default of a proper edifice for the in a no less energetic manner a similar work celebration of public worship, the work for among the English-speaking residents of several months past has suffered much. We Cape Haitien, while at the same time he is have great need of help to push on to comple­ pushing forward the standard of the Church tion the church building now commenced. among the native population, whose respect This is an absolute necessity. It will only be after this work is completed that we and esteem he has acquired by fourteen will be able to organize our Services in an years, residence among them. effective manner.” This devoted laborer is subjected to great After saying that he and the Rev.Mr. Myr­ privations in his labors of love, having to thil have devoted the whole of the small support his wife and children by his own stipends allowed them by the Board of Man­ industry, as professor in two government agers, so far this year, to aid in the con­ schools, on a very small allowance, while he struction of the church he adds: preaches the Gospel. It is painful to me “ At present it is not possible to collect n°t to have the means placed at my disposal contributions from our members for this to give him an adequate encouragement, by purpose, for in consequence of the hard aiding him to provide better for the neces­ times the resources of our families are re­ sities of his family. duced to the last cent.” 5 4 0 REPORT OF TEE BISEOP OF HAITI.

The Rev. Mr. Ledan says : “ I must now inform you that my class of “ It is only at this moment that we seek to candidates for Confirmation is encouraging. establish preaching stations in different sec­ I meet them every Thursday afternoon to ex­ tions of the parish seeing that hitherto the plain to them the Creed and the Articles of construction of the chapel has occupied all Religion in which they are much interested. our time and energies. Not yet having I have an interesting example in an old man, the means of lighting the chapel we cannot an American, who has been in this country bold Services at night, which would be very for nearly fifty years—never baptized—and advantageous to the cause. We are also now feels it his duty and privilege to join greatly in need of a large Bible for the Ser­ the Church. Led by an impulse of the vices of the Church.” Spirit he desires Confirmation. The class is now ten in number. I commenced giving The Rev. Mr. Michel says : instruction a month ago.” “ I have the satisfaction to announce to The Rev. Mr. Battiste writes: you that the work of God goes on marvel­ lously. I have had the opportunity of preach­ ‘ ‘ A member of our station at Petit-Harpon ing the Gospel almost from one end of this has offered to give a house and lot to the Arrondissment to the other.” Mission. The house needs to be altered to serve as a chapel at that Station. The chapel He mentions a station where on a certain at Bigon6 was to have been ready for con­ occasion one hundred and twenty-one per­ secration in January last, but circumstances sons assembled and heard him gladly. He ¡have delayed its completion. A drought, adds: accompanied by high winds near the end of last year, destroyed nearly all the produc­ ‘ ‘ The congregation at Petit-Fond keeps tions of the farms, so that almost a famine up still its interest in the^ good cause. I exists among the inhabitants. The fall in visit it often. The chapel that I engaged to price of coffee, their principal article of ex­ build at that station is nearly completed. port, has also contributed to reduce them to Two of our brethren there, Moïse and the last degree of poverty. These things Charleston, are to be specially commended have delayed the completion of our chapel. for the active efforts they are making to Our wants are numerous; particularly do complete it. I am soon to begin some re­ we need books, and other furnishings for pairs on the chapel at Trianon. ” our schools, and the means to give a small The Rev. Mr. Pons writes : pittance to our teachers in the Parish ‘ ‘ All goes well here, thanks be to God. Schools to encourage them in their labors of Unity reigns among our brethren. The work love. The parents of the children, from the Of the Rev. Mr. Jones continues to extend causes above mentioned, can give little or every day, and I doubt not that wre shall nothing for the support of these schools.” have the happiness to have you soon among The Rev. Dr. Love in concluding his re­ us, for we hope to present you some neo­ port says : phytes for Confirmation.” “ I have no general observations to make He names some six persons added or beyond the simple statement that my four about to be added to the Church and re­ months’ labor has evinced the fact that my marks: services are well accepted and appreciated “ They assist regularly at our Services, by those to whom I am sent.” at both stations in this city. The General The Rev. T. Faustin Holly of the Mission Commanding the Arrondissment with the of the Holy Comforter on the Bel-air in this officers of his staff attend the Services at city reports: the station in the upper part of the city.” “ This Mission wai formerly occupied by The Rev. Mr. Jones is charged with this the late Rev. C. J. Bistoury. After being latter station, while the Rev. Mr. Pons abandoned for a while, Divine Service was occupies St. Luke’s Church in the lower part recommenced a year ago in a house which of Jérémie. one of the members kindly put at our dis­ The Rev. Mr. Kerr writes to me under posal. Two Services are held on Sunday, and a weekly Friday evening Service will date of June 8th, 1881, informing me of his be shortly commenced. The average attend­ straitened circumstances in consequence ance may be placed at twelve persons. The of not receiving his salary for the past three pressing need is a small chapel in that months as professor of the government Ly­ quarter of the city into which all the other ceum at the Cape, and concludes with the dispersed members may be gathered.” following more hopeful view in regard to The venerable Rev. Mr. Bauduy, through the spiritual outlook of his work. pressed down by the weight of nearly eighty REPORT OF THE BISHOP OF H A llI. 5 4 1 yeaTs, aids me in the French Services of Holy work in Haiti may I be permitted to ask Trinity Church, Port-au-Prince, and over­ again, for the workers in this Mission field, looks the Mission Station at Bellevue, in the a renewed interest in the prayers of our fel- neighboring mountain o f La Coupe. He re­ low-churchman abroad, that G od may sus­ ports that the attendants at that Mission do tain us by His Grace amidst the spiritual not show a satisfactory appreciation of the perils and temporal difficulties that beset us, spiritual opportunities offered to them, and so that we may be fully equipped for the ac­ that he can only wait and pray that God in complishment of every good word and work, His own good time will awaken them to a to the honor and praise of His Holy Name, sense of duty by a special outpouring of the and to the setting forth the salvation of all Holy Spirit. men coming to the obedience of Faith, as it SUMMARY OF EPISCOPAL ACTS AND PARO­ is in J esus C h r is t our L o r d ! CHIAL REPORTS. Persons Confirmed ...... '...... 39 I beg to refer to the tabulated appendix Admitted to Deacons Orders...... 2 Advanced to Priests Orders ...... 1 Embodied in the Foreign Committee’s] Priests received by letters dimissoo'...... 2 Report] for the details of parochial and Churches consecrated...... 2 Missionary work during the past year. A Chapel opened and licensed...... 1 Clergy : 1 Bishop, 10 Priests, 3 Deacons...... 14 summary of such as come within the imme­ diate range of Episcopal acts, I herewith J ames T heodore H olly. subjoin. In closing this survey of our Port-au-Prince, July 15, 1881. [A p p e n d i x t o F o r e i g n C o m m i t t e e ’ s R e p o r t —F.]

ANNUAL REPORT OF THE BISHOP-ELECT OF CUERNA VAC A IN BEHALF

OF THE MEXICAN CHURCH

M e x ic o , July 25th, 1881. The Statistics which I send * will give you To t h e R e v . J o sh u a K im b e r , a slight idea o f our Christian work in this Se c r e t a r y o f F o r e ig n C o m m it t e e , Republic; you will please to note B o a r d o f M issions o f P r o t e s t a n t that many congregations are sadly in E p is c o p a l C h u r c h . want of Ministers, chapels, schools and R e v e r e n d a n d d e a r Si r : Christian books. To meet these wants wc Since the year 1861, when for the first time require to create a new ministry and to pro­ the idea of “ A Mexican Church ” was vide them with all they need. thought possible, I esteemed it as the most You will find in the list of congregations plausible news I could receive; believing it that some are without Lay-readers, but they to be the announcement of Divine Provi­ are visited by the Ministers who live in their dence for the establishing in this country neighborhood. of a Church which should identify itself I joined the late Presbyter Francisco Agui­ with our civil institutions and with the lar so as to realize the idea of establishing primitive Church in its ecclesiastical organ­ in my native land a Christian Church, which ization, that is to say, that a Catholic Apos­ should be characterized by being a Mexican tolic Mexican Church should be established Church. A complete change has taken place in the course of sixteen years in the in my native land. I thank G od that the grand work, humbly commenced in the year Republic, particularly in this Capital. The 1864, so cruelly persecuted on all sides, has following fact will serve to illustrate gradually triumphed over all its enemies, what I say: About twenty years ago and, in a word, is gaining a glorious victory a Roman Presbyter of the name of Juan in favor of the Christian faith in all its Ruiz attempted to work in favor of a relig­ purity. In the very centre of this Capital, in ious reform, and he was persecuted by his the magnificent Cathedral of the Mexican implacable enemies in consequence to such Church, a faithful and numerous congrega­ an extent that I was obliged to hide him in tion gathers for public worship. More than my house for more than two years, to shield fifty congregations constitute the Com­ him from the hands of the Romanists, who munion of this Church. Four hundred and sought to kill him under any pretext, as they forty children of both sexes are being edu­ were accustomed to do in those years. Now cated in our schools, and several youths are this same Presbyter has joined us, among being educated in our Divinity School for our numerous congregation in our Cathedral, the Ministry. The Holy Bible has been cir­ with perfect tranquility and security, which culated far and wide, and it is read by thou­ would have been impossible in other times. sands of persons; our printing-press issues Another change is about to take place in our periodical, LaV erdad, several pamphlets, a few years which will be of great impor­ and our Prayer Books and Hymnals, and is a tance to the City of Mexico. Three railways power to extend the light of the Gospel. will soon unite the Capital with the United There are many brethren and sisters in our States, and it is probable an active commer- Church who work with fervor and Chris­ tian valor to promulgate the Gospel amonji * See caption Meiieo, Foreign Committee’s Report-~ my countrymen [S e c. REPOET OF THE BISHOP-ELECT OF CUERNAVACA. 5 4 3 cial movement -will ensue in consequence. Church does not retrocede, but moves on in The beautiful climate, as well as business spite of all her enemies, making sincere con­ transactions, will attract many visitors. I verts, thus proving that it is the work of God think that in ten years, at the utmost, this and not of man. For all these reasons, for city will have increased very much, and will the love of our Lord Jesus Christ, and for be of great importance in America. the good of so many souls overwhelmed by The Mexican Church works heroically to the darkness of error and idolatry, whom this establish primitive Christianity, which will Church is seeking to convert, I beseech all lead my dear native land to a prosperous Christians who love their God and the spirit­ future in material wealth. Her influence is ual welfare of their souls, that they continue already felt in other countries where the their generous gifts to forward the Chris­ beautiful language of Spain is spoken, and tian work of this Church. among fifty millions of people. In the name of the Church I am much It is indeed marvellous, the development pleased to render my most sincere thanks to which the Church has obtained, notwith­ all our fellow-workers who have helped in standing the immense difficulties it has had this Christian work. to contend with in losing its first founder, Trusting that the most holy blessings of Presbyter Aguilar, and the eloquent preach­ the Triune God may rest upon you and our er, Manuel Aguas, in the most critical mo­ generous co-operators, ments; by continuing an endless struggle I remain, your humble brother, who loves with the Church of Rome, with sectarianism you in the Lord, and indifference: nevertheless, the Mexican P r u d e n c i o G . H e r n a n d e z . 544 REPORT ON PUBLICATIONS.

REPORT ON PUBLICATIONS.

The Secretaries respectfully report that the present number of subscribers to the Spirit of Missions is 5,797, and the number of subscribers to T h e Young Christian Soldier and The Carrier Dote is 54,082, of whicli 26,536 are to the Weekly, and 27,546 to the Monthly edition. They would further report, that, under the new contract entered into by the Board, which took effect about the 1st of January, the following results have been reached: The Spirit of Missions has paid all the expenses of the standard size edition, has covered $2,058.90, paid Messrs. M . H. Mallory & Co., for their interest in claims against subscribers for unpaid subscriptions, and has contri­ buted to the Domestic and Foreign Committees toward their extra pages, Annual Reports, and Miscellaneous Publications $1,000, and has a balance on .hand this day of $469.79. The Young Christian Soldier and the Carrier Dote has paid all its expenses, covered all the arrearages under the former contract for the four months to January 1st, last, amounting to some $400, covered $3,541 paid Messrs. M. H. Mallory & C o., for their interest in claims against subscribers for unpaid subscriptions, has contributed to the Domestic and Foreign Committees towards their Annual Reports and Miscellaneous Publications $1,000, and has on hand, to-day, a balance of $96.40. The Stated Publications, therefore, it will be observed, instead of being a tax upon the Missionary contributions, as in previous years, have not only paid their own way, but have reduced the “ central expenses” of the Board in the amount of $2,000. The collections from the subscribers have aggregated just about the amount due for the year, so that the subscription arrearages have not been increased. The Treasurers’ reports are hereto appended. With great pleasure, the foregoing is submitted by

A T TWTNTJ- ) JOSHUA KIMBER, f Secretaries-

N e w Y o r k , Sept. 1st, 1881. TREASURER'S REPORT. 545

1881. Sept. 1st. By Cash from S u b s c r ip t io n s ,...... $6,059 10 “ Returned by Messrs. M. H. Mallory ifc Co. on account of subscriptions,...... 1,020 47

$7,079 57

CONTRA. 1881. Sept. 1st. To Cash paid Messrs. M. H. Mallory & Co., .... $3,19711 Electrotypes, 28 00 Printing, 2,216 47 Publication Clerk’s S a la r y , ...... 110 ¡>4 “ “ Stationery, ...... 82 “ “ Postage, ...... 8 00 “ Proportion of Joint “ Stated Publications ” Expenses. . 45 96 “ “ Subscription,...... 1 1» “ “ Express, ...... 35 Cash returned s u b s c r i b e r , ...... 1 00 Amount paid Domestic and Foreign Committees, towards extra pages, Annual Reports, and Miscellaneous Publications, $500 e a c h , ...... 1,000 00 Balance to new account, ...... 469 79

$7,079 57

JAMES M. BROWN, Treasurer. Per E. W a l t e r R o b e r t s , Asst. Treas.

THE YOUNG CHRISTIAN SOLDIER AND THE CARRIER DOVE.

1881. Sept. 1st. By Cash received from su bscription s,...... $18,093 56 “ returned by M. H. Mallory & Co., account subscriptions, 8,164 03

$21,257 59

CONTRA. To Cash paid M. H. Mallory & C o . , ...... 9,930 13 “ Printing, ...... 7,810 78 “ ,£ Associate Editors Salary, ..... 800 00 “ " Proportion of joint ‘ ‘ Stated Publications ” Expenses, 204 70 “ “ Domestic and Foreign Committees, toward Annual Reports and Miscellaneous Publications, $500 each, 1,000 00 “ “ Literary C o n tr ib u t o r s ,...... 583 00 “ •' Electrotypes, ...... 344 12 *• “ Publication Clerk’s S a lary, ...... 355 52 “ P o s t a g e , ...... 19 81 “ B in d in g ,...... 17 00 “ “ Subscription Lists, Type, Chases and Plates, 76 89 “ “ Monthly P a c k e t , ...... 4 70 “ Stationery,...... 4 80 “ “ Expressage,...... 4 20 “ “ Mailing, ...... 2 34 “ Returned to subscriber,...... 3 20 Balance to new a c c o u n t, ...... 96 40

$21,257 59 LLOYD W. WELLS, Treasurer. REPORT OF THE STANDING COMMITTEE ON TRUST FUNDS.

The Committee on Trust Funds begs leave to present to the Board of Managers the following report of the Trust Funds of the Domestic and Foreign Missionary Society of the Protestant Episcopal Church in the United States of America, which are in its hands. The Securities are here reported at their par value, unless otherwise stated. September, 1st, 1880, to August 31st, 1881.

FOR DOMESTIC MISSIONS.

Gift of Miss Delancey of Geneva, N. T. The Income only to be used for Domestic Missions.

PRINCIPAL. Invested in First Mortgage Coupon Bonds of Morris & Essex Railroad Company...... $1,500 00

INCOME. Interest, 12 months, paid to Lloyd W. Wells, Treasurer of Domestic Committee...... 105 00

Gift of Dr. Spore, of Troy, N. T.

The Income only to be used for Domestic Missions.

PRINCIPAL. Invested in 30 Shares of Preferred Stock of Erie Railroad...... $3,000 00 The validity of this stock has been questioned. No income has been received.

Legacy of Mrs. Sarah Robinson, of Poughlceepsie, N. Y, The Interest only to be used for Domestic Missions.

PRINCIPAL. Invested in United States 41-2 per cent. ‘Registered Bonds of 1891...... $5,000 00

INCOME. Interest, 12 months, paid to Lloyd W. Wells, Treasurer of Domestic Committee...... 225 00

Gift of J. & S. Ferguson, of Stamford, Conn. (In Memoriam.) “ For a permanent fund of the Domestic Missions.”

PRINCIPAL. Invested in United States 4 per cent. Registered Bonds of 1907...... $1,000 00

INCOME. Interest, 12 months, paid to Lloyd W. Wells, Treasurer of Domestic Committee...... 40 00

Gift of John H Swift, of New York. Income to be used for Home Missions to Colored People. The Securities not to be changed during Donor's life without his consent.

PRINCIPAL. Invested in Stock of Missouri Pacific Railway Company, 9 3-8 Shares...... $937 50 The above stock was received in exchange for $1,260 Stock and Scrip of the St. Louis, Iron Mountain and Southern Railway Company, in accordance with the terms of consolidation between the two companies. This fund is over-invested $7.50.

i n c o m e . Dividends, 12 months, paid to Lloyd W. Wells, Treasurer of Domestic Committee...... $14 06 REPORT ON TRUST FUNDS. 5 4 7

G ift o f Rev. James Saul, D .D ., of Philadelphia. The income to be expended by the Domestic Committee for Missionary purposes. The Principal not to be used during Donor’s life without his consent. After his decease, any balance of principal and income may be “ disposed of by the Society according to their best judgment and discretion, provided that no disposition o f the principal may be made without being considered at two regular meetings of the Board. ”

PRINCIPAL. Invested in United New Jersey Railway & Canal Company stock, 27 Shares...... $2,700 00

INCOME. Dividends, 12 months, paid to Lloyd W. Wells, Treasurer of Domestic Committee...... 870 00

Bishop Whipple Hospital Fund . Legacy of Miss Ellen M. Watkinson, of Hartford, Conn. (Wi'l dated January 10th, 1874.) Interest to be paid to the Bishop of Minnesota for the support of the Bishop Whipple Hospital on the White Earth Reser­ vation, Minnesota; in case the Hospital is not used for Indian inhabitants of the White Earth Reservation, then the interest to be used by the Society for its Missions among Indians in the United States; and if the Society has ceased to maintain such Missions, then the principal to be equally divided between the Domestic and Foreign Committees of said Society, for the support of Missions under their respective supervision. PRINCIPAL. Invested in United States 41-2 per cent. Registered Bonds of 1891...... $3,000 00 “ “ Additional Croton Aqueduct Stock...... 5,000 00 Cash temporarily on deposit with Union Trust Co.(D.t L. & W. R. R. Bonds redeemed)...... 2,000 00 Cash “ “ “ “ “ 211 25

income. $10,211 23 Interest, 12 months, paid to Lloyd W. Wells, Treasurer of Domestic Committee ...... 650 17

Endowment of Indian Missions. PRINCIPAL. Mary E. Hinman Scholarship, in St, Mary’s School, Santee Agency, Nebraska, from Sundry Donations. Invested in United States 4 1-2 per cent. Registered Bonds of 1891...... $1,000 00 Edward S. Clark Scholarship, in St. Paul’s School, Yankton Agency, Dakota, from Mrs. Clark. Invested in United States 4 1-2 per cent. Registered Bonds of 1891...... 1,000 00 George H. Houghton Scholarship, in St. Paul’s School, Yankton Agency, Dakota. Invested in United States 41-2 per cent. Registered Bonds of 1891...... 1,000 00 Cash temporarily on deposit with Union Trust Co...... 37 50

income. $3,037 50 Interest, 12 months, paid to Lloyd W. Wells, Treasurer of Domestic Committee...... 135 66

Fund fo r Benefit of the Missionary Jurisdiction o f Oregon. PRINCIPAL. Received July 19,1881, from and subject to direction of Bishop Morris, of Oregon, through Lloyd W. Wells, Treasurer. 41-2 Shares of Stock Missouri Pacific Railway...... $450 00 No Income has been received.

FOR FOREIGN MISSIONS.

Bohlen Fund. For the Establishment and Sustentation of an interior Station at Bohlen, West Africa. Vide Report of Foreign Committee for 1857, page 567, and for 1858, page 573.

PRINCIPAL. Invested in United States 31-2 per cent. Registered Bonds (U. S. 5 per cent. Bonds extended) $18,000 00 “ 4 per cent. Registered Bonds of 1907...... 2,000 00 “ “ 41-2 per cent. Registered Bonds of 1891...... 250 00 Cash temporarily on deposit with Union Trust Company (U. S. 5 per cent. Coupon Bonds redeemed) 2,000 00 This Fund is over-invested $18.11 ------$22,250 00 INCOME. Income withheld temporarily under resolution of Board of Managers, June 8th, 1880...... 1,158 01 548 REPORT ON TRUST FUNDS.

Special Income Account from Bohlen Fund. The income from the Bohlen Fund is held in this special account under resolution of the Board of Managers passed June 8th, 1880. To Cash from James M. Brown, Treasurer.. $711 Cash temporarily on deposit with the Union Trust Company...... $2,068 71 To Interest collected, July 1, 1880, to date... 1,428 04 Cash in Bank...... 71 26 82,139 97 $2,139 97

Jane Bohlen Fund. For the Promotion of Christian Knowledge by means of Books and Tracts. Vide Report of Foreign Committee for 1873, subhead, Bohlen Funds. To United States 4 1-2 per cent. Registered Invested in United States 4 1-2 per cent. Bonds...... $2,600 00 Registered Bonds of 1891...... $2,600 00 To amount received from James M. Brown, Cash temporarily on deposit with Union Treasurer...... 4,634 00 Trust Company...... 4,634 00 $7,234 00 $7,234 00 This Fund is over-invested $11.27.

INCOME. Interest, 12 months, paid to James M. Brown, Treasurer of Foreign Committee ...... $296 67

Gift of John II. Swift, of New York, Income to be used for Foreign Missions. The securities not to be changed during Donor’s life -without his consent. PRINCIPAL. Invested in Stock Missouri Pacific Railway Company—9 3-8 shares...... $937 50 The above stock was received in exchange for $1,260.00 stock and scrip of the St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Railway Company, in accordance with the terms of consolidation between the two companies. This Fund is over-invested $7.50.

INCOME. Dividends, 12 months, paid to James M. Brown, Treasurer of Foreign Committee...... $14 00

Legacy of Mrs. M. S. Minor, of Baltimore, Md. Principal and interest to be applied to educate a native African boy, to be named Launcelot B. Minor. To two Shares of Stock of Merchants’ Invested in: National Bank, Baltimore : ...... $200 00 Stock of Merchants’ National Bank, Baltimore. $200 00 To Cash from James M. Brown, Treasurer 33 18 To Dividends on Stock collected, July, 1879, to date...... 35 64 Cash...... 70 82 $270 82 $270 82

Preston Divinity Scholarship. Legacy of Mrs. Preston, of Pittsburgh, Penn., to the late Miss L. M. Fay ; and at her request funded, the interest alone to be applied forever to the support of a Divinity student in China.

PRINCIPAL. Cash temporarily on deposit with Union Trust Co. (U. S. 5 per cent. C. Bonds redeemed)...... $900 00 Cash...... '...... 1 37 INCOME. Interest, 12 months, paid to James M. Brown, Treasurer of Foreign Committee...... 39 80

Legacy of S. W. S., of Louisville, K y . The interest “ to be used, yearly, exclusively in the cause of Foreign Missions.”

PRINCIPAL. Invested in United States 4 1-2 per cent. Registered Bonds of 1891...... $950 00 Cash...... 17 W

i n c o m e . $967 94 Interest, 12 months, paid to James M. Brown, Treasurer of Foreign Committee...... 42 76

Emily L. Hewson Scholarship, Gift of M. E. H., St. Paul’s Church, Albany, N. Y., to endow this Scholarship in Duane Hall, Shanghai, China. REPORT ON TRUST FUNDS. 549

PRINCIPAL. Invested In First Mortgage Coupon Bonds of Morris & Essex Railroad Company...... $600 00 “ United States 4 per cent. Registered Bonds of 1907...... 100 00 Cash...... 6 88

i n c o m e . . $706 88 Interest, 12 months, paid to James M. Brown, Treasurer of Foreign Committee...... 46 00

Legacy o f Mrs. Sarah Robinson, of Poughkeepsie, N. T. The Interest only to be used for Foreign ATlanlnna.

p r i n c i p a l . Invested in United States 44 1-2 per cent. Registered Bonds of 18ifl...... ! ...... $4,000 00 “ “ “ 1907 800 00 This Fund is over-invested $5.50. ------$4,800 00 INCOME. Interest, 12 months, paid to James M. Brown, Treasurer of Foreign Committee...... S12 00

Fund of Trinity Church, New York. Interest to be applied toward the support of the African Episcopate.

p r i n c i p a l . Invested in United States 4\ per cent. Registered Bonds of 1891...... $4,860 00 Cash...... 26 69

in c o m e . $4,276 65 Interest, 12 months, paid to James M. Brown, Treasurer of Foreign Committee...... 191 24

Cleveland Keith Fund. A Legacy of the Rev. Cleveland Keith, late Missionary of the Society in China, to be kept as “ a perma­ nent Fund for the benefit of the Mission to China, either as a sum to be borrowed from art the season of the year when contributions are few and repaid again when they are plentiful, or in such other way as the Foreign Committee shall think best to promote the purposes of said Mission.”

p r i n c i p a l . Invested in United States 4£ per cent.Registered Bonds of 1891...... $10,600 00 “ 4 “ “ “ 1907 ...... 700 00 Cash...... 13 74

i n c o m e . $11,818 74 Interest, 12 months, paid to James M. Brown, Treasurer of Foreign Committee...... 605 00

Fund of Missionary College, China. Interest only to be used for the purposes of the College.

p r i n c i p a l . To amount of Fund...... *$23,239 51 Invested in : U. S. 4j per cent. Registered Bonds of 1891..$11,500 00 U .S. 4 “ “ “ 1907... 15,900 00 To Gift of Rev. James Saul, D.D., income Cash temporarily on deposit with Union only to be applied toward support of the Trust Company...... « ...... 5,739 51 College until further directed by him ... 10,000 00 Cash in bank...... 100 00 $33,239 51 $33,239 51

i n c o m e . Interest, 12 months, paid to James M. Brown, Treasurer of Foreign Committee...... 1,888 11

Missionary Educational Fund. The Income only to be used for the Education of Native Children in Japan or some Heathen or Mohamme­ dan Land, in accordance with the terms under which the Fund was established.

p r i n c i p a l . Invested in Cash, temporarily on deposit with Union Trust Company...... $525 86

in c o m e . Interest, 12 months, paid James M. Brown, Treasurer of Foreign Committee 17 88 550 REPORT ON TRUST FUNDS.

Bishop Auer Memorial Fund. Receired from Foreign Committee, in accordance with their Resolutions o f April 8th, 1879, and April 12th, 1881; principal and interest to accumulate, and to be subject to call of said Committee. To cash from James M. Brown, Treasurer, Cash temporarily on deposit with Union May 7th, 1881 ...... »...... $5,675 76 Trust Company...... $5,675 76 To interest collected...... 11 55 Cash...... 11 55 $5,687 31 $5,687 31

Summary of List of Securities held by the Committee on Trust Funds fo r the Society, as per foregoing statements. • Par value. Market value. United States 5 per cent. Coupon Bonds of 1881, extended at 3£ per cent., Registered. .$18,000 00 $18,180 00 United States 4 1-2 per cent. Registered Bonds of 1891...... 45,150 00 51,019 50 United States 4 per cent. Registered Bonds of 1907...... 20,500 00 23,728 75 Twenty-three and one-quarter Shares Stock of Missouri Pacific Railway Company.. 2,325 00 2,325 00 Two Shares of Merchants’ National Bank of Baltimore, Md...... 200 00 200 00 Additional Croton Aqueduct Stock, New York...... 5,000 00 6,500 00 First Mortgage Coupon Bonds of Morris and Essex Railroad...... 2,100 00 2,730 00 Twenty-seven Shares of United New Jersey Railway and Canal Company...... 2,700 00 5,130 00 Thirty Shares of Preferred Stock of Erie Railroad...... 3,000 00 valid, quest. $269 87 Cash temporarily deposited in Union Trust Company, bearing interest at 3 1-2 per cent, per annum...... 23,792 59 24,062 46 24,062 46

Total...... §123,037 46 $133,875 71 Total amount of Income collected and paid Lloyd W. Wells, Treasurer of the Domestic Committee. .$1,439 89 Total amount of Income collected and paid James M. Brown, Treasurer of the Foreign Committee. 2,698 02 Total amount of Income collected from Bohlen Fund...... 1,158 04 Total amount of Income collected from Bishop Auer Memorial Fund...... 11 55

Total...... $5,807 50

E. A. H o f fm a n , E. & O. E. F. S . W i n s t o n , i J. C. G a r t h w a i t e , Committee on Trust i'unds. W i l l i a m S c o t t , C. V a n d e k b i l t , J

* In this am ount the follow in g Trnst Funds are Included: Susan M. Schereschewsky Scholarship, $1,500.00; Cornelia Jay Scholarship, $1,530.00; L ydia M. Fay (Memorial) Scholarship, $1,507.00; W om an’s Auxiliary Scholarship, $1,502.98; Bishop Boone Scholarship (form erly called Maryland Divinity Scholarship), $1,000.00 ; W illiam Ely Scholarship, $1,500.00; Eev. Yung Kiting Yen Professorship, $50.00; Edward A. Washburn Divinity Scholarship, $1,500,00. TENTH ANNUAL REPORT OF THE WOMAN’S AUXILIARY TO THE BOARD

OF MISSIONS.

T h e tenth year of the Woman’s Auxiliary WOBK o f 1880-81. to the Board of Missions opened with its Of the new work, marking this year as fifth General Meeting held in New York distinct from those preceding, there resulted City, October 12th, 1880. A t this meeting also from the General Meeting the under­ twenty-seven Dioceses and Missionary Juris­ taking of the support of a woman helper in dictions were represented. The Reports Salt Lake City, the payment of a scholar­ of twenty-three Diocesan Associations and ship in Bishop Whitaker’s school, Reno, Committees were read, and statements of Nevada, and the supply of funds for some the work and its need in various portions twenty alcoves in a new and much needed of the Missionary field were made. dormitory in Wolfe Hall, Denver, Colorado. HEW BRANCHES. At the fall meeting of the recently organ­ To the interest of this meeting may be ized Branch of the Auxiliary in Connecticut, traced the formation of the Pittsburgh great interest was awakened in Western Branch of the Auxiliary, on the 17th of Jan­ Texas through an address made by its Mis­ uary, 1881. On the first of June following, sionary Bishop. It was resolved to aid his the Western New York Branch was organ­ work by furnishing him with $2,500 with ized ; and at the very close of the Missionary which to add accommodations for a board­ year a third branch was formed, in the remote ing-school department to the girls’ school at District of Washington Territory, this being Seguin. W ith so much earnestness was the first of all the Missionary Jurisdictions this undertaken, that at the April meeting to organize the Auxiliary within its bor­ the Treasurer was able to report $3,227.76 ders—one of the many living, working me­ raised for the purpose. morials that shall arise to the enduring zeal In Oregon, Bishop Morris needing a House and love of its Missionary Bishop’s wife. Mother and Nurse for the Good Samaritan Besides these Diocesan Branches there was Hospital, called upon the Auxiliary for aid. started, in January, by a lady in Massa­ The money for her travelling expenses was chusetts, a Society called the “ Twenty raised by different Parish Societies, and her Minutes a Day Working Society,” founded support assumed by the Pennsylvania Com­ upon the plan of an English Society of mittee on W ork for Domestic Missionaries. the same name. Its members are bound In Massachusetts, Miss Pitman’s salary has to work twenty minutes each day, or been pledged by the Foreign Division of the the equivalent of that time, for some Mis­ Diocesan Branch, and by the New York sionary object, and the work which they Committee Miss Michie has been sent to have so far done is, by permission of their Japan, and her support there guaran­ Secretary, incorporated with the other work teed, while a beginning has been made for Missions represented in this Report. Be­ towards a fund of $4,000 for the anx­ ginning with fourmembers, the Society now iously desired Hospital at Osaka; and large numbers one hundred and forty-nine, to be contributions towards the cost of the Medi­ found in seventeen different Dioceses, each cal Department of the Shanghai Mission working separately by herself. This Society have been given by Calvary Parish, New is specially suited to persons living in places York. remote from any Parish or Mission station, A legacy of $1,000 was expended in the who are anxious to take some part in aiding support of two women working among the the Missionary work of the Church. Colored people of the South and one in 552 REPORT OF TEE WOMAN'S AUXILIARY.

Japan. A first payment of $500 was made uary 1st, 1872. Its first Report, presented by an individual member towards the en­ to the Board of Missions in October of that dowment of a scholarship in St. Helen’s year, by the Secretaries of the Committees, Hall, Portland, Oregon ; while the record but neither at that nor at any succeeding is permitted of $10,000 given by a member time brought prominently before the of the newly formed Pittsburgh Branch to Woman’s Auxiliary, is here given in full, educational work in the West, and of $3,000 as showing in what manner the work of given by a gentleman through the Pennsyl­ organization was begun. vania Committee on W ork for Foreign Mis­ FIRST REPORT. sionaries, for the new church building at “ At their last Meeting, the Board called Wuchang. upon the Secretaries of the various Depart­ The interest in work among the Colored ments of the Board, to summon the women people received this year a fresh impetus of the Church to the aid of the Missionary from accounts given by the Rev. Mr. Dun­ work. The following was their Resolution : lop of Savannah, Ga., o f his Mission among ‘ ‘ Resolved, That the suggestions contained the plantation Negroes of that region. In in this Report as to the organization of a money and promises, the support of four Woman’s Society Auxiliary to the Board of day-schools, at a cost o f $400 each, was Missions, be referred to the Reverend Sec­ guaranteed to him, the expense of one of retaries of the various Departments of this Board, with power to mature such Organi­ these being met by members of St. Barthol­ zation as may seem to them practicable and omew’s Parish, New York, who promise a expedient, and submit it to the considera­ yearly payment o f the amount. tion of the Church at large, through T he But no work o f the year can be said to Sp i r i t o f M issio n s. possess greater interest, or, possibly, be “ The Secretaries, at the earliest possible fraught with more beneficial results, than moment, acted on the authority thus given. the accomplishment of an enterprise, under­ They were successful in securing a Christian taken with great faith and pursued with woman admirably qualified for such a po­ untiring zeal and unswerving confidence to sition to undertake the work of General Sec­ this happy end— an end which is but a new retary, and they then addressed a letter to beginning—the sending out of two newly all the Rectors in the land, invoking their ordained Indian Deacons and an Indian sympathy and countenance, and asking that Catechist and interpreter, with their white each Rector would send to the Secretary of friend, teacher and Pastor, to be Mission­ the Woman’s Department the name of a aries and Evangelists where, a few short Christian woman in his Parish, who should years ago, they were rebellious and blood­ act in conjunction with her in the effort to thirsty heathen warriors. enlist the sympathies and interest of others. It is with great regret that, on account of “ Great care was taken not to interfere with the illness of its Director, and the fact that a Missionary Agencies already in operation in very large part o f its work is for Missions our Parishes. Where these existed the within its own Diocese, a complete and de­ object has been merely to bring them into tailed statement from the Central New York communication with the Committees of the Branch of the Auxiliary must be omitted Board, as the Church’s centre of Missionary from the Tables of the year’s Report. But, information, for their mutual g ood ; and, in while in figures its record is so imperfect, the case of Parishes where no such agencies the entire Auxiliary rejoices in the fact of existed, to plant a germ of a Missionary this grand Indian work in which its Diocesan Agency, leaving the shape of its growth and Director and its Parish Branches have borne the method of its activity to be governed by so great a part— a work whose value no individual preference and circumstances. In mere figures could possibly represent. pursuance of this plan it was, that each Rec­ A RETROSPECT. tor was requested to appoint a lady to act as As with this Report end the first ten years Secretary in his Parish, it being supposed of the Woman’s Auxiliary, it may be well to that such an appointee would be the sim­ look back over them, and note something of plest and best bond of union between the its beginning and its growth. Parishes and the Committees charged with Its organization resolved upon in the fall the carrying on of the Missionary work, and of 1871, its first Secretary was appointed Jan- the best channel for conveying information REPORT OF THE WOMAN'S AUXILIARY.

(and the interest which ensues) from the build an Indian Mission church, and $1,800 great centre of Missionary information to to establish an Indian hospital. each separate Parish. Such a Secretary has The next year saw the special offering of been appointed by about three hundred and $1,850 by the Niobrara League to defray the fifty of the Rectors, and a simple machinery expense of a new edition of the Dakota has been thus set at work, which will, we Prayer Book, and of a printing-press for the believe, without conflicting with other inter­ Mission at Yankton Agency. ests, accomplish much for the general Mis­ In 1874 the Harris Children Fund was sionary work. Under its simple operation, raised, which, with frequent additions, has ignorance of the Missionary work, which is greatly aided in the support of two orphan the mother of apathy, will give place to sons of a former Missionary up to the pres­ healthy information, the great spur to active ent date. The Committee on Work for interest, while the knowledge that the women Foreign Missionaries was that year formally of the Church have thus become agents and organized, and the Foreign Missionaries’ advocates of the work, will be like a breeze Fund established, by which the insurance from the ocean to our Missionaries, carrying dues o f our married Foreign Missionary cheer and vigor to their hearts and hands. Clergy and Physicians are met. “ The Secretaries beg leave in conclusion In 1870 the support of a woman sent out to to offer the following Resolution : work in the Foreign field was for the first 11 Resolved,That this Board approve heartily time undertaken. That year was also marked of the Woman’s Auxiliary to the Board of by the endowment of an Indian scholarship Missions, and cordially commend it, both and the support for the year of a Catechetical for the promise of good which it gives and school in Niobrara. for the spirit, thoughtful for individual cir­ In 1877 two women serving in the Do­ cumstances and preferences, in which it has mestic field were sustained, note was made been organized. of one hundred scholarships supported at (Signed) A. T . T w in c . home and abroad, and the endowment of W . H . H a r e . four scholarships in St. John’s College, B. I. H a ig h t .” Shanghai, wras resolved upon. g r o w t h . The Domestic Missionary Lending Library, Of the replies to the circular to which this the support of other women working among Report-refers, three-fourths were from Mis­ the Colored people of the South and one in sion stations, weak and struggling Parishes Japan, the completion of two of the endowed hardly able to sustain themselves, and from scholarships, the establishment of two day- Parishes already at work in some way with schools in Shanghai, the building of an In­ which their Rectors wished nothing might dian chapel, and of a dormitory for an In­ interfere. dian boarding-school, mark 1878 ; while From this unpromising beginning there the support of an African Missionary, the has grown up a band of working Societies building of a rectory in Niobrara, the outfit united in common interest and purpose, and travelling expenses o f a married Mis­ though diverse in methods and forms of or­ sionary to Wuchang, and a fund of $1,500 ganization, to be found in forty-six Dioceses, for a hospital at that station, signalize in twenty-two o f the Dioceses, and in 1879-80. one Missionary Jurisdiction being more Even so the Auxiliary has grown from closely drawn together for larger and more year to year, increasing in the number of its effective work, in Diocesan Associations. boxes, in the amount of its money contribu­ The first Report of the Secretary o f the tions, constantly developing new interests Auxiliary, printed at the close of its second and spreading in new directions. Begin­ year, gives no tables o f work in money or ning with clothing for Missionary families boxes, but the money contributions are com­ and stations, it takes up the aid of widows puted to have been not less than $20,000, and orphans, the salaries of women serving and the value of boxes twice that sum, giving at both Foreign and Domestic stations, the a total of $60,000. support o f schools and scholarships, the In that year there is a record of $2,400 building of rectories, churches and hospi­ raised to meet the indebtedness on St. tals. Mark’s Church, Salt Lake City, $3,000 to This year it reports over one hundred and 554 REPORT OF TEE WOMAN'S AUXILIARY. fifty scholarships, twenty women supported; Of the first, $1,000 are already assured, of money contributions directly through the the second, $3,400, of the last, $2,965. Missionary treasury, $49,462.05; 1,298 boxes Thus, $2,530 for the Domestic, and $2,615 valued at $94,233.75, making a total for the for the Foreign Committee, will be needed year o f $143,695.80. this year for these funds. For the ten years past the total, so far as The Branches not already pledged are can be gathered from the Annual Reports, asked to consider this matter. Some among is $789,195.71. them may wish to adopt a Missionary for This brief retrospect is here given to serve their own, thus still farther decreasing the a double purpose—to show that the Woman’s amount needed for the funds. From the Auxiliary is a living, growing and work­ others it is hoped a sufficient sum may ing organism, and to encourage it to a future be raised to meet every demand. From of more vigorous life, more sure and rapid each Parish Branch and Diocesan Society, growth, more abundant labors. a contribution proportioned to the Commit­ THE FUTURE. tee’s need and their ability is earnestly de­ There lies before it a new year which it sired. may make more useful to the Church, more As this Report goes to press a fresh call rich in reflected blessing to itself than any. comes to the Auxiliary. A new worker has year before. It has its old work to keep in applied for an appointment to Japan. She mind and to perform, never allowing any­ is greatly needed in the Girls’ School at To- thing more recent or seemingly more full of kio, but the Foreign Committee have al­ interest to displace it, without some other ready pledged themselves largely to this and sufficient cause. Every box promised Mission, and do not venture to increase their to Mission or Missionary should be filled, appropriation unless certified that the ad­ every pledge for salary or scholarship or ditional amount shall be secured .to them. school should be redeemed. It is with the assured hope that the sum In looking over the record of past work, needed ($950.) can be readily raised in the it may be observed that many special objects Auxiliary, that the supply of this want is are undertaken, and that there seems a ten­ named as a part of the new work of the year. dency to give too much to these special Apart from this no large special object is needs, too little in aid o f the General Mis- now suggested. As the year goes on, it will Bionsof the Church. It must be remembered, no doubt bear the imprint of some deed however, that in many instances the money done in memory of that Missionary member given is the individual gift of some member of the Auxiliary, who went out to her new of the Auxiliary, given in response to a call home and work in Washington Territory appealing to her own individual feeling ; with so brave a heart, only at its threshold and again, it should be remembered, that to lay down her life ; something also may the support of women, the payment of be done in it for the sons of Missionaries scholarships, and much money given for who ask its care. other purposes, very generally comes under It would be ready to meet every demand, appropriation, and helps the Domestic and and to work untiringly for the good of others. Foreign Committees as well as the various But it feels its own weakness ; it needs the Mission stations. help of greater numbers, it needs the in­ Still, to aid the Committees yet farther, creased sympathy and active co-operation of it is now purposed to establish two funds, the Clergy ; above all, it needs a renewal of to be called the Domestic and the spiritual life within itself, a fresh consecra­ Foreign Salary Funds. To these funds all tion on the part of cach individual making Diocesan and Parish Societies, not already up its body, a constant recollection in the engaged in the support of Missionary women midst of work that all must be done for of their own, are invited to contribute. For G od and through Ilis grace, made holy as salaries of such women in the Domestic field, offered unto Him, made effectual as done by $1,450 are now appropriated, in the Indian Him through it. and Freedman fields, $5,480, in the Foreign, Respectfully submitted, $5,580. J tilia C. E m e k y , Secretary. o f Ctontritiution^ From Parish and Associated Branches and Individual Memoers of the Woman’s Auxiliary,

F r o m S e p t e m b e r 1 s t , 1880, t o S e p te m b e r 1 s t , 1881.

Foreign Freed- Indian. Foreign men A lb a n y . C o n n .— Continued. Troy, St.John’s. $ 5 00 Windsor. Grace...... $28 34 s $ Litchfield Archdeaconry Total...... 5 00 Bethlehem, Christ...... 17 00 Kent, St. Andrew’s ...... 1 00 Ce n t r a l N e w Y o r k . Litchfield, St. Michael’s. SO 00 10 00 New Milford, St. John’s. 150 00 Binghamton. Christ... 22 00 Nortlifleld, Busy Bees... 8 00 Clinton, St. James’ ... 16 80 Plymouth, St. Peter’s ... 5 00 Cortlandt, Grace...... 8 00 2 00 Watertown, Christ...... 30 00 New Berlin,St. Andrew’s. 10 00 A few Friends 13 00 Oswego, Christ...... 19 25 21 90 Woodbury, St. Paul’s... 50 60 11 00 Home, Zion...... 20 00 30 00 Archdeacon ry ...... 8 04 7 96 “ “ Helping Middlesex Archdea­ Hand Society. 20 00 conry: Skaneateles, St. James’. 36 15 1 60 12 0U Clinton, Holy Advent.. 2 00 Syracuse, House of the Durham, Epiphany...... 8 00 Good Shepheid. 20 00 33 00 Essex, St. John’s ...... 6 00 “ St. Paul’s...... 20 00 40 00 Killingworth & Ponset, Utica, Grace...... 5 06 1 69 Emmanuel. 2 50 Watertown, Trinity___ 10 00 Middle Haddam, Grace., 1 00 Waterville, G ra ce...... 6 00 B 00 Middletown, Christ.. 38 25 4 10 “ Holv Trinity...... 321 10 70 23 70 24 196 27 Total...... 166 76 20 00 8 50 158 65 “ St. Luke’s Chapel 193 62 10 UO “ Bishop Williams. 10 00 C e n t r a l P e n n a . Saybrook, Grace...... 84 00 New Haven Archdea­ Reading, Christ conry. Cathedral New Haven, Ascension.. ß 80 15 61 Mothers’ Meeting...... 22 35 “ “ Christ. 3 00 Reading, St. Mark’s Sch. “ “ St. John’s.. 46 25 thro’ young ladies. 120 27 “ “ St. Paul’s ... 109 30 “ “ St.Thomas’. 100 00 Total. 142 62 “ “ Trinity...... 176 85 Waterbury, St. John’s... 100 00 1 Connecticut. Archdeaconry...... 74 ; 76 New London Archdea­ Fairfield Archdeaconry. conry. Bridgeport, Christ...... 31 50 Brooklyn, Trinity...... 15 00 “ (.North) Nativity 2 00 Colchester, Calvary...... 10 10 “ St. John's 115 71 25 00 Danielsouville, “ (East) St. Paul’s. 52 00 St. Alban’s. 6 00 “ “ Friends...... 1 00 5 00 New London, St. James’ 57 00 10 00 “ Friends...... 15 00 13 00 Norwich, Christ...... 143 25 5 00 Easton, Christ...... 6 50 “ “ Young Fairfield, St. Paul’s...... 6 00 Ladies’ Soc. 200 00 Long Hill, Grace...... 1 00 “ Trinity...... 40 00 New Canaan, St. Mark’s. G 00 Pomfret, Christ ...... 50 00 Poquetannock, Women’s B. C. 8 00 St James’. 5 00 Newtown, Trinity...... 23 50 Dio. B. W. A., not cred­ Nichols Farms, Trinity.. 1 50 ited to Parishes. 103 50 Redding Ridge, Christ... 2 00 2 00 »» *t “ s s 2 00 Total...... 3886 08 315 90 Ridgefield, St. Stephen’s 2 00 Southport, Trinity...... 155 70 3 20 100 00 1 70 D e l a w a r e . “ A Friend__ 5 00 Stamford, St. Andrew’s. 13 00 New Castle, Immanuel... “ St.John’s ___ 367 50 72 50 10 00 Men’s Bible Class... 2 25 Stratford, Christ...... 70 00 15 00 Wilmington, St. John’s.. 12 00 Tashua “ ...... 3 50 1 00 1 00 Westport “ ...... 25 00 1 00 T otal...... 12 00 Weston, Emmanuel...... 1 00 Archdeaconry...... 3 20 4 00 E a s t o n . Hartford Archdeaconry. Hartford, Christ...... 201 00 10 00 10 00 Snow Hill, All Hallows’.. 6 72 2 00 2 00 6 73 “ Good Shepherd. 226 12 10 00 Trappe, Mrs.J. W.Martin C “ St. James’ ...... 51 00 “ (West) St. James 27 00 Total., 6 72 2 00 8 38 “ St. John’s ...... 90 00 „ “ Trinity...... 196 00 G e o r g ia . Hebron, St. Peter’s . 8 50 New Britain,St. Mark’s Macon, St. Paul’s ...... 10 95 5 00 S. S 15 81 Ogeechee, St. Mark’s Warehouse Point, S. S. 6 50 St. John’s 60 00 Wethersfield, Trinity.... 1 00 Total...... 16 45 5 00 556 REPORT OF THE WOMAN'S AUXILIARY.

Domes­ Freed- Tnrlinn. Domes­ Freed- Indian. tic. men. Foreign tic men. Foreign- I l l i n o i s . M a ry la n d .— Continued.

Galena, Grace...... 8 $ 4 00 $ $ Baltimore, $ . $ $ $ ------Holy Comforter. 2 00 Total...... 4 00 “ Holy Trinity... 50 3« 28 “ Memorial...... 50 00 5 00 I n d i a n a . “ Messiali...... 6 30 “ Mt. Calvary___ 25 00 Indianapolis, St. Paul’s. GO 00 100 00 St. Barnabas’ .. 40 00 22 00 New Albany, St. PauJ’s.. 10 20 St. Paul’s...... 20 00 Richmond,St. Paul’s S.S. 21 26 “ St. Peter’s ...... 365 00 Terro Haute, St. “ Young Ladies... 40 00 Stephen’s. 65 00 4 00 “ Indian Aid...... 10 00 D C Branch 26 20 Total...... 75 20 4 00 60 00 121 26 Frederick, All Saints’ ... 22 00 141 00 Port Republic...... 10 00 I o w a . Reistertown, Hannah More Academy. 40 00 Cedar Rapids ...... 22 00 20 00 Whalyville, Johnny and Florry 40 Total...... 22 00 20 00 Diocesan B. W. A., not credited to Parishes. 52 42 K e n t u c k y . Total...... 106 60 552 50 1813 50 Covington, Trinity S. S. Mite Chest. 2 00 M assachusetts .

Total 2 00 Amherst, Grace...... 8 70 Andover, Christ...... 5 00 3 14 L o n g I s l a n d . “ S.S .... 5 00 13 00 Ashfleld, St. John’s .... 1 00 Astoria, Redeemer 2 00 Aubumdale, Brooklyn (it’. D.) Calvary 3 00 2 00 The Messiah 6 40 “ Christ.. 2 00 Beverly, St. Peter’s...... 6 00 Emmanuel.... 2 00 Boston, Advent...... 3 00 42 51 Grace...... 10 00 14 00 “ “ A Friend 5 00 Good Shepherd. 2 00 “ (Dorchester) Holy Trinity... 2 00 A l l Saints’. 5 00 2 00 Messiah ...... 2 00 “ Christ ...... 2 00 Redeemer...... 14 00 “ Emmanuel...... 10 00 33 00 146 00 293 50 Reformation__ 2 00 “ A. L. P. 50 00 St. Ann’s ...... 2 00 “ Evangelists...... 3 00 “ A Member 25 00 “ Good Shepherd. 15 50 24 50 73 00 St. Barnabas’ ... 2 00 “ (South) St. George’s !... 31 00 2 00 “ Grace... .,...... 5 00 St. James1...... 2 00 “ S. S ...... 25 00 St. John’s...... 2 00 “ Messiah...... 5 00 26 00 St. Mark’s ...... 2 00 “ (Boxbury) (.E. D.) St. Mark’s. 2 00 “ St. James’...... 127 00 50 00 St. Mary’s...... 4 00 “ St. John’s...... 1 00 89 00 St. Matthew’s.. 2 00 “ (East) St. Peter’s...... 2 00 “ St. John’s...... 50 Mrs. Brown...... 4 SO 6 10 “ (Charlestovm) Flusshing, St. George’s... 6 00 4 00 “ St. John’s...... “ Mrs. Franklin, 35 00 Family M. C ...... 26 00 Glen Covo, St. Paul’s __ 2 00 *• (Jamaica PI.) A Legacy E00 00 500 00 “ St. John’s ...... 10 00 30 00 10 00 Islip, Emmanuel...... 5 58 “ St. Mark’s...... 15 00 19 00 Jamaica, Grace 5 00 2 00 4 00 “ (Dorchester) Mankasset, Christ...... 10 00 “ St. Mary’s...... 25 00 12 00 11 SO 26 00 Newtown, St. James’ __ 60 00 2 00 “ (South) Diocesan B. W. A., not “ St. Matthew’s... 15 00 10 00 7 50 credited to Parishes... 28 00 10 00 79 00 94 00 “ St. Paul’s...... 28 00 26 50 23 90 273 C6 S. S .... 40 00 Total...... 87 00 566 00 159 58 677 10 “ Trinity...... 7 00 220 38 695 54 231 00 “ S.S .... 40 00 190 00 155 00 M a in e . Bradford, E. A. K ...... 5 00 Bridgewater, Miss L. H. 1 21 Augusta, St. Mark’s...... 6 00 Brookline, St. Paul’s ... 50 00 Bath, Grace...... 50 Cambridge, Christ...... 3 00 8 00 33 50 Bangor, St. Paul’s...... 1 00 “ (North) Brunswick, St. Paul’s ... 6 00 “ St. James’...... 8 00 2 00 16 50 Eastport, Christ...... 2 00 S. S. 8 50 Gardiner, Christ...... 6 00 Bt. John’s Mem. 2 00 27 50 59 50 87 00 Haliowell, “ Bt. Peter’s ...... 5 00 52 50 St. Matthew’s. B0 M. K. A. S ...... 45 00 Portland, St. Luke’s. ... 5 00 Dedham, Good Shepherd B 00 45 00 Saco, Trinity ...... 1 00 “ St. Paul’s ...... 5 00 10 00 Diocesan B. W. A ___ 2 00 Fall River, Ascension... 10 00 Fitchburg1 Christ . Í2 00 5 00 5 00 29 00 Total...... 27 00 Forest Hills, a Lady...... 2 00 Groton, E. K. C...... 2 00 M a r y l a n d . Hanover, St. Andrew’s.. 5 00 Haverhill, St. John Baltimore, Ascension... 90 00 Evangelists’. 1 00 “ Christ...... 50 00 2 50 “ Trinity...... 7 00 10 00 “ Emmanuel...... 160 00 108 00 Hyde Park, Christ...... 25 00 “ Grace...... 80 00 220 00 852 00 Longwood. Our Saviour. 6 00 15 95 REPORT OF THE WOMAN'S AUXILIARY. 557

Domes­ Freed- Tnriifln. Foreign Domes­ tic. rueu. tic. Foreign. M a s s .— Continued. N. J.—Continued.

Long wood, Young $ $ $ 8 Middletown, Ladies...... $ 4 00|$ Peoples’ Soc 5 00 102 00 Moorestown, Trinity__ 3 00 Miss F ... 3 00 2 00 Mount Holly, Lowell, St. Anne’s. . 5 00 18 78 17 0G 23 30 St. Andrew’s. 12 75 Lynn, St. Stephen’s 23 10 00 22 54 “ “ Trinity...... 5 00 10 00 Malden, St. Paul’s... 5 00 New Brunswick, Christ Medford, Grace...... 10 00 5 00 and St. John’s. 8 00 Nahant, A. A. H ...... 5 00 New Market, New Bedford, Grace— 10 00 20 00 Holy Innocents’. 2 00 Newburyport, St. Paul’s 60 00 40 00 Perth Amboy. Newton, Grace ...... 6 50 17 50 77 22 Holy Cross. 3 21 Newton Lower Falls, Plainfield, Grace...... 3 001 St. Mary's 3 00 S 00 3 00 17 25 Princeton, Trinity...... 2 00 Peabodv, St. Paul’s — 5 00 Railway, St. Paul’s...... 5 00 Pittsfield, St. Stephen's 10 00 Riverton, Christ...... 5 00 Miss E. S. N. 25 00 io no Somerville, St. John’s ... 5 00 Quincy, Christ...... 8 00 6 00 81 00 South Amboy, Christ.... Salem, Grace...... 10 00 10 00 Two Ladies. 3 00 St. Peter’s ...... 18 00 52 10 75 50 10 00 Rwedesboro’, St. Luke’s.. 5 00 S. S.. 12 41 Trenton, St. Michael’s... Somerville, M. A. H ... 3 00 “ Trinity, a few Springfield, Christ...... 62 98 40 00 Ladies. 8 50 Stock bridge, St, Paul’s 15 00 Taunton, St. John’s ... 18 50 Total. S.S 6 00 Waltham, Christ...... 5 00 56 11 32 00 5 00 “ “ Bible Class 31 00 N e w Y o r k . Webster, Reconciliation 15 00 Wellesley College S oc.. 5 00 Bedford, St. Matthew’s.. 41 80 Woburn, Trinity...... 3 00 Castleton, St. Mary’s. .. 2 10 Worcester, All Saints’. .. 10 00 60 00 51 00 “ Mrs. B. Richards 1 25 Diocesan B. W. A., not Clifton, St. John’s...... 88 9K credited to Parishes 5 00 80 00 29 00 2 96 Edgewater, St. Paul’s... 40 00 Greenburgh, Zion. . ___ 30 00 Total...... 418 19 761 02 1825 46 2154 93 Harrison, S. S ...... Irvington, St. Barnabas’ . 175 45 M i c h i g a n . Mamaroneck, St. Thomas’. 31 Í0 19 10 Algonac, MissF. Smith. 5 00 Matteawan, St. Luke’s.. 45 47 97 94 Alpena, Trinity...... 9 38 Monroe, Grace, “ Mrs. J.S. Minor. 23 12 A Member. 24 00 Brooklyn, All Saints’ __ 10 00 New Brighton, Christ... 113 23 Detroit, Christ...... 26 25 87 08 25 00 New Dorp, Mission S. S. 5 00 “ Emmanuel...... 2 00 New Rochelle, Trinity... 80 30 39 05 “ Grace...... 10 00 New York, All Angels’ .. 12 00 “ Mariners’ ...... 2 50 2 50 5 00 Annunciation 10 00 20 00 21 00 “ St. James’ ...... 5 00 5 00 Ascension__ 40 00 " St. John’s ...... 25 00 Calvary ...... 500 00 1213 16 “ St. Paul’s...... 60 00 53 00 316 52 135 21 “ Chapel. 132 25 «o oo: 23!) 11 East Saginaw, St. John’s 10 00 Christ...... 45 00 29 00 101 00 Jackson, St. Paul’s ...... 25 00 Eighth Ward Monroe, Trinity...... 10 00 Mission, Pontiac, Zion...... 5 00 St. Ann’s Guild.. 9 91 Diocesan B. W. A., not Epiphany__ 30 00 credited to Parishes. 158 13 150 62 Grace...... 130 00 C90 00 “ S. S...... Total...... 2Î0 00 319 58 316 52 250 21 “ Chapel. 5 00 Heavenly Rest. CO OO 152 20 M in n e s o t a . Holy Apostles’. 10 00 92 55 A Member... 120 00 5)0 00 Faribault, St. Mary’s Holy Communion. 10 00 805 00 90 00 School. 12 48 50 00 Holy Spirit.. 10 00 Holy Trinity. 230 00 Total...... 12 48 50 00 (.Harlem.) Holy Trinitv. 10 00 75 00 N e v a d a . S.'S. 3 17 102 23 Incarnation.. 50 00 250 00 Austin, C. E. M. E ...... 2 00 10 00 Redeemer S. S. fi 50 St. Ann’s...... 5 00 Total...... 2 00 10 00 St. Bartholomew’s 548 00 440 00 131 00 Sti Chrysostom’s, 50 00 N e w J e r s e y , St. Clement’s. St. George’s.. 70 00 100 00 Beverly, St. Stephen’s. 36 16 2 50 (Fordham) Burlington, St. Mary’s 5 00 St. James’ ... 54 20 76 On Camden, Our Saviour... 6 00 St. Mark’s... 2 0 0 00 2TO 50 GO 00 Cajpe May,Miss M.Reeves 50 00 St. Michael’s. 35 00 30 00 30 79 Elizabeth, Christ...... 3 00 “ St. John's . a S. S. Class 40 00 “ “ S. S 2 00 9 00 St. Paul's__ 40 00 “ Trinity...... 105 00 S. S. Infant Class. 40 00 _ “ B.W.A. ... 1 34 8 10 St. Philip’s .., 10 00 Florence, St. Stephen’s 1 00 St. Stephen’s. 5 00 20 00 Freehold, St. Peter’s ... 1 00 6 15 St. Thomas’. . 207 00 206 24 4f!5 48 “ Ladies ...... 3 85 Young Ladies. 90 80 Long Branch, St. James 4 25 St. Timothy’s 5 00 S58 REPORT OF THE WOMAN'S AUXILIARY.

h Domes Freed- Indian. Foreign tic. men. Indian. Foreign N e w Y o r k .— Continued. Ohio.—Continued. i New York, $ iS Cuyahoga Falls, 8 S $ 9 Transfiguration. 191 50 St. John’s 14 66 “ Trinity (a few Denison, St. Barnabas’ .. 1 0( Members). 40 00 Elyria, St. Andrew’s __ 5 OC “ Trinity Chapel. 55 00 ero o( 5HÔ 00 Gam bier. Holy Spirit__ 25 00 “ Z io n ...... 240 Of. 7.Î 00 Huron, Christ...... 25 0C 10 00 Pelham, Christ ...... 10 11 83 0( 140 36 Mansfield, Grace...... 10 00 Poughkeepsie, Christ, Massillon, St. Timothy's Holy Comforter S. S. 10 00 and St. Paul’s. 1R0 00 Medina, St. Paul’s ...... 2 00 Portchester, St. Peter’s 50 00 34 00 MountVemon, St. Paul’s 12 16 Red Hook. St. Paul’s ... 28 00 New Lisbon, Trinity...... 41 00 6 00 Richmond. St. Andrew’s. ft/ 63 Norwalk, St. Paul's...... 20 00 R.ve, Christ...... 187 00 60 0C 291 25 Painesville, Lake Erie “ Mrs. Wm. Van Seminary. 7 oo; 12 00 Rensselaer. 80 00 Sanduskv, Grace...... 65 00 Saugerties, Trinity, Toledo, Trinity...... 20 00 Two Members. Wooster, St. James’ ...... 5 00 Scarsdale, St. James the Less. 55 05 Total...... 73 00 21 23 403 b'J West Brighton, Ascension. 133 51 Pennsylvania. Marie Louise Band. 15 00 Doylestown. St. Paul’s.. 14 00 13 31 Westchester, St. Peter’s. 122 00j 95 00 Lower Merion, Yonkers, St. John’s...... 7 40 25 00 9 35 Redeemer. 20 00 “ St. Paul’s...... j 14 00 80 00 “ “ St. John’s. 10 00 B. W. A...... i 5 oo; 9 00 25 00 M arcusHook, St. Martin’s 5 00 “ Mite Chest...... 7 oo! Media, Christ...... 5 00 Staten IslandAssociation 274 oo; “ S. S...... 10 00 Diocesan B. W. A., not Norristown, St. John’s.. 5 00 credited to Parishes. 862 56 ! ’75S 87 732 24 Philadelphia, Advent__ 1 00 6 00 ------“ (Lover Dublin) Total...... 2115 4ü 521 30 7846 57 *• All Saints’ ... 20 00 “ Ascension... 4 00 57 00 5 00 N i o b r a r a . Atonement.. 28 00 “ (Germantown) Santee Agency, Calvary...... 44 25 St. Mary’s School. 4 00 “ Monumental. 20 00 37 00 1 “ Christ...... 8 00 155 50 Total. 4 00 “ Church Home. 5 45 “ Covenant__ 82 00 8 00 N o r t h C a r o l i n a . “ Epiphany.... 120 00 “ Epis. Hospital. 180 00 104 55 Asheville, .Trinity...... 40 00 “ (Urescentville) Edenton, St. Paul’s ...... 13 62! Good Shepherd. 6 00 Leakesville, Epiphany Grace ...... 98 88 1 38 “ Holy Comforter. 100 00 “ Mite Chest.. 3 92 “ Holy Communion 1 30 “ Mission’y Boxes. 1 90 “ Holy Trinity. 94 00 310 00 105 00 Raleigh, St. Mary’s “ Holy Trinity School. 40 00 Mem. Chapel. 5 00 t “ noly Trinity, Total.. 5 30 13 62 81 90 Men’s Bible Class. 30 00 1 “ Incarnation.. 10 00 50 00 N o r t h e r n N e w J e r s e y . 1 “ Mediator..... 12 00 ! “ Women’s B. C__ 10 30 Belleville, Christ...... 2 00 “ Nativity...... 6 00 Bergen Pt., Trinity...... 49 00 34 17 35 22 35 59 “ Redeemer... 3 00 Jersey City, St. John’s.. 9 00 1 “ St. Andrew’s 10 00 Madison, Grace...... 5 00 50 00 “ (Mantua) Morristown, Redeemer, St. Andrew’s 34 26 Missionary Box. 4 16 S. S. 5 00 “ Ladies...... 15 00 “ St.Bamabas’ 5 00 Newark, Grace .. 2 00 “ Men’s Bible Class. 29 75 “ St. Paul’s ...... 1 00 “ St. Clement’s 5 12 2 00 “ Trinity...... 25 00 “ St. James’... 46 00 173 00 96 00 “ Missionary Box.. 2 00 1 “ Young Ladies' B.C. 75 00 30 00 Orange, Grace...... 5 00 20 00 “ (Kin gsessing) “ Mrs. A. T. E. “ St. James’__ 10 00 Kirtland. 25 00 (K. Liberties) Orange, St. Mark’ s...... St. John’s “ (East) Mrs. J. W.R. 75 00 S. S. 15 75 Summit, Calvary ...... “ St. Jude’s... 35 69 64 00 Through League, Mrs. G. “ St. Luke’s... 8 00 260 50 43 00 M. Tibbetts. Troy, N. Y. “ Women’s B. C 8 50 “ (Germantown) Total. 148 00 141 38 130 59 “ St. Luke’s___ 10 00 65 00 “ St. Mark’s ..... 20 00 80 00 121 80 O h i o . “ (Frank ford) St. Mark’s . 274 50 2 00 Cleveland, All Saints’ ... 2 75 S. S. 24 24 “ St. Mark’s__ 5 48 8 52 (West) “ St. Mary’s __ 18 00 St. Mary’s ... 10 00 56 00 “ St. Paul’s__ 141 75 “ (Chestnut Hill) “ Trinity...... 30 50 St. Paul’s___ 50 00 REPORT OF TEE WOMAN'S AUXILIARY. 559

1 Domes­ Freed- Indian Domes­ Freed­ Foreign. tic. men. ¡Foreign tic. man. Indian. Penn.—Continued. S. O.—Continued.

Philadelphia. St. Peter's. $ 2 0 00 $ 8 00 $ 64 81 § 62 50 Cincinnati, Christ...... $ 20 00 $ $ $ Young Ladies’ B. C. 140 00 42 41 H. H. Society. 25 00 “ {Germantown) “ (Avondale) St. Peter’s... 12 98 6 00 58 26 63 02 35 00 “ A Member... 3000 00 “ St. John’s __ 18 00 Mothers’ B. C . 15 00 Circleville, St. Philip’s.. 64 98 “ Mme. Clement’s. 25 00 “ Two Ladies.. 2 00 St. Stephen’s 80 00 16 00 19 00 5 00 “ (Bridesburg Columbus, St. Paul’s __ 15 00 5 00 10 00 St. Stephen’s 25 00 “ Trinity...... 256 20 83 81 70 00 104 41 “ (Roxboro’) Delaware, St. Peter’s__ 35 00 81 23 St. Timothy’s. 13 00 Lancaster. St. John's— 10 00 “ (West) Marietta, St. Luke’s ...... 5 00 “ TJie Saviour. 150 00 4 00 29 60 44 85 “ Transfiguration. S 00 Pomeroy, Grace...... 10 00 “ (Maylandville) 55 00 Portsmouth, All Saints’ . 10 00 15 62 41 42 Trinity...... “ Christ...... 9 9(i “ (Oxford Ch.) Worthington, St.John’s. 7 47 4 27 6 70 12 80 Trinity...... 24 00 Zanesville, St. James’ ... 25 00 40 00 *• Zion...... 29 00 “ Mr. & Mrs. L. Coffin 20 00 886 37 158 55 81 70 403 74 “ Mrs. C. Willing. 100 00 “ (Germantown) Springfield. Mrs E. Butler. 50 00 Plioenixville, St. Peter’s. 5 00 Waverly, ACommunic’nt 10 00 Kockdale, Calvary S. S. Westchester, Total...... 10 00 Holy Trinity. 300 00 40 00 120 00 Diocesan B. W. A., not Texas. credited to Parishes. 630 00 126 18 52 29 103 02 Miscellaneous, A Friend. 73 00 1031 98 1154 71 2886 06 4868 40 Total...... 70 00 73 00 Pittsburgh. Vermont. Brownsville. Christ...... 12 25 12 75 Grt-eensburgh, Christ 20 00 Bellows Falls, St. Agie.s’ 100 00 50 00 40 00 Miles Grove, Grace ...... 3 00 Burlington, St. Paul’s... 7 00 Pittsburgh, St. Andrew’s 70 00 30 00 106 50 100 00 “ Rock Point Soc. 100 00 Total...... 182 25 80 00 son’s Mite Chest. Vergennes. Quincy. Mrs. C. E. Parker.. 10 00 Winooski, Knoxville, St. Mary’s Trinity Mission 5 00 School. 12 00 Total . . . . 47 36 15 00 12 00 100 00 12 00 Virginia. Rhode Island. Alexandria. Christ...... 30 00 95 38 Barrington, St. John’s... 6 00 Christ, Bristol, St. Michael’s ... 10 001 Young Ladies. 10 00 Crompton, St. Philip’s... 3 00 3 00 “ St. Paul’s 90 00 East Greenwich, Hampton. Miss A. E. C .. 5 00 St. Luke’s. 12 001 10 00 40 00 Lonsdale, Christ...... 30 00 10 00, “ s ...... 5 00 10 00 Newport, Mrs. Keene “ St. Luke’s... . and Mrs. Odell. 10 00 “ “ G — 5 00 Pawtucket. St. Paul's... 50 W. M. A ...... 50 00 52 00 40 00 Pontiac, All Saints’ ...... 2 00 10 00 50 00 115 19 Providence “ ...... 5 00 1 00 Shelboume, St. James’ . 25 00 “ Grace...... 10 00 5 00 Sherwood, Miss. School. 10 00 V Redeemer..... 15 00 9 00 1 00 2 00

“ St. John’s __ 40 00 125 00 Total...... 121 00 92 00 432 52 “ St. Stephen’s. 25 00 “ The Saviour.. 12 00, W e s t e r n M ic h i g a n . “ Mrs. G. H. Corliss 100 00 “ Mrs. Carrington. 10 00 Grand Rapids, St. Mark’s 25 2 10 4 25 Wakefield, Ascension... 2 00 “ “ Industrial Westerly, Christ ...... 1 00 22 00' 15 00 5 00 Diocesan B. W. A ...... 18 57 75 00 17 68 Holland, Grace...... Effle and Gerty. Total...... 95 57 24 00 205 00 468 18 Diocesan B. W. A., not credited to Parishes. 1 00 S o u t h e r n O h i o . Total ...... 16 25 2 35 9 25 Bellaire, Trinity...... 5 00 5 00 Chillicothe, St. Paul’s ... 15 00 22 75 W e s t e r n N e w Y o r k . Cincinnati, Advent__ :. 285 10 50 00 84 13 “ (Riverside) Buffalo, St. James’ Atonement... 5 00 Infant Class. 2 00 (Clifton) Coming, Christ...... 37 39 88 91 Calvary...... 5 00 Geneva, Trinity...... 60 00 65 50 46 00 52 50 560 REPORT OF TEE WOMAN'S AUXILIARY.

Domes­ Freed- Domes- Freed- tic. men. Indian. Foreign tic. meq. Indian. Foreign. West. N. Y .—Continued M i s c e l .—Continued. Hammondsport, $ $ $ $ $ 42 20 $ $ $ 5 00 St. James’ 4 50 Rochester, St. Luke’s— 95 19 55 10 82 70 165 31 »4 87 4 33 1 00 55 39 “ Mrs. W. S. Oliver. 10 00 ♦Total of Cash Receipts 189 08 130 60 128 70 256 72 from 33 Dioceses and 2 Missionary Jurisdic­ M iscellaneous . tions < all which may be found acknowledged in St. M a r k ’s T h e S p i r i t o f M i s - Friendly League. 2 00 1 00 10287 33 4404 20 14821 04 19949 48 W. Aux. Meetings...... 52 67 2 33 17 00 F. M. F ...... 33 39

* In addition to this money sent directly through the Missionary treasury, $24,106.51 have been reported as given in other ways by Branches of the Auxiliary. Of this sum $10,000 were the gift of a member of Trinity Church, Pittsburgh, for educational work in the West; Florida gave $1,404.73 for Missions within the Diocese. Long Island, $1,806.59, and Central New York, $2,309; while $3,676.40 were contributed by different Parish and Diocesan Associations to the Mexican League. p $ i a t witft f ataatijtrojg,

Sent by Parish and Associated Branches, and Individual Members o f the Woman’s Auxiliary,

From September, 1st, 1.880, to September 1st, 1881.

TO DOMESTIC AND DIOCESAN MISSIONS AND MISSIONARIES. ALBANY. CONNECTICUT— Continued. Branches. * Boxes filled. Value. Branches. Boxes filled. Value. Lebanon Springs, Our Saviour 1 $34 75 Salisbury. St. John’s...... 2 36 00 Troy, St. John’s ...... 4 418 64 Sharon, Christ...... 1 12 58 Thomaston, Trinity...... 1 50 00 Total...... 5 453 39 Washington, St. John's...... 1 11 25 Wolcottville, Trinity...... 1 64 00 CALIFORNIA. Middlesex Archdeaconry. Diocesan Branch...... 14 734 B5 Middletown, Holy Trinity...... 1 40 00_ San Francisco, St. Luke’s...... 2 9? 75 1Veto Haven Archdeaconry. Total...... 1C 832 30 Birmingham, Miss Jennie Shelton. 1 Branford, Trinity...... 2 35 00 CENTRAL NEW YORK Cheshire, St. Peter’s ...... 1 14 00 (Including Indian and Freedman) East Haven, Christ...... 1 5 00 estimated...... 91 3,066 77 Guilford, Christ ...... 1 11 45 New Haven, Christ...... 1 2 00 Total ...... 91 3,060 77 “ St. John’s ...... 5 284 75 St. Paul's...... 3 201 83 CENTRAL PENNSYLVANIA. “ St. Thomas’ ...... 3 219 28 Easton, Trinity ...... 2 130 00 “ Trinity...... 6 . 27G 15 Mauch Chunk, St. Mark’s ...... 1 130 00 “ Chapel...... 1 13 50 Philipsburgh, St. Paul’s ...... 1 57 65 Southford, Epiphany...... 1 10 00 Wallingford, St. Paul’s...... 1 75 00 Total...... ~4 317 65 Waterburv. St. John’s ...... / nn Waterville, St. Paul’s ...... f 1 1/0 w CONNECTICUT. Yalesville, St. John Evangelist’s.. 1 25 00 Fairfield Archdeaconry. Kew London Archdeaconry. Bridgeport, St. John’s...... 1 22 36 Brooklyn, Trinity...... 1 115 00 Easton, Christ ...... 1 400 Danielsonville. St. Alban’s ...... 1 20 40 Fairfield, St. Paul’s ...... 1 5 35 New London. St. James’ ...... 1 90 00 Newtown, Trinity...... 3 138 55 Pomfret, Christ...... 1 9000 Norwalk, St. Paul's...... 2 143 88 Diocesan. “ “ Young Peoples’ Bureau of Relief...... 7 224 70 Society ...... 2 150 90 Redding Ridge, Christ...... 2 10 00 Total...... 102 4,639 39 Ridgefield, St. Stephen's...... 1 750 South Norwalk, Trinity...... 2 23 50 FLORIDA. Southport, Trinity...... 4 176 1C Diocesan B. W. A ...... 10 Stamford, St. John's...... 3 485 00 Stratford, Christ...... 2 85 00 Total...... 10 Tashua, Christ ...... 1 5 25 Westport, Holy Trinity...... 2 16 32 FOND DU LAC. Hartford Archdeaconry. Neenah, Trinity...... 1 10 00 Bristol, Trinity...... 1 6 25 Ripon, Girls’ Society...... 1 6 00 Hartford, Christ...... 5 188 16 Good Shepherd...... 2 165 00 Total...... 2 16 00 (W.) St. James’ ...... 1 30 00 St. John’s...... 1 36 78 ILLINOIS. “ (E ) St. John’s ...... 1 20 00 Chicago, St. James’ Young Wo­ , “ Trinity...... 2 103 00 men’s Committee...... 1 42 00 New Britain, St. Mark’s ...... 1 75 00 Joliet, Christ...... 1 40 00 Stafford Springs, Grace...... 1 33 90 •Lockport, St. John’s...... 1 40 00 Unionville, Christ..’...... 2 18 00 Warehouse Point, St. John’s 1 80 00 Total...... 3 122 00 Windsor, Grace...... 1 37 00 Litchfield Archdeaconry. INDIANA. Bethlehem, Christ...... 1 11 00 Fort Wayne, Trinity...... 1 52 00 Kent, St. Andrew's...... 1 25 00 Indianapolis, St. Paul’s...... 1 51 32 Lime, Rock, Trinity...... 1 75 00 Logansport, Trinity...... 1 67 95 Litchfield, St Michael’s...... 4 225 24 Richmond, St. Paul’s S. S ...... 1 15 00 New Milford, 3t. John’s ...... 2 159 40 Plymouth, St. Peter’s ...... 1 25 00 Total...... ~4 186 27 562 REPORT OF THE WOMAN'S AUXILIARY.

IOWA. MASSACHUSETTS- Continued. Branches. Boxes filled. Value Branches. Boxes filled. Value. Davenport, Trinity...... 1 45 00 Boston, (Roxbury) St. James’ 2 284 25 (HelpingHand Soc.)... 1 141 50 Total...... 1 45 00 “ (South) St. Matthew’s .. 3 91 73 St. Paul’s ...... 3 690 60 KANSAS. “ “ S. S...... 39 00 Burlington, Ascension, Two Infant " Trinity...... 30 00 Classes...... 1 10 00 Cambridge, Christ...... 147 44 “ (North) St. James’ ... 190 00 Total. 10 00 “ St. John's Mem...... 243 00 Chelsea, St. Luke’s (A Member)... 8 00 LONG ISLAND. Fitchburg, Christ...... 90 28 Astoria, Redeemer...... 1 160 00 Hyde Park, Christ...... 32 ñO “ St. George’s, error in last Lawrence. Grace ...... 147 40 year’s report...... 1 128 00 Longwood, Our Saviour...... 347 20 Brooklyn,(£. D.) Christ.ClassNo. 5, 1 23 25 Lowell, St. Anne’s ...... 207 00 “ Grace...... 6 856 28 “ St. John’s Parish Aid Soc.. 14 20 “ Holy Trinity Chapel 1 70 00 Newton, Grace, Ladies’ Missionary “ Redeemer...... 2 850 12 Society...... 121 84 “ Reformation...... 1 150 00 Newton, Grace, Guild...... 65 00 “ St. Ann’s...... 2 250 00 Newton Lower Falls, St. Mary’s, “ St. George’s ...... 1 80 00 (Two Ladies)...... 10 00 “ St. James’ ...... 3 108 60 Quincy. Christ...... 31 00 “ “ Industrial School 1 45 00 ! Salem, St. Peter’s ...... 147 54 “ St. Luke’s ...... 2 290 00 ¡Taunton. St. Thomas’ ...... 321 85 “ St. Mark's...... 2 139 09 ! Worcester, All Saints’ ...... 100 30 “ St. Mary’s Guild...... 1 85 00 “ St. Matthew’s ...... 1 200 00 Total ...... 43 4,328 47 “ A Friend ...... 1 Flushing, St. George's...... 2 895 13 MICHIGAN. Glen Cove, St. Paul's Guild 1 84 60 Alpena, Trinity...... 1 253 00 “ Society of St. Agnes... 1 105 00 Detroit, Christ...... 1 180 00 Hempstead. St. George’s ...... 1 100 00 “ St. John’s ...... 2 257 00 Jamaica. Grace...... 1 13-2 00 Newtown, St. James’ ...... 1 87 00 Girls’ Society...... 1 50 00 Queens Co Association. St. Paul’s...... 4 448 65 Glen Cove, St. Paul’s ...... 30 00 St. Peter’s ...... 1 1G 00 Jamaica, Grace ...... < 15 00 180 00 Newtown, St. James’ ' 25 00 Monroe, Trinity...... 1 42 56 Rockaway, Trinity...... 35 00 Alpena, Trinity...... 11 00 Woman’s Missionary Association, 18 50 of the Diocese...... 2 160 20 Detroit Christ...... 21 25 — i “ Emmanuel...... 13 00 Total...... 36 (Val. of 35)4,124 27; “ Grace...... 20 00 I “ Mariners’ ...... 10 00 LOUISIANA. i “ St. James’ ...... 10 00 New Ofleans, Miss K. Dykers 1 001 “ St.John’s ...... 25 00 — i *’ St. Paul’s...... 18 00 Total. 00! “ St. Peter’s ...... 12 20 I East Saginaw. St. John’s 3 50 HAINE. ¡Jackson, St. Paul’s ...... 18 00 Brunswick, St. Paul’s...... 2 22 001 Monroe, Trinity...... 16 25 Oldtown, St. James’ ...... 1 6 30 Miscellaneous 7 35 Augusta, St Mark's...... 42 59 Bath, Grace...... 21 00 Total...... 13 1,600 26 Brunswick, St. Paul’s ...... 82 40 Damariscotta...... 10 00 MINNESOTA. Eastport, Christ...... 32 Minneapolis, Gethsemane...... 1 Hallo well, St. Matthew’s ...... 5 St. Paul, St. Paul’s...... 1 Oldtown, St. James’, ...... 12 Portland. St. Luke’s...... 113 Total...... 2 (Val. o f : Saco, Trinity...... 27 MISSOURI. Total. 373 04 St. Louis, Christ...... 5 MARYLAND. Total...... 5 464 73 Annapolis, St. Anne's...... 1 78 89 NEW HAMPSHIRE. Baltimore, Grace...... 2 200 00 Claremont, Trinity...... 1 24 25 “ Mt. Calvary...... 1 250 00 Concord. St. Paul’s ...... 3 188 52 Emmorton, St. Mary’s...... 1 25 00 Dover, St. Thomas’, a lady...... 1 2 25 Georgetown, Christ...... 1 55 00 Exeter, Christ...... 1 34 75 “ St. John’s...... 3 65 00 Hanover, St. Thomas’ ...... 1 33 00 Jessups, Trinity...... 1 125 00 Keene, St. James’ ...... 3 100 00 Washington, Ascension...... 3 405 00 Manchester, Grace...... 1 30 00 “ Epiphany,...... 3 450 00 West Claremont, Union Church... 1 20 00 “ Incarnation...... 8 252 18 “ St. John's...... 6 500 00 Total...... 12 432 77 “ “ (Some Ladies’ Lenten work)...... 1 125 00 NEW JERSEY. District of Columbia Branch 1 25 00 Beverly, St. Stephen’s ...... 2 244 43 Burlington, St. Mary’s ...... 129 18 Total...... 26 2,556 07 East Long Branch, St. James’. .. 107 00 Elizabeth, Christ ...... 130 00 MASSACHUSETTS. “ St. John’s ...... 466 31 Andover (N.) St. Paul’s Mission... 1 91 77 B. W. A ...... 102 05 Boston, Emmanuel...... 8 574 47 “ Miss Ball...... 27 00 “ “ (a member) 1 6 00 Morristown, Trinity...... 62 00 “ Good Shepherd...... 8 60 60 Mount Holly, St. Andrew’s...... 100 00 “ Messiah...... 1 68 00 “ Trinity...... 180 70 REPORT OF THE WOMAN'S AUXILIARY. 568

NEW JERSEY—Continued. NORTHERN NEW JERSEY—Contfnued. Branches. Boxes filled. Value. Branches. Boxes filled. Value. New Brunswick, Christ and St. Belleville, Christ...... ] John’s ...... 3 256 77 Bergen Point, Trinity...... Perth Amboy, St. Peter’s ...... 1 90 00 Franklin, Grace...... Plainfield, Grace...... 2 160 0i' Jersey City Heights, St. John’s. “ Holy Cross...... 1 320 001 Madison. Grace. Princeton, Trinity...... 1 75 00 Newark, Christ Riverton. Christ...... 3 70 00 “ Grace...... South Amboy. Christ & St. Peter’s 1 47 94 “ St. Barnabas’ ...... Trenton, St. Michael’s ...... 1 120 00 “ (Woodside) St. John’s. ------“ Trinity...... 740 88 Total...... 29 2,500 3t' ’ Orange, (East) Christ...... Grace...... (South) Holy Commun­ NEW YORK. ion...... Greenburgh, Zion...... 1 100 00 St. Mark’s...... Irvington, St. Barnabas’ ...... 2 170 00 St. Paul’s...... Matteawan, St. Luke’s ...... 1 75 00 Summit. Calvary...... New Brighton, Christ...... 3 274 00 Members of League...... “ “ Young Ladies’ Soc. 1 325 00 Newburgh, St. George’s...... 1 30 00 Total...... 29 3,578 21 “ Miss AUerly...... 1 25 (X) Newr York, Annunciation...... 1 inn m OHI°- 107 43 Ascension...... 2 222 29 Akron, St. Paul’s ...... iv2 o- '• Canton, St. Paul’s — ...... 5 00 Beloved Disciple...... 1 143 35~ Cleveland, All Saints’ ...... 1 00 Calvary...... 1 “ Grace...... 4 80 “ A few friends.. 1 100 00 “ St. Mark’s ...... 7 00 “ Young Ladies.. 1 “ St. Mary’s...... 81 12 Christ...... 1 280 00 St. Paul’s...... 162 00 Christ, A member...... 1 “ Trinity...... 171 RH Grace...... 14 1,494 24 Cuyahoga Falls, St. John’s ...... 5 00 “ Chapel...... 4 232 00 Kremont, St. Paul’s ...... 81 00 Heavenly Rest...... l 275 00 Gambier, Holy Spirit...... 5 25 Holy Apostles’ ...... 1 33 27 Hudson, Christ...... 12 40 Holy Communion...... 4 740 on Huron, Christ...... 30 15 Holy Spirit...... 4 jj™ 001 MassiHr,n, St. Timothy’s...... 16 00 Incarnation...... 1 ¡"2 22 Mount Vernon, St. Paul’s ...... 45 00 Intercession...... 4 o-k 07 Norwalk, St. Paul’s...... 100 00 Redeemer...... 1 *7“ ~~iOberlin. Christ, “ Busy Bees” ...... 3 50 St. Ann’s ...... 1 Painesville, St James’ ...... 50 00 St. Bartholomew’s.... 4 io2 m 1 Peninsula, Bethel and outside St. George’s ...... 1 120 on friends ...... 10 50 St. James’ ...... X 300 00 Sandusky, Calvary...... 7 50 (Fordham) St. James’ . 2 100 00 “ Grace ...... 34 54 St. John Baptist’s..... 1 122 00 Steubenville, St. Paul’s...... 52 89 St. Mark’s ...... 3 510 00 Toledo, Trinity...... 92 75 “ Mrs. D. C.Weston 1 45 00 Youngstown, St. John’s ...... 2 137 00 St. Stephen’s (estimat­ ed) ...... 11 1,226 71 St. Thomas’ ...... 12 N K T0tal...... » Transfiguration...... 4 678 1 6 PENNSYLVANIA. Trinity Chapel...... 8 1,334 7! : Coatesville, Trinity... , 80 00 Zion. 453 4t j Conshohockin, Calvary 173 61 Ladies...... 6 (Val. of 3) 195 70 Lower Merion, St. John’s...... 248 00 Nyack, Grace 12 00 Philadelphia, Lower Dublin, All Saugerties. Trinitv...... 29 22 Saints’ ...... 150 no Sing Sing, St. Paul’s ...... 100 00 “ Ascension...... 146 72 Wappinger’s Falls. Zion. 150 00 “ Germantown, Calvary.... 375 00 Westchester, St. Peter’s. 80 00 “ Germantown, Christ...... 324 85 White PJains, Grace ...... 43 00 “ Christ...... 161 Od Yonkers, St. John’s ...... 4 565 00 “ “ Chapel...... 175 00 “ St. Paul’s ...... 2 200 00 “ Holy Apostles...... 212 63 “ Holy Comforter (Memor­ Total ...... 123 14,222 55 ial Chapel)...... (Val. of117) “ Holy Trinity...... 1 1,766 06 “ “ Young Ladies’ Bible Class...... 120 00 NORTH CAROLINA. “ Holy Trinity Memorial Lenoir, St. James’, Little Girls... 1 Chapel...... 150 00 “ Incarnation...... 127 00 Total. “ “ Young Ladies’ Class...... 31 00 “ Mediator...... 250 00 NORTHERN NEW JERSEY. “ Nativity...... 54 25 Bergen Point, Trinity...... 1 278 00| St. Andrew's...... 505 00 Hackensack. Christ...... 1 130 00 St. Clement’s...... 10-1 98 Jersey Citv Heights, St. John’s ... 3 500 37 St James’ ...... 13 2,270 06 Madison, Grace...... 1 122 22 (West) St. James’ ...... 90 00 Montclair, St. Luke’s ...... 1 110 00 Germantown, St. Luke’s. 2 835 00 Morristown, Redeemer...... 1 197 53 St. Mark’s ...... 3 525 TO “ St. Peter’s ...... 1 m 20 (West) St. Mary’s...... 2 250 00 “ (Woodside) St.John’s 1 15 75 Gei mant’n, St. Michael’s. 2 150 CO “ Trinity...... 1 137 5* St. Peter’s ...... 4 525 00 Orange, (East) Christ...... 2 233 00 Young Ladies’ Orange, Grace...... 2 265 00 Bible Class...... 5 455 6c “ (South) Holy Communion 1 353 73 Germantown, St. Peter’s. 4 261 35 St. Mark’s...... 4 77 00 St. Stephen’s ...... 8 815 67 Paterson, St, Paul’s ...... 1 175 00 (West) The Saviour 5 429 00 Pomp ton, Mrs, Ludlum...... 1 18 00 Transfiguration...... l 286 43 564 REPORT OF THE WOMAN'S AUXILIARY.

PENNSYLVANIA.—Continued. SOUTHERN OHIO—Continued. Branches. Boxes filled. Branches. Boxes filled. Value. Pottstown, Chri=t ...... 1 Newark, Trinity...... 4 147 00 West Chester, Holy Trinity...... 3 Portsmouth, All Saints’ ...... 1 60 00 “ “ Ladies’. 1 Springfield, Christ...... 1 70 87 Diocesan Committee...... 5 Total. 2,364 33 Total...... 97 15 (Val. of 96) VERMONT. PITTSBURGH. Brandon, St. Thomas’ ...... 1 29 85 Allegheny. Christ...... 1 150 00 Burlington, St. Paul’s ...... 2 380 83 Oil City, Christ, “ Bishop Kerf oot” " Rock Point, Girls’ Mis­ Class...... 1 sionary Society 3 28 15 Pittsburgh, Calvary...... 1 Enosburgh, Christ...... 1 12 00 “ St. Andrew’s...... 1 Montpelier “ 1 10 00 “ Trinity ...... 1 Northfield. St. Mary’s...... 1 25 00 Rutland, Trinity...... 1 93 00 Total...... 5 St. Albans, St. Luke’s ...... 1 140 00 Vergennes, St. Paul’s...... 1 19 20 RHODE ISLAND. Woodstock, St. James’ ...... 1 127 63 Barrington, St. John’s...... 1 35 00 Bristol, St. Michael’s ...... 3 175 00 Total...... 13 865 66 East Greenwich, St. Luke’s...... 1 92 00 Newport, Trinity...... 2 689 00 WESTERN MICHIGAN. Pawtucket, St. Paul's...... 1 10 00 Allegan, Good Shepherd...... 1 13 00 47 00 Battle Creek, St. Thomas’ ...... 1 20 75 “ “ Trinity___f 45 00 Hastings, Emmanuel ...... 2 46 77 Providence, All Saints’ Memorial.. 1 100 00 Kalamazoo, St. Luke’s ...... 1 125 00 “ Grace...... 6 371 50 “ Willing Hands Society 2 30 00 St.John’s ...... 7 433 35 “ St. Barnabas’ and St. “ St. Stephen’s ...... 3 163 15 Luke’s S. S...... 1 51 07 Barrington, St.John’s ...... Ludington, Grace...... 1 9 44 Bristol, St. Michael’s, $57...... Niles, Trinity...... 1 24 00 Central Falls, Rt. George's...... Paw Paw, St. Mark’s ...... 1 5 00 East Greenwich, St. Lukes, $83. “ “ S. S., $25 Total...... 11 325 03 Lonsdale, Christ, $76...... Man ton, St. Peter’s...... Phenix, St. Andrew's Mission, $3 WESTERN NEW YORK. Pontiac, All Saints’ ...... Buffalo, Christ...... 1 175 00 “ St. Luke’s ...... 1 Providence, All Saints’, $31.32... 390 84 “ Grace, $70.43...... 617 58 “ Trinity...... 5 “ St. James'...... “ “ By error in report for ’79-’80...... 20 00 “ St. John’s, $47...... 290 00 “ St. Stephen’s, $70.. Geneseo. St. Michael’s ...... 3 Geneva, Trinity...... 3 241 00 “ St. Thomas’ ...... Niagara Falls, St. Peter’s...... 1 34 G3 ■* The Saviour...... Rochester, Christ...... 4 307 00 Wakefield, Ascension...... “ St. Luke’s...... 3 493 06 Warwick, a daughter o f the 853 84 Church...... “ St. Paul’s ...... 3 Westerley. Chr ist, $130...... Total...... 24(Val.of23) 2,805 37 Woonsocket, St. James’, $8... Total...... 32 WEST VIRGINIA. Wheeling, St. Matthew’s ...... 1 117 00 SOUTH CAROLINA. Beaufor«, St. Helena's...... 1 Total. 117 00 Total. 65 00 WISCONSIN. Beloit, St. Paul’s, A member 2 25 00 SOUTHERN OHIO. Madison, Grace...... 3 64 50 Chillicothe, St. Paul’s ...... 1 83 97 Milwaukee, All Saints’ ...... 3 262 98 Cincinnati (Walnut Hill) Advent.. 6 588 85 “ “ A member.. 1 44 56 “ “ Our Girls. 1 87 05 “ St. James’ ...... 1 75 00 “ Infant Class Society... 2 38 50 “ St. Paul’s ...... 5 134 75 ‘‘ (Riverside) Atonement. 1 25 00 Racine, St. Luke’s ...... 2 188 06 “ (Clifton) Calvary 5 282 85 “ Christ...... 5 302 74 Total...... 17 794 85 “ (Avondale) Grace 1 140 00 (Collage Hill) “ 1 45 00 MISCELLANEOUS. “ St. John’s ...... 2 165 00 Twenty Minutes Society...... 3 400 00 Dayton, Christ...... 1 175 35 St. Paul’s, Evansville, Ind., and Delaware, St. Peter’s ...... 1 31 15 St. Ann’s, N. Y. City...... 1 50 00 Lancaster, St. John’s ...... 1 60 00 Special Committee...... 9 Marietta, St. Luke’s ...... 1 21 50 “ Young Ladies’ Guild 1 40 00 Total...... 13 (V al.of4) 450 00

816 Boxes, value given (average $84.43)...... $68,900 20 29 Boxes, value not given (same estimate)...... 2,448 65

Total, 845 Boxes, Value...... $71,348 85 REPORT OF THE WOMAN'S AUXILIARY. 565

TO HOME COLORED PEOPLE. ALBANY. Branches. Boxes filled. Value. Massachusetts—continued. Troy, St. John’s ...... 1 53 36 Branches. Boxes filled. Value. Cambridge, St. John’s Memorial... 1 125 00 Total...... 7 53 36 Dedham, Good Shepherd, A Sun­ day-school class 1 4 00 CENTRAL PENNSYLVANIA. St. Paul’s ...... 1 70 00 Lancaster, Mrs. H. K. Benjamin.. 1 7 00 Fall River, Ascension...... 1 02 55 Mansfield, St. James’ ...... 1 10 00 Hingham, Mission...... 1 25 00 Longwood, Our Saviour...... 1 70 00 Total...... 2 17 00 Newton, Grace, 28 12 “ Lower Falls, St. Mary’s.. 28 00 CONNECTICUT. Springfield, Christ...... 16 75 Fairfield Archdeaconry. Worcester, All Saints’ ...... 57 14 Bridgeport, St. John’s...... 2 54 90 Several Friends...... 20 00 Trinity...... 1 202 50 Amherst, Grace...... 3 00 Fairfield, 9t. PauTs...... 1 14 Boston, St. Paul’s...... 24 00 Longhill, Grace ...... 1 6 55 “ Trinity...... 3 00 Redding Ridge, Christ...... 1 1 53 Brookline, St. Paul’s ...... 3 00 South Norwalk, Trinity...... 1 10 50 Cambridge, St. John’s Memorial 5 00 Southport, Trinity...... 3 208 Gloucester, St. John’s...... 25 00 Stamford, St. John’s ...... 1 49 72 New Bedford, Grace...... 26 55 Stratford, Christ...... 1 51 00 Newburyport, St. Paul’s...... 6 00 Westport “ 1 23 74 Salem, St. Peter’s : ...... 12 00 “ Holy Trinity...... 1 6 03 Massachusetts Bible Society, Hartford Archdeaconry. through Miss Gordon...... 6 25 South Glastonbury, St. Luke’s 1 40 00 Litchfield Archdeaconry. Total...... 30 1,852 88 New Milford, a lady...... 2 Watertown, Christ...... 2 MICHIGAN. Woodbury, St. Paul’s ...... 1 Detroit, Christ...... 2 Middlesex Archdeaconry. “ Emmanuel...... Middletown, Christ ...... 1 “ Grace...... “ Holy Trinity...... 1 Dexter, St. James’ ...... New Haven Archdeaconry. Flint, St. Paul’s, Two boys...... Birmingham, St. James’ ...... 1 Jackson, St. Paul’s, Children’s So. Meriden, St. Andrew’s...... 1 Romeo, Miss M. M. Bailey...... New Haven, Ascension ...... 2 Ypsilanti, St. Luke’s...... “ Grace...... 1 “ St. Paul’s...... 1 Total. 340 88 “ St. Thomas’ ...... 1 Waterville, St. Paul’s ...... 1 NEW JERSEY. New London Archdeaconry. Bridgeton, St. Andrew’s Brooklyn, Trinity...... 2 41

OHIO. RHODE ISLAND. Branches. Boxes filled. Value. Branches. Boxes filled. Value. Cleveland, Emmanuel...... 1 3500 Barrington, St. John’s ...... 1 20 00 “ Good Shepherd...... 3 50 61 Newport, Emmanuel...... 1 140 00 “ “ Four S. S. Pawtucket, St. Paul’s...... 1 8 00 Classes...... 1 2 75 Providence, The Epiphany...... 1 55 00 “ 8t. Mark’s ...... 1 7 00 “ Grace...... 2 137 00 “ “ Sewing-school 1 13 00 Woonsocket, St. James’ ...... 1 100 0« St. Mary’s ...... 1 18 50 Bristol, St. Michael’s ...... “ Trinity...... 1 35 00 Central Falls, St. George's...... Cuyahoga Falls, St. John’s 1 15 00 East Greenwich, St. Luke’s ...... Gambier, Holy Spirit...... 3 119 10 Lonsdale, Christ...... Hudson, Christ...... 1 20 00 Manville, Emmanuel ...... Lima, Christ...... 1 10 00 Newport “ ...... Mansfield, Grace...... 1 40 00 Pawtucket, St. Paul’s, $17.78.... Marion, St. Paul’s ...... 1 32 25 Providence, All Saints’, $4...... 431 28 Massillon, St. Timothy’s S. S 1 14 00 “ Grace...... Sandusky, Calvary...... 1 5 00 “ St. James’, $14...... Grace...... 1 100 00 “ St. John’s...... Steubenville, St. Paul’s ...... 1 20 00 “ St. Stephen’s ...... Youngstown, St. John’s...... 1 6300 “ The Redeemer,...... “ The Saviour...... Total...... 22 600 21 Die. B. W. A ...... 1 to 00 PENNSYLVANIA. Total...... 13 Oil 28 Holmesburg, Emmanuel...... 1 53 93 Philadelphia, St. Clement’s 1 3 00 SOUTHERN OHIO. “ St. James’ ...... 1 23 40 Cincinnati, (Walnut Hills) Advent. 1 58 00 “ 8t. James the Less. 1 107 00 “ Our Girls...... 1 55 00 “ (Ger.) St. Luke's 2 865 00 “ Christ...... 1 94 13 St. Mark’s ...... 2 6320 Delaware, St. Peter’s ...... 1 66 75 “ A Member 1 82 00 Lancaster, St. John’s ...... 1 35 00 St. Peter’s ...... 1 105 00 Newark, Trinity...... 2 132 00 (Ger.) St. Peter’s Piqua, St. James’ ...... 2 87 96 and friends 1 Pomeroy, Grace...... 1 84 00 “ St. Stephen’s 2 82 00 “ Miss Coles’ Lenten Total ...... 10 512 84 Sewing-class 1 60 00 ,l (Germantown) Mrs. VERMONT. G. D. Purviance. 1 60 00 Brattleboro’, St. Michael’s ...... 3 104 50 “ Ascension...... St. Johnsbury, St. Andrew’s...... 1 44 81 “ Christ...... “ St. James’ ...... Total...... 4 149 31 “ “ the Less “ St. Jude's...... k ogc "jq St. Luke’s ...... 5 255 38 WESTERN NEW YORK. “ St. Mark’s ...... Buffalo, St. Luke’s ...... 1 64 11 “ St. Peter’s ...... Geneseo, St. Michael’s ...... 2 60 00 “ St. Stephen’s...... Phelps, St. John’s, Willing Work­ “ Holy Trinity...... ers...... 1 20 00 West Chester, Junior Missionary Society...... 1 50 00 Total...... 4 144 11 A. Lady...... 1 WISCONSIN. Total...... 22 (Val. of 20)1,309 01 Beloit, St. Paul’s, a Member...... 1 12 50 PITTSBURGH. Total. is so Meadville. Christ...... 2 174 52 Pittsburgh, Calvary...... 1 77 11 MISCELLANEOUS. “ Trinity...... 1 160 00 Special Committee...... 5 Total...... 4 411 63 Total...... ~6 196 Boxes, value given (average $47.18)...... •...... $9,332 22 11 Boxes, value not given (same estimate) ...... 518 45 Total 209 Boxes, Value...... $9,850 67"

TO INDIAN STATIONS. ALBANY. CONNECTICUT. Branches. Boxes Filled. Value. Fairfield Archdeaconry. Gonverneur, Trinity, Young Chris­ Branches. Boxes filled. Value. tian Workers ...... 1 11 62 Bridgeport, Christ...... 2 48 50 Troy, Miss F. A. Gilbert...... 1 10 28 Easton, Christ...... 1 3 50 Fairfield, St. Paul’s ...... 1 4 50 Total...... ~2 21 90 Norwalk, St. Paul’s ...... 1 Redding Ridge, Christ...... 1 8 04 CALIFORNIA. Southport, Trinity...... 2 118 05 Suison, Helena C. Bead...... 1 Stratford, Christ...... 1 5 00 Westport “ 1 2 00 Total...... 7 Holy Trinity...... 1 2 12 Hartford Archdeaconry. CENTRAL PENNSYLVANIA. Farmington Mission...... 1 60 00 Carbondale, Trinity...... 1 10 75 Hartford, Christ...... 1 21 62 Easton, Trinity...... 1 50 00 “ St. James’ ...... 1 5 00 “ St. John’s...... 1 67 70 Total. 60 75 Trinity...... 1 17 00 REPORT OF THE WOMAN'S A UXILIARY. 5 6 7

CONNECTICUT—Continued. MASSACHUSETTS. Branches. Boxes filled. Value. Branches. Boxes filled. Value. ParkvlUe, Grace Chapel...... 1 8 45 Boston, Advent...... S 71 43 Southington Mission...... 1 1 00 ‘'1 “ Girls’ ‘.Friendly So­ Suffleld, Calvary...... \ 7 50 ciety 40 00 Archdeaconry...... 1 83 34 “ Emmanuel ...... 258 07 Middlesex Archdeaconry. “ Messiah...... 12 00 Durham. Epiphany...... 1 34-38 “ (Roxbury) St. James’...... 64 90 Middlefield, St. Paul’s ...... 1 4 50 “ (Dorchester) St. Mary’s__ 66 00 Middle Haddam, Christ...... 1 7 25 “ (South) St. Matthew's...... 100 00 Middletown, Christ...... 1 27 95 “ St. Paul’s ...... 111 00 Holy Trinity...... 2 210 00 “ Trinity...... 885 00 Portland, St. John Baptist’s...... 1 10 (JO Brookline, St. Paul’s ...... 110 88 “ Trinity and Pocansett Cambridge, St. John’s Memorial.. 05 25 Mission...... l* 73 00 Dedham, Good Shepherd ...... 4 00 New Haven Archdeaconry. “ St. Paul’s ...... 80 00 Waterbury, St. Margaret’s Sch l 75 00 Fitchburg, Christ...... 53 50 New London Archdeaconry. Greenfield, St. James’ ...... 62 75 Now London, St. James’ ...... 1 X^awrence, Grace...... 60 07 183 50 Lenox, Trinity...... 28 50 Diocesan. Longwood, Our Saviour...... 205 00 Bureau of Relief...... 1 2 60 Newburyport, St. Paul's ...... 88 92 Newton, Grace...... 68 50 Total...... 81 1,033 00 Pittsfield, St. Stephen’s ...... 125 00 Salem. Grace ...... 32 00 DELAWARE. “ St. Peter’s...... 88 CO New Castle, Immanuel ...... 1 75 00 Stockbridge, St. Paul's...... : 175 00 Webster, Reconciliation...... 49 05 Total. 75 00 Worcester, All Saints’...... 144 »1 Mis, F. B. Ellison...... 25 00 EASTON. Margaret Coffin P. Bk. Society__ 6 25 Trappe, Mrs. J. W. Martin...... 1 Several Friends...... 110 00 Amherst, Grace...... 39 50 Total...... ~1 Andover, Christ...... 89 05 ILLINOIS. “ Bequest of a Lady.... 71 90 Chicago, St. Stephen’s, S. S. class. 1 Beverly, St. Peter’s...... 12 00 Freeport, Zion...... 1 Boston, (Dorchester) All Saints’. 10 51) New Lenox, Grace ...... 1 “ Christ...... 13 81 ‘ ‘ Chapel of theEvangelists 35 00 Total...... 8 50 00 “ Good Shepherd ...... 35 00 (Charlestown) St. John’s 26 50 INDIANA. “ (Roxburv) St. John's.... 47 GO Richmond, St. Paul’s S. S ...... 1 St. Mark’s...... 29 50 Brookline, St. Paul’s...... 30 75 Total. Cambridge, Christ...... 42 20 (North) St. James’ .. 21 00 IOWA. St. Peter’s...... 31 24 Warerley, St. Andrew’s S. S. class 1 13 00 Danvers, Calvary...... 40 00 Hanover, St. Andrew’s ...... 20 00 Total. 13 00 Hyde Park, Christ...... 41 00 Jamaica Plain, St. John’s...... 8 88 50 KANSAS. Lowell, St. Anne’s...... 30 81 Atchison, Trinity. 1 Lynn, St. Stephen’s...... 38 89 Malden, St. Paul’s ...... 17 00 Total . 1 Marblehead, St. Michael’s.___ 24 23 Melrose, Trinity...... 18 37 LONG ISLAND. New Bedford, Grace...... 68 75 Brooklyn (E.D.),Christ,Class No. 7. 1 Northampton, St. John’s...... 16 00 “ Grace...... 1 Peabody, St. Paul’s ...... 48 75 11 St. Ann’s ...... 1 Plymouth, Christ...... 13 60 “ St. George’s ...... 1 Quincy, Christ...... 25 00 “ St. Luke% S. S ...... 1 Salem, Grace, a parishioner.. 20 00 Islip, Emmanuel...... 1 Somerville, Emmanuel...... 10 00 “ St. Mark’s ...... 1 Springfield, Christ...... 35 50 Newtown, St. James’ ...... 1 Taunton, S t John’s...... 13 00 Van Deusenville, Trinity...... 16 00 Total...... 1 286 09 Waltham, Christ...... 10 00 Woburn, Trinity, a member... 6 00 MAINE. Augusta, St. Mark’s. Total...... 44 8,750 23 Bath, Grace...... Brunswick, St. Paul's.___ Eastport, Christ...... MICHIGAN. Exeter, Trinity Mission.., Alma Mission...... 1 6 00 Hallowell, St. Matthew’s. Pontiac, Zion...... 1 83 10 Oldtown, St. James’ ...... Portland, St Luke’s...... Total...... 8 88 10 Saco, Trinity......

Total. 43 78 MISSISSIPPL Natchez, Trinity S. S. Guild 1 60 20 MARYLAND. Baltimore, Grace ...... 182 00 Total. 60 20 “ Memorial...... 155 00 “ Mrs. Geo. Guest...... 15 00 Emmorton, St. Mary’s ...... 50 89 NEW HAMPSHIRE. Washington, Ascension...... 150 00 Exeter, Christ...... 1 10 00 “ St. Mark’s ...... 63 00 Nashua, Good Shepherd...... 1 16 00 Total. 615 89 Total...... g 26 00 568 REPORT OF THE WOMAN'S AUXILIARY.

NEW JERSEY. PENNSYLVANIA—Continued. Branches. Boxes filled. Branches. Boxes filled, Value. Beverly, St. Stephen’s S. S 2 Whitemàrsh, St. Thomas’ ...... 1 15 00 Elizabeth, B. W. A ...... 1 Indians’ Hope...... 4 265 00 Hadd onfield, Grace...... 1 Mount Holly, St. Andrew’s 3 Total...... 21 1,181 00 “ Trinity...... 1 Perth Amboy, Holy Cross...... 2 Princeton, Trinity...... 2 PITTSBURGH. Riverton, Christ...... 1 Meadville, Christ, Little Soldiers,. 1 25 00 Sewickly, St. Stephen’s...... 1 45 00 Total...... 13 850 00 Total...... ~2 70 00 NEW YORK. Edgewater, St. Paul’s ...... 1 1 34 RHODE ISLAND. New Dorp, Mission School...... 1 42 00 Pawtucket, Trinity...... 1 50 00 New York, Calvary...... 2 Providence, St. John’s ...... 1 225 00 “ Free Chapel 1 Bristol, St. Michael's, $20...... St. Stephen’s ...... 1 80 00 Crompton, St. Philip’s ...... St. Thomas’ ...... 3 340 78 East Greenwich, St. Luke’s__ “ Young Ladies’ Soc. 8 162 61 Newport, Emmanuel, $10...... Transfiguration...... 1 125 00 Pawtucket, Trinity, $3...... 9 562 00 Zion...... 1 152 53 Providence (South) Christ, $10.. Mrs. D. LeRoy...... 1 “ Redeemer...... Wappingers’ Falls, Zion,Children’s And other Parishes through In­ Society...... 1 48 70 dian Aid...... West Brighton, Ascension...... 1 Westchester, St. Peter’s ...... 2 101 25 11 837 00 Yonkers, St. Paul’s, Young La­ dies’ Society...... 1 7 50 SOUTHERNOHIO. Columbus, Trinity...... 1 37 86 Total...... 20(Val.ofl5) 1,094 Si Delaware, St. Peter’s ...... 2 119 50 45 00 NORTHERN NEW JERSEY. Hillsboro’, St. Mary’s ...... 2 Orange (East) Christ S. S. Class T o ta l...... 5 202 36 No. 9...... 1 70 43 Orange, St. Mark’s ...... 1 150 00 Bergen Pt., Trinity...... 14 25 VERMONT. Franklin, Grace...... 7 50 Chester, St. Luke’s ...... 1 62 02 Jersey City Heights, St. John’s. 19 92 Poultney, St. John's...... 1 20 00 Madison, Grace...... 6 24 St. Albans, St. Luke’s...... 1 50 00 Newark, (Woodside) St. John’s.. 2 00 Bellows Falls, Immanuel f ■, 25 00 “ St. Barnabas’ ...... 25 00 Shelboume, Trinity Mission j 21 55 “ Trinity...... 5 50 “ Grace...... 41 50 Total...... 4 178 57 “ St. Mark’s ...... 58 50 “ (South) Holy Communion 12 75 Summit, Calvary...... 67 20 VIRGINIA. Petersburg, St. Paul’s ...... 1 25 00 Total...... 5 480 79 Total...... 1 25 00 OHIO. Ashtabula, St. Peter’s ...... 1 75 00 WESTERN MICHIGAN. Cleveland, St. Mary’s...... 1 41 60 Holland, Grace, a little Girl 1 1 50 “ Trinity...... 1 110 60 Marshall, Trinity, Children...... 1 5 00 Collamer, St. Paul’s ...... 2 54 25 41 00 Fremont, St. Paul’s...... 1 Total...... 2 6 50 Sandusky, Grace...... 2 166 95 Total. 489 40 WESTERN NEW YORK. Buffalo, Miss E. W. Rochester.... 1 18 00 PENNSYLVANIA. “ St. John’s, Little Girls— 1 31 85 Downineton, St. James’, Sewing School...... 1 12 00 Total...... 2 4S 85 Philadelphia (Germantown) Cal­ vary...... 1 100 00 70 00 WISCONSIN. Philadelphia, Evangelists...... 1 Beloit, St. Paul’s, a Member 1 12 50 “ Incarnation...... 1 84 00 “ (Northern Liberties) 12 50 St. John’s 1 30 00 Total...... 1 “ (Germantown) St. Luke’s 3 193 00 “ St. Peter’s 3 120 00 MISCELLANEOUS. “ The Saviour 2 150 00 Special Committee...... 10 “ 411 Spruce Street 2 83 00 Mrs. F. Graff...... 1' 59 00 Total...... 10

200 Boxes, value given (average $56.35)...... $11,270 21 15 Boxes, value not given (same estimate)...... 26

Total, 215 Boxes, Value...... $12,110 47 REPORT OF THE WOMAN'S AUXILIARY.

TO FOREIGN STATIONS. CENTRAL PENNSYLVANIA. NEW YORK. Branches. Boxes filled. Value. Branches. Boxes filled. Value. Milford, Good Shepherd Sewing- Clifton, St. John’s ...... 2 58 00 school...... 3 00 New York City, Annunciation 1 4 00 “ Calvary, Young Ladies’ 1 25 00 Total. 3 00 “ a working-woman of the Benevolent CONNECTICUT. Society...... 1 1 00 Waterbury, Trinity. 40 00 “ Christ...... 1 26 00 “ St. Stephen’s, and B. & Total. 40 00 P. B. Society 1 20 00 “ St. Thomas’ Young MARYLAND. Ladies’ For. Society. 1 49 00 Georgetown, St. John’s...... 1 7 00 “ Diocesan Committee... 8 101 60 Washington, St. John’s...... 1 25 00 Total...... Tl 285 46 Total.... 32 00

MASSACHUSETTS. OHIO. Boston, Good Shepherd., 24 30 Gambier, Holy Spirit. 50 00 50 00 “ (Highland) St. John’s... 25 00 Total...... 50 00 “ (Dorchester) St. Mary’s. 1 00 “ (South) St. Matthew’s... 20 00 “ St. Paul’s ...... 2 00 St. Phoebe’s PENNSYLVANIA Guild...... 2 5 00 Philadelphia, Bishop Potter Mem. Cambridge, Christ...... 4 25 House...... 1 10 00 St. John’s S. S., Six “ Incarnation...... 1 38 00 Little Girls...... 4 00 “ (Germantown) Mme. Long wood, Our Saviour...... 5 00 Clement’s 1 Lynn, St. Stephen’s ...... 11 53 Mrs. William Welsh. 1 30 00 Salem, Grace, a member...... 13 00 Diocesan Committee...... 8 (Val of 2) 63 25 Diocesan B. W. A ...... 1 53 61 Total...... 7 (Val. of 5) 141 25 Total...... 4 218 69 MICHIGAN. VIRGINIA. Detroit, Grace. 15 00 Alexandria, Ladies. 70 00 Total...... 15 00 Total... 70 00

27 Boxes, value given (average $31.68)...... $855 40 2 Boxes, value not given (same estimate).-...... 63 36 Total, 29 Boxes, value...... $918 76

The Special Committee, in sending 26 Boxes to different Mission fields, acknowledge the receipt o f contributions from Miss McDwaine’s S. S. Class, E. Orange, N. J .; St. Michael’s, Bristol, R. I .; Miss C. Voorhees’ S. S. Class, South Amboy, N. J .; Maine B. W. A .; Mt. Holly, N. J .; Grace and St. George’s , Brooklyn, L. I.; MissL. Wyman’s Class, Covington, K y.; Riverton, N. J.; Skaneateles, N. Y .; Greenwich, Conn.; State Charities Aid Association of N. Y .; Dover, N. H .; Ascension S. S., Rhinecliff, N. Y .; Infant Class, St. James’ S. S., Buffalo, W. N. Y .; St. James, Hammondsport, N. Y., and from many individual members of the Auxiliary. Packages of S. S. papers have also been sent to different Missions by many persons interested, and several volumes added to the Domestic and Foreign Missionary Libraries.

SUMMARY OF YEAR’S WORK AS RECORDED IN TABLES Accomplished in 43 Dioceses and 1 Missionary Jurisdiction by Diocesan and Parish Branches and Individual Members of the Auxiliary. "Mo n e y . Domestic...... $10,287 33 Freedman...... 4,404 20 Indian...... 14,821 04 Foreign...... 19,949 48 Total...... §49,462 05 Domestic ...... $71,348 85 Freedman...... 9,850 67 Indian...... 12,115 47 Foreign...... 918 76 Total...... $94,233 75 Total, in Money and Boxes...... ; ...... $143,695 80 THE TWENTY-SECOND ANNUAL REPORT OF THE EXECUTIVE COM­ MITTEE OF THE AMERICAN CHURCH MISSIONARY SOCIETY, SEPTEMBER 1ST, 1881.

T h e Executive Committee present to the The next year, 1878, the Treasurer 6ays, Society the Twenty-second Annual Report “ The entire indebtedness of last year, over of their work. $7,000, has been paid in full with the ex­ Brief reference to the condition of the ception of four hundred dollars due on loan, Society four years ago, the position then and all current expenses of this year have assumed, and its course since, seems desi­ been met to date. Also, on January 1st, rable in connection with its present work. 1878, a reduction of fifty-five per cent, was In 1877 the Report of the Executive Com­ made in the expenses of the Society.” mittee says, ‘ ‘ For the first time in the his­ That year the balance on hand at its tory of our Society, we have been unable to close was $1,000; the next year, 1879, it send to the Missionaries their full amount at rose to $4,000; in 1880 to over $6,000; and the stated time, and some of them have this year the balance on hand, in cash and been suffering foj; it.” It adds, “ The pres­ bonds, at its close, is also over $6,000. ent condition of our important work, both Only one year in the twenty-two years of at home and in Mexico, and our resources, the history of the Society have the Mission­ curtailed by the pressure of four years of aries failed to receive their full amount at financial struggle, calls for earnest thought the stated time. and prayer, and for active effort from every In each of these four years, from 1878 to member of our Society.” 1881, we have commissioned between thirty That earnest thought and prayer were not and forty Missionaries, the number varying lacking; and, in the same year, our Com­ from thirty-three to thirty-nine. mittee of Conference with the Board of The receipts for the general work have Missions recommended, in the following averaged sixteen thousand dollars per an­ words, that the Society should become aux­ num, ranging between fifteen and eighteen iliary to the Board of Missions, v iz: thousand. “ In view of the state of things in our The expenses have not in any year since Church, and of the work of the American 1878 reached the amount at which they were Church Missionary Society, your Committee then placed when the reduction of fifty-five are of the opinion that it would be wise for per cent, was made, and this year they have the Society to adopt the proposed arrange­ been less than in any preceding year. ment, and would beg leave to offer the fol­ It thus appears that the advice of our lowing resolutions : Committee of Conference appointed in 1877, “ Resolmd, That the terms of agreement en­ that the Society should retain its Adminis­ tered into by the Committee of Conference tration as well as its Organization, was emi­ appointed by the Board of Missions and this nently wise and beneficial. Society, by which the American Church Tour Executive Committee, acting in con­ Missionary Society retains its Charter and sultation with the Bishops of the Church its Organization, and the Administration connected with the Society, carefully con­ and Appropriation of the funds it 6hall re­ ceive for its different fields of labor, be sidered the above mentioned facts, and also hereby approved and ratified by the Board inquired concerning the opinion of the o f Missions.” members of the Society at large, in refer­ REPORT 0 Ì THE AMERICAN CHURCH MISSIONARY SOCIETY. 571 ence to a resolution referred to them at the For the Ely Professorship of Griswold last Annual Meeting which looked to plac­ College, Iowa, it holds as follows : ing the work of the Society entirely under Property in Fort Wayne. Indiana, valued at $5,725 the control of the Domestic Committee, and, In bond and mortgage on farm lands in Iowa, 1,600 on Nov. 1st, 1880, passed the following In bond and mortgage on property in Chicago, 7,000 In United States bonds, 5,861 resolution : “ Resolved, That the work o f the Ameri­ Total, - - - 20,18« And on account of the Anthon Professorship, can Church Missionary Society shall be of the same, in bonds, . . . 11,800 continued as heretofore.” PUBLICATIONS. It was not deemed expedient to call an The Register has been issued as a quarterly earlier meeting of the Society than this, the Missionary paper, part of it being devoted Special Committee considering it better to to the children, who receive it in return for submit their conclusions, as they now do, their offerings through the Missionary Post- in connection with the report of the year, to office. The Twenty-first Annual Report the details of which your attention is now was printed in full, and also in abstract as a directed. circular for the pews. FINANCES. SUPPLIES TO MISSIONARIES. The receipts have been, for the general work of the Society, from parishes and indi­ Never have these gifts of the ladies been viduals ...... $12,828 38 more helpful or highly appreciated by the For objects kindred to the work, but not tinder the control of the Committee - 568 79 workers. It would be gratifying if we For Foreign Missions including Mexico - 1,163 15 could obtain the statistics of their dona­ tions more fully. Total .... $14,560 82 The balance in the Treasury, August 31, BOXES OF CLOTHING, ETC., SENT TO OUR MIS­ 1881, w a s ...... 2,038 42 SIONARIES. Trinity Mission Church, London, Ohio, 1 Box, LEGACIES. estimated value, - - - - $ 50 00 The Society has received on account of Holy Trinity Church, Philadelphia, Pa., 1 Box, the legacy of the Rev. Alvah Sanford, de­ and 1 Package, estimated value, - 120 00 St. Michael’s Church, Trenton, N. J., 1 Box, ceased, $2,044, and from Mrs. Ann estimated value, - - 120 00 Edwards, of Washington, D. C., deceased, Church of the Incarnation, New York City, $100. 10 Boxes, estimated value, - - 1,200 00 St. Paul’s Church, Chester, Pa., 1 Box, esti­ By the death of Mrs. Mary R. Miller, of mated value, - - - 118 00 Rhinebeck, N. Y ., in March last, a deed St. Andrew’s, West Philadelphia, Pa., 3 Boxes, which has long been in the possession of the estimated value. - 200 00 Christ Church, Brooklyn, L. I., 1 Box and 1 Society takes effect, conveying to us the Barrel, estimated value, 251 00 Rectory adjoining Ascension Church, Rhine- Christ Church. Bay Ridge, L. I., 1 Barrel and cliff, N. Y., the parish school building and 1 Package, estimated value, - - 130 00 Zion Church, Newport, R. I., 1 Box and 1 Bar­ three lots of land on which they stand, the rel, estimated value, - . - 150 00 church also being in our possession. The Church of our Saviour, Brooklyn, L. L, 1 Box, will further provides for a bequest of $5,000 estimated value, . . . n o 00 St. George’s Church, New York City,1 Box, as an invested fund for the support of the estimated value, - - - - 115 00 Missionary work of that church. By Bome St. Andrew’s Church, Wilmington, Del., 1 Box, unexpected delay in the probate of the will, estimated value, - - - 172 00 St. Matthias, Philadelphia, Pa., 2 Boxes, esti­ this amount has not yet been paid to us. mated value $300, and Cash $50, - - 850 00 SECURITIES. St. Andrew’s Richmond, Staten Island, N. Y., The Society holds for our own account 1 Box, estimated value, - - - 185 00 St. Paul’s, Cheltenham, Pa., 1 Box, estimated $2,000 invested in four per cent. United value, - - - 175 00 States bonds, part of the legacy of Miss Trinity Church, Williamsport, Pa., 1 Box, esti­ mated value. - - 40 00 Charlotte S. Harrison, deceased ; and St. Peter’s Church, Baltimore, Md., 1 Box, $1,689, of its general fund invested in the estimated value, * 82 00 same manner. Also a promissory note for Total, - - 83,568 00 $400, bearing interest, and the deeds of Ascension Church, Rhinecliff, N. Y., to­ DOMESTIC MISSIONARIES. gether with the deeds for the Rectory and We have commissioned thirty-seven Mis­ School-house .adjoining the church .and-for sionaries,-seven have resigned and one died, the lands attached.thereto. leaving the present number twenty-nine. 572 REPORT OF THE AMERICAN CHURCH MISSIONARY SOCIETY.

Their fields of labor have been as fol­ extensive fields in Northwestern Iowa which lows, in sixteen Dioceses and Missionary are filling up so first, and we responded by Jurisdictions : Colorado, 2; Delaware, 5; sending another laborer to Cherokee and parts Iow a,3; Kansas, 3; Minnesota, 1; Missouri, 1; adjacent. The Bishop speaks most highly Nebraska,2; Nevada, 1; New York, 2; North­ of the gentleman we selected, the Rev. ern New Jersey, 1; South Carolina, 1; South­ S. H. Johnston, who is proving himself an ern Ohio, 1; Tennessee, 1; Texas, 1; Virginia, efficient Missionary. At Emmetsburg in his 7; West Yirgina, 5. recent visitation the Bishop was met by two ABSTRACTS OF MISSIONARIES’ REPORTS. of our Missionaries, the Rev. Messrs. Hale W e shall endeavor, from the full annual Townsend and S. H. Johnston, “ Who,” he reports just received, to give such facts as says “ are each striving single handed to do fairly present the work accomplished in each the work of half a dozen men.” field. A true picture of Western work is given in COLORADO. the report of the Missionary to Cherokee. Durango in the knot of the Rocky Moun­ He has labored but four months. Six tains, one hundred miles from any railway, have been baptized, five confirmed, fifteen has been the centre of our operations here. added, a Sunday-school organized, a brick The Missionary entered this new field in church worth $1,800 completed, paid for, the coldest part of last winter, living in a and consecrated; $250 secured toward a rough cabin and working among the miners. parsonage fund, a communion service of He soon secured property worth more than plate received, and a bell promised. He $2,000, built a church with saw-dust floor has also visited seven other stations and and canvas windows, and again proved our commenced work in each. We do not Church to be, as she often is, the pioneer, wonder that the report adds that he has the first on the ground to occupy for J e s u s. been dangerously ill after riding forty-six His church has been consecrated, his cabin miles in a farm wagon under the burning enlarged, and some comforts thrown round sun of August. him and his hardy, faithful wife. Messrs. Hale Townsend and Kemp are as At Fort Collins, etc., another laborer is in abundant in labors as ever, and very suc­ a different field. The town is surrounded cessful. “ A t Emmetsburg,” Mr.. Town­ by an agricultural district with an increas­ send says, “ the handsome and thoroughly ing population. A new railroad is opening built church, our only one in twenty coun­ through the place, coal mines are being de­ ties, is paid for and consecrated. At Shel­ veloped, gold has been discovered in the don, subscriptions toward a church amount mountains near, and all is excitement. to over $1,100, the lots are secured, and “ These things will bring,” says the Mis­ builders making estimates.” sionary, “ a class of citizens which will The Rev. Dr. Kemp tells ue of three churches need religious influence, and which must be in course of erection and two more soon to met by the Missionary of the Cross with an be begun. Both of these laborers unite with open hand, an open heart, and an open Bishop Perry in asking for more men. The church. For this provision must be made immigration of substantial English settlers of an extensive nature, on a generous scale in large numbers, gives peculiar opportuni­ of Christian liberality, which is more and ties for our Church in this region. more needed out West.” KANSAS. DELAWARE. The work in Kansas has had some discour­ There has been no change in the number agements. The Rev. T. B. Dooley, at Saiina, of our laborers in this Diocese. was long sick, finally resigned his Mission, At Georgetown a new church is approach­ and soon after died. ing completion, and a Sunday-school build­ Yictoria, our newest point, has a. beauti­ ing will also be erected. ful and valuable church building erected by The chapel at Long Neck has had ex­ a wealthy gentleman who has deceased. tensive additions and repairs made, nine The members are scattered upon their farms, have been confirmed and twenty-seven added for the town is small and this section has by baptism. suffered for several years from drought, the IOWA. burning heat of this last summer being the Earnest appeals have been made for the heaviest burden of all. The Missionary is REPORT OF THE AMERICAN CHURCH MISSIONARY SOCIETY. 573 laboring on in faith, with a reduced in­ ing Bishop Whitaker in Virginia City and come, and hoping almost against hope. has two stations beside. At Emporia in “ The Golden Belt,” as the N EW YO RK . wheat region of the south is called, a better Sad bereavement has visited our Rhinecliff work is being done, and the Missionary Mission this year. Rev. Dr. Savage, who thinks that concentration at that railroad had ministered here for fifteen years, rested centre is our best course at present. from the labors of a long and useful life in MINNESOTA. January last, and Mrs. Mary R. Miller, who The outlook here is always bright and by her means, her personal efforts, her ener­ opening new vistas of usefulness. Seven gy and wisdom, had done so much in this stations in a wide district, one of them place, also died during the year. reaching out into Dakota, fully occupy our The Chapel of the Ascension, a beautiful earnest Missionary. He says, “ We preach church on the high bank of the Hudson, has in school-houses, and halls, and borrowed long been in the possession of the Soci­ buildings, all along the line, as we have no ety, and the additions which Mrs. Miller has church between the Mississippi and the Red made in her bequests place in our care a River of the North, one hundred and forty very valuable property. miles. At Yalley City, Dakota, a beautiful As soon as possible a temporary appoint­ small stone church has been erected the past ment was made, and the Rev. Mr. Taylor,of summer, and will be ready for use shortly in Rondout, ministers regularly to the people, the rough state.” He has also labored some- and with much acceptance. The chapel, wnat at the Chippeway Indian Mission. which seats three hundred, is now full, a MISSOURI. class for Confirmation has been presented, At Carthage, our only point here, a Sun- and the fine Sunday-school well maintained. day-school of eighty, thirty-five communi­ When the full care of an able Clergyman cants, a church repaired, and a united par­ shall have been secured, a good work can ish, speak of work done. undoubtedly be done. NEBRASKA. SOUTH CAROLINA. The Mission at Beatrice became self-sup­ If the view presented at this point can be porting this year and Bishop Clarkson asked regarded as representative of our Southern us to enter upon new work in his Diocese. country, a bright prospect opens. Five con­ We selected a Clergyman of the Irish gregations are under the care of this Mission­ Church who has recently come to our country ary, three white and two colored. Manufac­ with very high recommendations and sent tures of various kinds are being established, him to Palls City, and other stations, one of and people coming in. Of St. George’s them fifty miles away. He has proven him­ Kaolin, the Missionary writes, “ Nothing self to be an earnest, evangelical man, and about this beautiful church is wanting. It a haed and cheerful laborer. He writes, is situated between two large factories, with “ You will be pleased to hear I am daily a factory population around of twelve hun­ more and more encouraged in my Mission dred beside the planting population. With­ work. The congregations are increasing in a few years,” he adds, “ more than $1,400 steadily. I am now beginning to realize have been expended in restoring the church the importance, the great blessing, the and Rectory at Edgefield.” In conclusion Church Missionary Society is to this Western he says, “ I am now ready to retire, if two country. God only can truly estimate the Missionaries of living, active faith in Jesus fruits of the work which the friends of this would take my place, for, owing to the cap­ much needed society enable its servants to ital seeking investment, and large enter­ accomplish in this vast field of labor.” He prises opening, an important work would speaks of some of the best families in liis sta­ be placed before them.” tions identifying themselves with our Church, SOUTHERN OHIO. of plans already laid for building, and he The Rev. Mr. Rambo has added Athens mentions one Service when some attended County to his labors in Hocking County, the who had been in no place of worship for mining region extending through both. He twenty years. truly says, “ It is a work requiring patience.” NEVADA. TENNESSEE. We have one Missionary here who is aid­ The fruit of four years of earnest labor has 574 REPORT OF THE AMERICAN CHURCH MISSIONARY SOCIETY. been gathered in at Knoxville, and a fine to gladden our hearts and help us keep church costing $4,000 has been presented, ahead.’ free of debt, for consecration. The living A tried and trusted laborer, the Rev. T. stones of the invisible temple have not been H. Lacey, who was formerly in this Diocese, wanting, as two Confirmations have been has just returned to take up the work at held in the new church. Fifty communi­ Hinton and Lewisburg, which Mr. Lee was cants, a Sunday-school of sixty, and a popu­ compelled to leave. lation of three thousand to labor among, are It is of this field that Bishop Peterkin the elements of the parish, speaks in his report, where he admirably

TEXAS. describes the method which our Church has W e consented to the appointment of the adopted as her method in all her great work; Rev. J. J. Page in Texas as soon as he should he says: find a suitable field; but, after a short stay “ In the history of these two stations dur­ he decided to remove to another Diocese. ing the past two years, we have evidence of what can be done by faithful effort, even VIRGINIA. where it may seem to be a day of very small Some points in this Diocese present new things. features of interest. In the Rev. Mr. Hund­ “ The annual visit of the Bishop has led ley’s field an old colonial church has been on to the visit of the Missionary once every purchased, which is estimated as worth $1,- two months. The few scattered and dispir­ 500. Services will be held in it by our Mis­ ited communicants, about sixteen in number sionary. At Wicomico, in Northumberland have grown to nearly forty, a lot has been County, a similar purchase was made three subscribed in each place, and such moneys years since, “ purely on faith,” as the Mis­ subscribed towards church-buildings, that it sionary words it ; but this year has seen the is safe to anticipate the erection of a neat money paid, a fine congregation gathered, chapel in each Mission during the next ten communicants added, and a good Sun­ twelve months. It is by the brave and faith­ day-school in operation. ful prosecution of such work all over the From Blacksburg, a faithful layman State that our scattered people are to be writes, that since the Rev. N. P. Dame left cared for, and many others gathered into them, they have been without a Missionary the fold for their highest good, and the and will need our help to secure another. strengthening and development of our be­ WEST VIRGINIA. loved Church.” This Diocese continues to manifest vig­ CONCLUSION. orous life. In our broader field, in seventeen Mission­ After too short a service the Rev. F. D. ary Jurisdictions and Dioceses, we have kept Lee has had to retire from his work on ac­ close to this method, so that in every place count of ill-health, but in the short time he our Missionaries have worked with the chief labored successfully. His last report says, Missionary, the Bishop following with a glad “ During the last nine months the work in mind his godly admonitions. this field has gone on quite promisingly, one We think it has been fully shown that church having been built at Hinton, and these laborers have done brave and faithful considerable funds collected for another at work. Lewisburg.” The material interests which they have In the Rev. Mr. Buchanan’s field, progress secured in our rapidly developing country is reported. A beautiful little Gothic have not been slight, and will prove as church, ceiled with yellow pine, has just foundations for future structures,rather than been completed at New Martinsville; a com­ as the seeds of a wondrous harvest. fortable Rectory will soon be done at Mounds- In church buildings and Rectories alone ville, costing $1,600; thirty-one have been the report shows a present value of $41,600 confirmed, and the faithful preaching of secured, and most of it this year, while it Ch r is t carried on at many stations. speaks of many other enterprises as begun. That these men need our support will ap­ It tells also of scattered communicants gath­ pear from the words of another Missionary ered in; of those who had neglected public who says, “ I was just three dollars and thirty worship for twenty years bowing the knee in cents ahead when the welcome check came adoration; of very many who never knew our REPORT OF THE AMERICAN CHURCH MISSIONARY SOCIETY. 575

Church and her hallowed services learning to promise while it is one of faith, of prayer, love the beauty of our Zion, and enroll­ of arduous labor, and it calls for renewed ing themselves among her children. zeal and effort more earnestly than ever. We might speak of the Missionary reven­ By order of the Committee. ues of our Society as ™ell invested -when W i l l ia m A. N e w b o l d , they have secured to the church, property to Financial Secretary and General Agent. the value of nearly $42,000 in one year; but this 42,000 is really an investment at more At a meeting of the Executive Committee than compound interest, in our growing o f the A merican Church Misbiokary Society, held October 10th, 1881, the fol­ West, for the future strength of our Church and for the evangelization of our country. lowing resolution was passed, v iz : But these material interests, great as they Resolved, That a copy of the Annual Re­ are, and not to be neglected as instruments, port of the Executive Committee to the sink into insignificance when compared with American Church Missionary Society, ap­ proved this day, be presented to the Board a fact mentioned by one Missionary; he offi­ of Managers of the Domestic and Foreign ciated at the prison,, baptized ten, and pre­ Missionary Society of the Protestant Epis­ sented eleven for confirmation, believing the copal Church in the U. S. A ., in conformity repentance and reformation to be sincere with Section 4th of the Articles of Agree­ of those who in prison walls gave up their ment between the American Church Mission­ assumed names for Ch r is t ' s sake, that they ary Society and said Board. might suffer shame for His cause. I certify that the above is a true copy Who shall estimate the future returns of taken from the minutes of the Executive such seed, when broadly cast over such a Committee of the American Church Mission­ land as ours, at that day when the angel ary Society. reapers shall gather the harvest of glory here? Tnos. C. J. Baily, Our Mission work is eminently one of Recording Secretary. FIFTH ANNUAL REPORT OF THE LEAGUE IN AID OF THE MEXICAN CHURCH

T he Corresponding Secretary respectfully idency the Lusitanian Church was also fully presents the Fifth Annual Report of the organized. The Episcopal supervision of League in Aid of the Mexican Branch of the these Churches having been committed to Church. him until their respective Bishops should be The year just closed has not been free from consecrated, Bishop Riley held a confirmation anxieties; but, under the guidance of the and an ordination service in both countries. Almighty, the cause in which we take so Having been a friend of the lamented deep an interest stands now upon a firmer Carrasco, who lost his life in the ill-fated basis, and is more rich in promise than at any Ville de Havre, on his homeward voyage, former period. after the meeting of the Evangelical Alliance The stated meetings of the League were, in this city in 1873, the Bishop was received as usual, suspended during the summer with the most affecting enthusiasm on his months, but a constant correspondence was arrival in Madrid; and it was a thrilling carried on with the laborers in Mexico and incident to preach the pure Gospel of our with our friends at hom e; while the General L oud J esus C h r is t to a crowded congrega­ Secretary, the Rev. Abbott Brown, availed tion in the city of Seville, with the tomb of himself of every opportunity to present the an officer of the Inquisition not far from the cause to the Church. pulpit, and with an open Bible before him; It had been hoped that the Right Rev. the for the reading of which, Matamoras, Car­ Bishop of the Yalley of Mexico would have rasco., and Cabrera had, a few years previous, been present at the meeting of the General suffered imprisonment and exile. Convention in October last, but his engage­ Señor Cabrera, the Bishop-elect of Madrid, ments in England, with special reference to a former Roman Catholic priest, is a man of the organizations of National Episcopal fine genius; and is said to have learned the Churches in Spain and Portugal, unavoid­ first word of the Protestant doctrine through ably prevented it. His absence was, how­ a Spanish Catechism for children, published ever, overruled for good; the Right Rev. in this city. the Bishop of Delaware making an able Bishop Riley left for his Diocese in De­ statement of the condition and needs of the cember, the Rev. Abbott Brown preceeding Church in Mexico before both houses of the him by a few weeks. General Convention; refuting some idle Before entering upon the details of our calumnies and dispelling some misty doubts. work, it seems fitting to express our deep Bishop Riley reached here in November, sense of the loss the Association has sus­ and during his brief sojourn made several tained in the death of the beloved rector addresses and preached in the Church of the of this parish, the Rev. Dr. Edward A. Holy Trinity. He told us of the cordial Washburn, to whom we are indebted for Christian welcome he had received in Eng­ wise counsels, patient guidance, and many land and Ireland, and of his deeply interest­ words of sympathy and encouragement. ing and important visitations to the Churches The extension of the Master’s Kingdom was in Spain and Portugal. He was present and the desire and aim of his life, and we can best presided at the first Synod held in honor his memory by like devotion to the Seville, and materially helped by his advice in service of our Sa v io u r . the orgnization of the Spanish Episcopal A resolution of profound regret was en­ Church which was then formally constituted; tered upon our minutes and transmitted to Señor Juan B. Cabrera being nominated as his bereaved family. Bishop-elect of Madrid. Bishop Riley subse­ The League is now represented in nine­ quently visited Portugal, and under his pres­ teen dioceses of the United States, and in REPORT OF THE MEXICAN LEAGUE. 577 the neighboring Diocese of Huron. The re­ we convey his thanks to all the youth­ ports from the Branches and Associations ful members of the League; to the band of are highly encouraging, and testify to the “ Willing Workers,” in Elizabeth, New untiring zeal and energy of their officers and Jersey; the “ Guild of the Golden Cross,” members. The meetings of the Central in Baltimore; and to the Sunday-school Board have been well attended, and the in­ Classes, for their loving efforts in behalf of terest greatly enhanced by addresses from the little ones in Mexico. the Bishop of the Valley of Mexico, the Rev. We have now to record, as a special bless­ Dr. John Cotton Smith, the Rev. Joshua ing, the acceptance of the Rev. Carlos Kimber, and Mr. Betancourt of Mexico. Enrique Butler of an invitation fronxBishop The Bishops of Delaware, Pennsylvania, and Riley to take charge of educational work in New Jersey, and many of the Rev. Clergy his diocese. have favored in like manner the meetings of For the consummation of this long-desired the Branch Leagues. object, we are indebted to the Right Rev. The absence of the General Secretary dur­ the Bishop of Pennsylvania; to the Rev. R. ing the past three months was in a measure C. Matlack; and to the members of the Phila­ supplied by his graphic and interesting com­ delphia Branch ; whose Secretary, with the munications from Mexico, which with those co-operation of a few friends, has provided of a lady of his party, are invaluable as the the outfit, and secured the funds for the testimony o f competent witnesses to the im­ journey of the Rev. C. E. Butler and family portance of the work, and the admirable to Mexico. manner in which the work is being con­ The Rev. Mr. Butler has the highest tes­ ducted. timonials, and being a native of Cuba, is The support of the Scholarships in the peculiarly fitted for this new field of duty, Theological Seminaries and Orphanages in where his counsel and aid will be most valu­ Mexico, appeals strongly to the sympathy of able, and where his arrival will be hailed our members ; and we are happy to announce with joy by the faithful and zealous workers. a large increase in their number. Five are His salary for the year is secured; and we maintained in the Theological Seminary ; should be greatly lacking in faith, if we did for four of which we are indebted to the not count upon it with confidence for many suggestion and valued efforts of our chief years to come. Rev. Mr. Butler leaves for officer, Mrs. Fordyce Barker. These are the Mexico on Thursday next, and will take Bishop Alfred Lee Scholarship, supported with him the assurance that many earnest in the Diocese of Connecticut ; the Bishop hearts at home will pray that he may be Stevens, by the Branch League of Philadel­ abundantly blessed, and so far as in them phia: one yet unnamed, by the Kentucky lies, will aid him in his Christian efforts. Branch; and the Rev. E. A. Washburn Me­ We must renew the grateful acknowledg­ morial, by the Woman’s Foreign Missionary ments of past years to the Editors of the Association of Calvary Church, New York. Churchman, Episcopal Register, Standard of The Bishop Riley Scholarship is supported the Cross, Southern Churchman, and Evangel­ by the Ladies’ Church Aid Society of Christ ical Churchman, of Canada, and to all others Church, Springfield, Ohio. who have published communications relating In the Orphanages, we now record seventy- tp the Church work in Mexico. two Scholarships; eleven of which have We also tender our thanks to Mr. Warbur- been raised this year. The ever-vigorous ton for his shorthand copy of Bishop Riley’s and generous Pittsburg Branch has added sermon in October last. seven to its list ; one of them being endowed, To Messrs. Brown Bros. & Co. we are un­ as a memorial to the Rev. Abel A. Kerfoot. der special obligations for their kindness in The Young Ladies’ Missionary Society, of having attended to the banking business of St. Thomas’ Church, New York, has like­ the League for the last five years, at their wise been most efficient, and has increased own charges, and we present them our cor­ the number to ten. dial thanks. The Bishop of the Valley of Mexico deems The receipts for the year ending April 19, the Christian training and education of the 1881, have been $20,257.87. young—the laborers of a future day— The expenditures have been as moderate a matter of paramount importance; and j as was consistent with the furtherance of the 678 REPORT OF TEE MEXICAN LEAGUE.

work; being limited to publications, adver­ his malady was pronounced incurable. It tisements, and a few other items. has since increased, rendering him unable to The publications during the year have discharge his ministerial duties. been as follow s: Annual Reports, Triennial Bishop Riley was urged to take charge of Reports, Bishop Lee's Address, Leaflets, and the vacant See ; and the field is now divided Envoy— 9,750 in all; in pages, 128,000. between him and the Bishop-elect Hernan­ The Envoy, our occasional paper, has been dez. Bishop Riley has the supervision of gratuitously circulated and well received. the congregations in the City of Mexico; We are much indebted to the Rev. Dr. and of the eighteen others in the towns and John Cotton Smith for the leading article in villages scattered through the Valley, which the last issue. has a circumference of over two hundred We are sincerely grateful to all who have miles. aided this movement for the extension of The jurisdiction of the Bishop-elect com­ “ the faith, once delivered to the Saints,” by prises 15 congregations in and about the establishment in Mexico of a National Cuernavaca, 6 in the neighborhood of Nopa- Branch of the Historic Church; and we ten­ la, and about a dozen others in the States of der our respectful thanks to Bishop Bedell, Pueblo and Vera Cruz; besides many others of Ohio, for his kind expression of confidence yet unformed, in various localities. in, and commendation of, the efforts of our Bishop Riley has already accomplished Society in liis sermon delivered at the clos­ much necessary organization of the Church ing of the General Convention. work; and, on the 16th of February, or­ We regret to announce the retirement of dained five candidates as deacons, and ad­ two of our valued officers. Mrs. Hcman vanced them to the order of Presbyters on Dyer, Recording Secretary, after serving the 22d. Their names are Señors Pioquinto most efficiently for over four years, was Orihuela, Luis Canal, Jacinto Hernandez, compelled by pressing duties to relinquish Joaquin Hernandez, and Juan Ramirez the position in January last. Mrs. Fordyce Arellano. Señor Orihuela is 73 years of age, Barker, our President, has recently tendered and was among the first to confess C h r ist her resignation, and expressed her regret openly, years ago when the Gospel was that she is obliged to decline the request of first preached in Mexico. He resides in the Executive Committee to reconsider her Joquicingo; and will be able to administer decision. From the formation of the League, the Communion in that distant district, Mrs. Barker has taken an earnest interest in where there has hitherto been no clergyman. the cause, and sought to promote its wel­ Señor Canal has been prominent in the fare by her personal influence and her liberal history of the Mexican Church, having had gifts. The surrender of the tie is a source charge of it after the death of Manuel Aguas, of sincere regret; and we present her, in the during the absence of Bishop Riley : he is a name of the League, the most cordial thanks man of talent and an able preacher. for the wisdom, efficiency, and fidelity, with Señor Ramirez Arellano is a man of great which she has discharged the duties of her faith, and has been laboring for years in the office. congregation of Xochitengo. The Church in Mexico has prospered in all Señors Jacinto and Joaquin Hernandez are its departments of work during the past the sons of the Bishop-elect— young unmar­ year; and the return of its beloved Bishop ried men of education and ability, and very has inspired it with increased life and inter­ eloquent preachers. Bishop Riley feels that est. The most affectionate greetings reached these newly ordained brethren are thoroughly him from the country congregations, and qualified for their high offices, and it is hoped many of their members hastened to welcome that many souls, now wandering in “ slip­ him. pery places,” may be gathered into C h r is t ’s The Diocesan Synod was convened shortly fold, through their faithful ministry. after his arrival, and the resignation of the The students in the Theological Seminaries Rev. Tomas Valdespino, as Bishop-elect, in the City of Mexico and in Cuernavaca are ■which had been tendered some months be­ being carefully instructed, and of the Boys’ fore, was accepted. It will be remembered School and Orphanage a correspondent that Señor Valdespino came to this country writes: “ We have now thirty-one boys in two years since for medical advice, and that our Orphanage ; Mr. Poncé de Leon with his REPORT OF TEE MEXICAN LEAGUE. 579 wife and daughter have charge of these little Archbishop’s Yicar, in the town of Morelia, ones ; there are also two good teachers, Sefior Michoacan, issued an edict recently to the Julio Trujillo, and Senor Francisco Canden- effect that Homan Catholics must have no osa. Including the day-scholars, the num­ dealings with Protestants, under penalty of ber of boys being educated by them is sev­ the highest excommunication. This is but enty. The future hope and prospect of the one instance of intolerance. Church must depend on the education of The brief statistics of the Mexican Branch a native ministry, and this we expect to find of the Church will show how firm a hold in our Boys’ Orphanage; hence, the great she has taken upon the people. There are necessity of taking care of these little lambs over 50 organized congregations ; 80 mission of Ch r is t ’ s flock. ” stations; 9 clergymen; nearly 70 lay workers; There are, at present, between 70 and 80 3,500 communicants; over 7,000 wor­ girls in the Girls’ Orphanage ; and a mem­ shippers; and 8 schools for the young. ber of the League has written: “ Mrs. Surely, her claim is great upon all who love Hooker’s Orphanage, as well as the Boys’ the L o r d J esus Ch r is t in sincerity. We School, I consider the most important branch most gratefully acknowledge that our efforts of the work. The children are the ones to have been wonderfully blest. Yet, the begin with ; and wheu I see the neatly-clad, magnitude and the promise of the work call modest, happy-looking, intelligent girls un­ for large liberality; funds are needed for the der Mrs. Hooker’s care, and think of the general work, and also for the special objects. antecedents of most of them, and what a Bishop Riley writes : “ I earnestly ask friends change her motherly teaching has made in to forward funds designated for building their very being, I think, if the Orphanage purposes to the Treasurer of the League aa alone were the object of the entire work, it fast as possible, as the need is very urgent.” would be sufficient to repay the interest taken The fine old Church of San José requires ex­ in it. Mrs. Hooker is, evidently, very fond tensive repairs ; it has been examined by an of her children ; and they appear to appreci­ architect, who says that ‘ ‘ an earthquake ate her attachment.” shock, which is liable to occur at any mo­ The Society for the “ Protection of ment, would entail serious damages.” Children,” and that of the “ Fraternal A lli­ In closing this Report, it is fitting to ance,” are very useful adjuncts of the work. acknowledge the general interest shown by The services in the Cathedral of San Fran­ our Mother Church in England and Ireland cisco and in the Church of San José de for the little martyr Church in Mexico. Gracia are most interesting; the large and This mutual sympathy in faith and works devout congregations, the sweet singing of binds us more closely together, and is an the children, and the forcible preaching of earnest of the fulfilment of the prophecy that the Gospel, are evidences of the value of the “ there shall be one fold and one shepherd.” movement. C h a r l o t t e A. H a m il t o n , In the Cathedral, the congregation num­ bers, on Sunday mornings, between three Corresponding Secretary. ] and four hundred ; and the daily services are April 19 th, 1881. well attended. The Sunday-school is com. N. B. Miss M. A. Stewart Brown reports : posed, not only of children, but of many The total amount contributed during their adults, who assemble with eager desire for fiscal year to the Mexican League was $20,- Christian instruction. 471,36, of which $1,000 was permanently Very encouraging and deeply touching re­ invested, $18,579.00 was paid to the Treas­ ports reach us from the country congrega­ urer of the Foreign Committee: of which tions, many of them self-supporting ; all of sum $17,373.00 was to be applied under the them fighting “ the good fight of faith,” appropriations to Mexico, and $1,206.00 to under obstacles difficult for us to conceive objects not covered by appropriation, prin­ of. Opposition comes from all sides; the cipally for building purposes. AMERICAN CHURCH BUILDING FUND COMMISSION.

T his Commission was established last Oc­ the 18th day of October, 1880, at the session tober, when both houses of the General of the Board of Missions, when Hon. L. Convention, in session as the Board of Mis­ Bradford Prince, of the Diocese of Long sions, joined in framing its organization, Island, introduced a resolution, which was and in directing its work. The membership adopted, as follows: of the Commission consists of all the Bish­ “ Besolved, That a Committee of five be ops, of one Clergyman and one Layman in appointed to take into consideration the each Diocese and Missionary Jurisdiction, general subject of adequate and systematic aid for the erection of new churches, and and of twenty members at large appointed especially to consider the expediency of or­ by the Presiding Bishop. Its object is to ganizing a Society of the whole American create a fund of One Million Dollars, to Church to promote church building, and of aid in building new churches where such inaugurating the formation of a Centennial assistance is desirable. Fund of a million dollars for that purpose: The Fund, as required by its Charter, is said Committee to report at the meeting of to be invested, and kept intact. The Com­ this Board on Monday next. In accordance with the above resolution, mission shall use all proper means in their the Bishop presiding (Bishop Lee) appoint­ power for the formation and increase of said ed the following Committee: Fund ; shall have the custody thereof, to in­ THE BISHOP OF WESTERN TEXAS, vest the same as shall seem to them expedi­ REV. N. H. SCHENCK, D.D., ent; and shall give the income thereof, and REV. D. O. KELLEY, loan portions of the principal, as they shall HON. L. BRADFORD PRINCE, deem proper: provided, however, that not MR. LEMUEL COFFIN. exceeding Five Hundred Dollars shall be At the next meeting of the Board of Mis­ donated to any one church ; and, also, that sions the Committee presented a report, where loans are made, the church so aided drawn up with great care, and with very shall be otherwise free from debt, that the considerable length, which need not be loan shall not exceed one-third of the prop­ quoted here, but some of the points of which erty loaned upon, shall be repaid to the may be stated, as follow s:— Commission in instalments within five years No necessity is so pressing at this time with reasonable interest, and shall be se­ upon the Church at large as the erection of cured by a bond and mortgage which shall churches in the newer settlements of our be a first lien on said property. country. It is time that the Church met The Commission has power to make by­ this necessity, by permanent and systematic laws and regulations for its government and methods. There can be no question of the the transaction of its business ; to organize importance of forming a Building Fund. No Auxiliary Committees in Dioceses and Mis­ man can estimate the benefit arising from sionary Jurisdictions, and to do all proper the annual donation of the income of a mil­ things for the carrying on of its work. It lion dollars to aid in the erection of church­ shall make an annual report of its proceed­ es. Supposing that income is $50,000 a ings, and of the condition of the Fund, to year, and that $500 is appropriated in aid the Board of Missions when in session, and of each church, a hundred new churches an­ to the Board of Managers thereof in other nually would be the result. There is room years. The Treasurer of the Domestic and for such an increase. One Bishop said he Foreign Missionary Society shall be Treas­ could build twenty-five churches in his Ju­ urer of the Commission. Twenty-five mem­ risdiction in one year if he could aid each bers of the Commission shall constitute a to the extent of $500. A donation, made quorum, when regularly convened. conditionally on the action of the people This Commission received its inception on assisted, is a stimulant to local effort of in­ AMERICAN CHURCH BUILDING FUND COMMISSION. 581

calculable value. The Church has ability in the Mission Rooms at the Bible HouBe, to raise $1,000,000 during the three years. New York, Bishop Elliott of Western Texas One dollar and a half a year from each com­ in the Chair, Mr. William G. Low was elect­ municant will reach the amount. An offer­ ed Secretary of the Committee, and Judge L. ing from every congregation in the land, B. Prince was requested to prepare a history annually, during the three years allotted to of the effort thus far, with an appeal in its the work, is recommended. Donations from behalf. individuals of large means and benevolence A t a meeting held December 14th, Bishop are also solicited. It is hoped the Fund Scarborough in the Chair, the Rev. Charles may be fully gathered before the meeting Howard Malcom, D .D ., assistant to the Rt. of the General Convention in 1883; and thus Rev. Henry C. Lay, D.D., LL.D., Bishop of be an offering to God as a memorial of His Easton, was elected Corresponding Secreta­ care in the past, and to be used in the ex­ ry. He entered upon his oS^ce the first day tension of His kingdom in the future; and of January. At the same meeting, it was that it may commemorate the Centennial of resolved to incorporate the Commission the American Church as a branch of the under the New York General Act. Church Catholic. At a meeting held January 4th, Bishop Appreciating the importance of organiz­ Scarborough in the Chair, it was voted ing the Commission before the adjournment to put forth a circular letter signed by of the General Convention, the Presiding the officers of the Committee, addressed Bishop (the Rt. Rev. Benjamin Bosworth to all the Bishops in behalf of the Commis­ Smith, D.D., LL.D.) promptly named the sion; and, also, the official headquarters of twenty members at large, and the other the Commission were established at Room Bishops the members from their respective 22, Bible House. Feb. 2nd a lithographed Dioceses and Jurisdictions. letter of Bishop Doane, President of the Ex­ On October 27, a meeting was held at ecutive Committee, was addressed to every noon, in the Church of the Holy Trinity, Bishop of the Church. At these, and at sub­ New York, presided over by Bishop Doane, sequent meetings of the Committee, various at which the following officers were elected: plans, which need not be particularly de­ scribed, were decided upon for carrying on President, the work B is h o p POTTER, of New York. The first year of the three years for ac­ Vice-Presidents, complishing the work has nearly expired. B ish o p s STEYENS, WHIPPLE, A great task has already been accomplished. CLARKSON, JAGGAR a n d ELLIOTT. It would require a volume, rather than a Secretary, brief report, to fully set forth all the work WILLIAM G. LOW, Esq. thus far accomplished. It has necessarily The Treasurer is the Treasurer of the been largely of the nature of construction. Domestic and Foreign Missionary Society, Such an immense and complicated mechan­ M r . L lo y d W . W e l l s , by resolution of the ism cannot be set in motion without much Board. painstaking care. A vast correspondence An Executive Committe consisting of the has been carried on, extending into every following persons (together with the Secre­ Diocese and Missionary Jurisdiction, and tary and the Treasurer) was then appointed: into all foreign Missions; six thousand cop­ b is h o p d o a n e (by vote of the Commission), ies of Judge Prince’s report, in pamphlet BISHOP SCARBOROUGH, BISHOP STARKEY, form, have been distributed throughout the REV. DR. DIX, HON. HAMILTON FISH, whole Church; about twenty-five thousand REV. DR. POTTER, S. P. NASH, ESQ., circular letters and appeals, lithographed, REV. DR. DYER, HOH. L. B. PRINCE, and printed, have been sent from the cen­ REV. DR. SCHENCK, MR. LEMUEL COFFIN, tral office to Bishops, Commissioners, Rec­ REV. DR. M’VICKAR, G. C. SHATTUCK, M.D., tors, Laymen, in every quarter of the Church REV. DR. LEEDS. MR. ORLANDO MEADS. at large; many carefully written articles upon The Executive Committee have held fre­ the subject have been furnished the Church quent meetings, and have given diligent press; sermons and addresses have been de­ work to the matter entrusted to their hands. livered; nine prominent Diocesan Conven­ At their meeting held November 23, 1880, tions have been attended, and by public ad­ 582 AMERICAN CHURCH BUILDING FUND COMMISSION.

dresses or conference with Bishops and Cler­ for arranging the organization ; and, also, gy, the interests of the Commission have been that according to the conditions of organi­ advanced; other Dioceses have been visited; zation in many Dioceses, as Albany, New many Bishops have issued a pastoral letter, York, Long Island, Pennsylvania, Ohio, etc., and made mention in their annual address, collections from parishes and other sources in favor of our work; Auxiliary Diocesan are pledged at various dates before the close Committees have been appointed; in many of the year 1881. The Treasurer’s abstract Dioceses a certain Sunday has been appointed is as follow s:— for an offering in every congregation for the Treasurer's Report. Commission; and, in brief, from Portland to From January 1st to August 31st, 1881. San Francisco the work is to-day going on, To amount received from Individuals $2,869 50 hundreds and thousands of earnest hearts “ “ “ “ Parishes...... 1,657 82 and hands lending it their co-operation, $4,527 32 through the help of Bishops, of Diocesan CREDIT. By Salary of Secretary...... $800 00 Conventions, of Auxiliary Committees, of “ Cash to Rt. Rev. G. F. Seymour, Rectors, of generous Laymen. for Mortgage on Property in The calls for help which have already Edwardsville, Illinois...... 600 00 “ Expenses for Printing...... Ill 31 come to the Commission prove the need of “ “ “ Advertising, Post­ this work. It is impossible to state these age, etc 90 00 calls here, but they are numerous and im­ 1,601 31 portant, and from various parts of the coun­ Balance of Cash on hand...... $2,926 01 try. In one case, the Commission by a The Treasurer also holds One Bond for One Hun­ prompt loan of $600, saved from sale and dred Dollars of '‘ The University of the South,” loss a church property worth $5,000! As presented by the Missionary Bishop of Western Texas. fast as the interest on the Fund accumulates Besides the cash receipts above shown, there are pledges to be redeemed within three years, for several it will be given to carry on the work for thousand dollars. which the Commission is established, and LLOYD W. WELLS, Treasurer.

thus at once be productive of good. With G o d ’ s blessing, and the enthusiasm An abstract of the Treasurer’s report is and generosity of the Church, the under­ appended. In due time a full report, giving taking appointed by the General Convention the names of persons and churches contrib­ will be successfully accomplished: yet, the uting, will be published. In presenting this Committee at this time, and in this manner, abstract it is but just to state that the work distinctly and urgently plead fo r a prompt, of the Commission was only begun in Janu- hearty and generous co-opet'ation upon the part uary of this year, and that this report there­ o f a l l Churchmen! fore covers only a period of eight months; WILLIAM G. LOW, that comparatively few returns are expected Secretary. At the beginning, as much time is required New York, September 1,1881. PARISHES CONTRIBUTING TO DOMESTIC AND FOREIGN MISSIONS, From Sept. 1, 1880, to Sept. 1, 1881.

Domes­ Foreign. General. Domes­ Foreign. tic. 1 tic. Alabama. A lb a n y —Continued. Autauga ville, St. Matthew’s .. $15 55 $ $ $ Anniston Grace...... 9 70 Bouquet, St. John’s Chapel... Birmingham, Advent...... Brush’s Mills, St. Peter’s...... Camden, St. Mary’s...... Carlo wville, St. Paul’s ...... 5 00 6 00 10 00 Oliootaw County, Calvary---- Claiborne, St. James’ ...... Cambridge, St. Luke’s...... Clayton, Grace...... 17 17 4 24 Dallas County, St. David’s... 70 82 34 50 “ “ Grace...... Decatur, St. Paul’s...... Demopolis, Trinity...... Elyton, St. John’s...... 5 50 Eufaula, St. James’ ...... Eutaw, St. Stephen’s...... 5 00 15 00 Evergreen, St. Mary’s...... Florence, Trinity...... 6 50 1 00 Fork of Greene, St. Mark’s__ Gainesville, St. Alban’s...... Conklingville, St. John’s...... Greensboro’, St. Paul’s...... 34 00 9 12 52 00 Greenville, St. Thomas’...... Hayneville, St. Andrew’s...... Coxsackie, Christ Ch...... Huntsville, Nativity...... Delhi, St. John’s...... 85 00 ■Jacksonville, St. Luke’s...... Deposit, Christ Ch...... Livingston, St. James’...... Duanesburgh, Christ Ch...... 12 57 Lowndesboro’ St. Paul’s...... Ellenburgh, St. Peter’s...... Macon, St. Andrew’s...... Essex, St. John’s...... Marengo Co., St. Michael’s__ Exeter, St. John’s...... Marion, St. Wilfred’s...... Mobile, Christ Ch...... 23 30 “ Good Shepherd...... “ St. John’s ...... 19 00 16 65 25 00 3 00 St. Mary’s...... Garrattsville, St. Mark’s...... Trinity...... 14 25 24 75 Glenn’s Falls, Messiah...... 17 25 9 16 (Spring Hill) St. Paul’s Gloversville, Trinity...... Montevallo Mission__ Gouvemeur, Trinity...... 9 53 Montgomery, St. John’s Opelika, Emmanuel__ Portland, Grace...... Pushmataha, Calvary... 5 70 10 71 Seale, Redeemer...... Selma, St. Paul’s...... 5 00 St. Stephen's, Grace.... Talladega, St. Peter’s ... 10 27 7 60 3 00 Tallassee, St. Mary’s..... Tuscaloosa, Christ Ch.. Tuscumbia, St. John’s.. Hoosick Falls, St. Mark’s...... 52 00 23 00 Union Springs, Trinity. 23 74 34 65 Uniontown, Holy Cross 10 84 Whistler, St. Paul’s . 25 00 50 00 5 00 20 00 Miscellaneous...... 5 00 5 00 5 08 10 07 Parishes cont. D. M .... 13 48 “ F. M...... 5 157 87 102 10 40 00 Lake George, (Caldwell) “ G. M...... 3 St. James’. Lansingburgh, Trinity...... 100 07 Albany. LawrenceviUe, St. Thomas’... Albany, All Saints’ Cath. Chap. 149 91 66 05 Lebanon Springs, Our Saviour 1 89 “ Grace...... “ Holy Innocents’ 46 75 10 00 “ St. Paul’s...... 690 00 275 00 “ St. Peter’s...... 120 00 200 00 278 32 “ Trinity...... “ Zioa...... Mechanicville, St. Luke’s...... Amsterdam, St. Ann’s ... Middleburgh, St. Luke’s...... Ashland, Trinity...... 6 00 Athens, Trinity...... Morris, Zion...... i 15 00 5 00 Ausable Forks, St. James’ .... 9 48 9 48 Morristown, Christ Ch...... BaUston Spa, Christ Ch. 15 00 159 60 Morristown Mission...... 584 Parishes Contributing to Domestic and Foreign Missions.

Domes­ Domes­ tic. Foreign. General. tic. Foreign. General. Albany—Continued. California—Continued.

Norfolk, Grace...... $ $ $ Bakersfield, St. Paul’s Mission i 8 $ $ Northampton, Redeemer. Centreville, St. James’ ...... 3 01 Norway, Grace...... Fresno City, St. James’...... 6 90 5 00 Oak Hill, St. Paul’s...... 2 00 Gilroy, St. Stephen’s...... Ogdensburg, St. John’s ... 65 99 Los Angeles, St. Athanasius .. Oneonta, St. James’ ...... 25 00 Martinez, Grace...... 1 50 Otego, Immanuel...... Oakland (Brooklyn), Advent.. Plattsburgh, Trinity...... 18 00 7 00 18 28 “ St.John’s...... Port Henry, Christ Ch.... 8 41 St. Paul’s...... 53 50 Portlandville, St. John’s .. ■ 2 00 Redwood City, St. Peter’s...... Potsdam, Trinity...... 254 47 349 00 Salinas, St. Paul’s...... Prattsville, Grace...... San Diego, Holy Trinity...... 10 00 10 00 Rensselaerville, Trinity .. 12 00 San Francisco, Advent...... Rouse’s Point, Christ Ch. Christ Ch...... Richfield, St. Luke’s...... “ Grace...... 19 00 “ Springs, St. Job “ Presidio Mission . 17 70 Salem, St. Paul’s...... 25 00 25 00 27 50 St. John’s...... Sandy Hill, Zion...... 6 36 6 36 St. Luke’s...... Saratoga Springs, Bethesd 16 84 St. Paul’s...... Schaghticoke, Trinity...... “ St. Peter’s...... 8chenectady, St. George’s 121 00 St. Stephen’s.. Christ Ch. 3 41 2 05 “ Trinity...... 50 00: 50 00 Schoharie, St. Andrew’s Ch’l... SchuylerviUe, St. Stephen’s... 12 13 San Gabriel, Our Saviour...... Sharon Springs, Trinity San Jose, Trinity...... 28 16 8pringfield (East), St. Paul’s.. Santa Barbara, St. Mark’s___ Stillwater, St. John’s...... “ Trinity...... 3 25 Stockport, St. John Evangelisl 60 00 75 00 Santa Clara, Holy Saviour___ StottvUle, St. Barnabas’ Ch’l.. Santa Cruz, Calvary...... Ticonderoga, Ch. of the Cross, San Mateo, St. Matthew’s...... 67 40 Troy, Ascension...... 25 00 San Rafael, St. Paul's...... “ Christ Ch...... 60 00 15 00 Santa Rosa, Incarnation...... “ Holy Cross...... 43 00 50 00 Sonora, St. James’...... St. John’s...... 350 36 877 33 Stockton, St. John’s...... “ St. Luke’s...... Watsonville, Grace...... St. Paul’s...... 24 60 “ “ Free Chapel... 205 00 Parishes cont. D. M...... 8 • UnadiUa, St. Matthew’s...... 10 00 195 51 149 41 20 15 Waddington, St. Paul’s...... “ G. M...... 2 Walton, Christ Ch...... 15 00 7 CO Warrensburgh, Holy Cross.... 7 42 3 00 Ce n t r a l N e w Y o r k . Waterford, Grace...... 25 09 Adams, Emmanuel...... West Bangor, St. Mark’s ...... Afton, St. Ann’s...... 7 10 6 48 West Burlington, Christ Ch .. Antwerp, St. Paul’s...... Westford, St. Timothy’s...... 2 48 Grace...... 1 3 24 West Troy, Trinity...... Auburn, St. John’s...... 1 89 Whitehall, Trinity...... St. Peter’s...... 1 2i0 00 170 00 Windham, Trinity...... Augusta, St. Andrew’s...... ; 4 39 2 28 Miscellaneous...... 52 50 846 55 Aurora, St. Paul’s ...... ! 1 51 Parishes cont. D. M...... 39 Bainbridge, St. Peter’s...... j 44 00 7 34 “ F.M ...... 29 2510 66 2132 09 1780 00 Baldwinsville, Grace...... 6 96 6 68 " G. M...... 24 Big Flats, St. John’s...... Binghamton, Christ Ch...... 99 19 20 69 Arkansas. Good Shepherd. 32 60 Arkadelphia...... 68 Augusta, St. Paul’s...... Batesville, St. Paul’s...... 13 00 12 00 !Camden, Trinity.. Camden, St. John’s...... 10 00 15 20 5 25 4 34 1 48 Conway, St. Peter’s...... 4 SO Candor, St. Mark’s...... 7 57 Dardanelle, St. Paul’s...... ¡CapeVincent, St.John’s. Des Arc, St. James the Less... jCarthage, Grace...... Fayetteville, St. Paul’s...... 14 00 ICazenovia, St. Peter's...... 110 06 62 01 Fort Smith, St. John’s...... 19 56 11 07 Cayuga, St. Luke’s...... 5 75 2 19 Helena, St. John’s...... Champion, St. John’s...... Hope, St. Mark’s...... 4 00 Chittenango, St. Paul’s .. 40 67 Hot Springs, St. Luke’s...... Jacksonport, Grace...... 5 95 Lake Village, Emmanuel...... Lewisburgh...... ! 1 86 Little Rock, Christ Ch...... 15 05 10 00 ; 16 30 Phillips Co., Grace...... , St. Paul’s. Pillow’s Station...... Pine Bluff, Trinity...... 60 1 85 Prescott, St. James’ ...... 14 10 Van Buren, Trinity...... Washington, Grace...... 4 30 2 39 Miscellaneous...... Parishes cont. D. M...... 0 2 16 “ F. M...... 2 84 91 21 07 29 05 2 09 “ G. M...... 69 64 45 44 Trinity. 308 46 169 68 Califohnia. 66 ! 4 06 6 60 Alameda, Christ Ch . '] Anaheim, St. Michael’s.. 16 16 28 86 24 10 Patches Contributing to Domestic and Foreign Missions. 585

Domes- j Foreign. General. Domes­ Foreign General tic. C e n t b a l N e w Y o r k — Contin'd. Central Penn.— Continued. Greene, Zion ...... 839 92 Allentown. Mediator...... $ 1 $ Guilford, Christ Ch...... 14 49 2 50 Altoona, St. Luke’s...... Hamilton, St. Thomas’...... 5 0) Antrim, Trihity...... Harpersville, St. L u ke’s 4 23 ¡Ashland, St. John’s...... Holland Patent, St. Paul’s 10 Cl ¡Ashley, St. John’s...... Homer, Calvary...... iAthens, Trinity...... Horseheads, St. Matthew’s ___ Bedford, St. James’...... Ithaca, St. Joh n ’s...... ! 85 00 | 87 32 !Bellefonte, St. John's...... It 88 St. Paul’s ...... i i Bethlehem, Trinity...... Jaruesville, St. Mark’s Birdsboro’, St. Michael’s...... 16 45 11 58 , 5 00 ! Bloomsburgh, St. Paul’s...... 8 5 5 3 82 2 18 Blossburgh, St. Luke’s ...... Manlius, Christ Ch...... Brookland, All Saints’ Chapel 4 00 5 13 Marcellus, St. John’s ...... Carbondale, Trinity...... 6 18 41 OO 31 00 McLean, Zion...... 1 00 2 00 ¡Carlisle, St. John’s...... 45 00 12 50 Mexico, Grace...... 2 00 iCatawisHa, St. John’s...... Moravia, St. Matthew’s...... 1 70 1 7 6 iCentralia, Holy Trinity...... Morrisville Mission...... 02 , Centre Hill, Trinity Chapel... 6 00 Mount Upton, Grace...... i iChambersburgh, Trinity...... New Berlin, St. Andrew’s...... 64 55 37 50 iChurchtown, Bangor...... 3 68 80 New Hartford, St. Stephen’s .. 3 05 1 55 ¡Columbia, St. Paul’s...... 13 50 3 00 Northville, Calvary...... 1 Danville, Christ Ch...... Norwich, Emmanuel...... I Derry, St. James’...... Oneida, St. John’s...... 12 90 9 75 | Douglassville, St. Gabriel’s ... Oriskany, St. Peter’s...... j Dundaff, St. James’...... Falls, Good Shepherd 1 60 97 | lEaston, Trinity...... 8 12 Osceola, St. Peter’s ...... , I Eckley, St. James’ ...... Oswego, Christ Ch...... 71 99 *1 90 i Fall Brook, St. Thomas’ ...... Evangelists’ ...... 8 00 4 00 I Gap Mines, Grace...... j Owego, St. Paul’s...... 30 61 2 00 Gettysburgh, Prince of Peace. Oxford, St. Paul’s...... 113 51 IGibsonburgh, St. James’...... Paris Hill, St. Paul’s...... 7 16 IGreat Bend, Grace...... ! 21 31 Perryville, St. Stephen’s...... [Hanover, St. John’B...... I Peterboro Mission...... 30 60 jHarrisburgh, St. Paul’s...... j 5 75 | 2 00 Phoenix, Emmanuel...... I “ St. Stephen’s ... \ 25 00 15 00 50 00 Pierrepont Manor, Zion...... 20 96 Hazleton, St. Peter’s...... ' Port Byron, St. Paul’s...... 29 iHonesdale, Grace...... 25 00 25 00 Port Leyden, St. Mark’s __ ¡Huntingdon, St. John’s...... Pulaski, St. James’ ...... 3 35 j Jermyn, St. James’...... Eedwood, St. Peter’s...... 59 | Lancaster, St. James’ ...... 117 30 7 00 Koine, St. Joseph's...... 1 04 j| “ St.John’s...... Zion...... 21 00 76 06 ! jLawrenceville, St. John’s---- Hackett’s Harbor, Christ Ch .. i Leacock, Christ Ch...... Seneca Falls, Trinity...... 77 36 72 00 ,Lebanon, St. Luke’s...... |501 74 141 40 Sherburne, Christ Ch...... 12 27 4 98 Lewistown, St. Mark's...... “ Grace...... Lock Haven, St. Paul’s...... 3 25 5 00 •23 56 66 65 12 06 j iLykens, Christ Ch...... | Smithboro', Emmanuel...... j IMahanoy City, Faith...... Speeds ville, St. John’s...... 1 58 ! iManheim, St. Paul's...... Syracuse, Calvary...... 3 04 I ¡Mansfield, St. James’ ...... 5 20 “ Grace ...... 6 40 I ¡Marietta, St. John’s ...... ' 25 00 25 00 “ St. James’ ...... 12 40 14 39 \ ¡Mauch Chunk, St. Mark's___ I 105 99 141 84 St.John’s...... 5 84 , Milford, Good Shepherd...... ! 2 18 •2 43 5 31 St. Paul’s...... G7 91 108 5 ) 12 00 Minersville, St. Paul’s...... j Trinity...... ; Montrose. St. Paul’s...... j “ House Good Sh’p’d. 20 01) 49 00 | jMontoursville, Our Saviour... j Theresa, St. James’...... 2 06 I ¡Muncy, St. James’...... ] Trumansburgh, Epiphany__ i ¡Morgantown, St. Thomas’ ___ \ Union Springs, Grace...... 1 61 ¡Mount Hope, Hope...... Utica, Calvary...... 7 50 7 00 New Milford, St. Mark’s...... j Grace...... 141 86 1 69 ¡Nickel Mines, Grace...... Grace Chapel...... Northumberland, St. Mark’s..] Good Shepherd...... ¡Pike, St. Matthew’s...... : St. George’s...... 10 00 Philipsburgh, St. Paul’s...... •28 05 31 10 St. Luke’s Memorial---- •23 28 23 28 iParadiBe, All Saints’ ...... ! 11 20 9 04 6 00 Trinity...... 100 53 51 09 ¡Pittston, St. James’ ...... I 4 88 Waterloo, St. Paul’s ...... 25 33 ¡Plymouth, St. Peter’s...... I 30 00 Watertown, Grace...... 3 00 2 10 iPottsville, Trinity...... j 25 75 “ Trinity...... 84 86 13 60 ¡Pleasant Mount, St. Paul’s___j Waterville, Grace...... 27 80 9 08 ¡Beading, Christ Cathedral.... 149 35 Maverly, Grace...... | “ St. Barnabas’ ...... 1 50 Woedsport, St. John’s...... 1 99 St. Mark’s School... 120 27 Wellsburgh, Christ Ch...... ¡Salem, St. John’s...... Westmoreland, Gethsemane.. Sayre, Redeemer...... 7 00 Wliiteaboro’, St. John’s...... 6 50 Scranton, St. Luke’s...... 12 93 Wiiiowdale, Grace...... 8 46 (Hyde Park) St. Windsor, Zion...... David’s ...... Willard Mission...... 6 08 “ (Green Ridge) Good Whitney’s Point, Grace...... Shepherd...... Miscellaneous...... 86 75 27 50 40 00 -Schuylkill Haven, St. James’.. Parishes cont. D. M...... 77 Shamokin, Trinity...... “ F. M ...... 45 2367 22 1178 93 54 15 ¡Springville, St. Andrew’s...... “ G. M...... 3 ¡South Bethlehem, Nativity... 239 9G 44 28 45 00 ¡St. Clair, Holy Apostles’ ...... 11 26 Central Pennsylvania. II Sterling, Zion...... Allentown, Grace...... 8 45 2 00 I ¡Summit Hill, St. Philip’s...... 10 75 586 Pa/mhes Contributing to Domestic and Foreign Mission

D om es­ Foreign. General. Domes­ Foreign. General. tic. tic. Central Penn.— Continued. Connecticut— Continued.

Sunbury, St. Matthew’s...... $ $ $ $ $ $ Tamaqua, Calvary...... 2 10 ity School...... 10 00 116 00 Tioga, St. Andrew’s ...... 3 80 ¡Milford, St. Peter’s ...... 12 00 7 00 Towanda, Christ Ch...... 56 00 43 00 75 60 ¡Milton, Trinity...... Troy, St. Paul’s ...... ¡Monroe, St. Peter’s...... Tunkhannock, St. Peter’s...... ¡Mystic, St. Mark’s ...... Wellsboro’, St. Paul’s...... 36 97 16 90 ¡Naugatuck, St. Michael’s...... Wilkesbarre, St. Clement’s... ¡New Britain, St. Mark’s ...... St. Stephen’s ... 275 00 500 00 ¡New Canaan, St. Mark’s...... 27 39 15 07 White Haven, St. Paul’s...... 34 16 !New Haven, Ascension...... 14 04 5 61 Williamsport, Christ Ch...... 132 44 68 23 Christ Ch...... 8 50 “ Trinity...... Grace...... 8 00 4 00 York, St. John’s...... 196 71 G6 00 " St. John’s...... 48 25 47 61 Miscellaneous...... 75 00 13 85 “ St. Luke’s...... Parishes cont. D. M...... 35 “ St. Paul’s...... 248 75 117 00 2287 11 1509 26 322 01 “ St. Thomas’ ...... 90 00 G.M. .11 “ Trinity...... 506 78 89 60 26 00 “ “ Chapel.. 21 00 26 25 ¡New London, St. James’ ...... 367 00 80 00 25 00 Connecticut. Pequot Chapel. Ansonia, Christ Ch...... ¡New Milford, St. John’s...... 100 00 20 00 Bantam, St. Paul’s ...... Newtown, Trinity...... 1 00 9 84 Bethany, Christ Ch...... 3 50 ' St. John’s Chapel.. Bethel, St. Thomas’ ...... 19 5J 4 00 !'North Branford, Zion...... Bethlehem, Christ Ch...... 5 50 5 50 i North Canaan, Christ Ch...... 5 00 Birmingham, St. James’ ...... ¡Nortlifield, Trinity...... 8 00 Bloomfield, St. Andrew’s...... Northford, St. Andrew’s...... Branford, Trinity...... 15 6S 14 17 .North Guilford, St. John’s__ Bridgeport, Christ Ch...... 17 00 5 00 North Haven, St. John’s...... 29 10 20 00 " (North), Nativity. j 50 19 “ St. John’s...... 30 00 5 00 116 00 25 82 (East), St. Paul's.. 9 7(5 31 50 “ Christ Ch...... 603 83 5 00 " Trinity...... Old Saybrook, Grace...... 22 00 11 00 Bridgewater, St. Mark’s ...... ¡Oxford, St. Peter’s ...... i Bristol, Trinity...... 5 00 5 00 Parkville, Grace Chapel...... 46 90 Broad Brook, Grace...... ! Pine Meadow, St. John’s...... Brookfield, St. Paul’s...... 11 48 PlainviUe, Our Saviour...... Brooklyn, Trinity...... 8 28 14 16 ¡Plymouth, St. Peter’s v. .. 18 00 5 00 Central Village, St. Paul’s...... Pomfrst, Christ Ch...... 1 00 706 00 Cheshire, St. Peter’s...... 58 29 1 00 ¡Poquetannock, St. James’ ___ Clinton, Holy Advent...... 1 18 2 00 8 00 .Portland, Trinity...... 15 85 Colchester, Calvary...... 3 09 Putnam, St. Philip’s...... 5 00 Collinsville, Trinity...... ¡Quaker’s Farms, Christ Ch... 7 25 4 00 Danbury, St. James'...... 7 70 Redding, Christ Ch...... 4 00 7 00 Danielsonville, St. Alban’s___ Ridgefield, St. Stephen’s...... 2 00 Darien, St. Luke’s...... Riverton, St. Paul’s...... Durham, Epiphany...... Rockville, St. John’s...... 2 00 East Haddam, St. Stephen’s... 123 71 13 16 8 00 Round Hill Calvary...... East Hartford, St. John’s...... 12 25 Roxbury, Christ Ch...... East Haven, Christ Ch...... Station, Chapel___ Easton, Christ Ch...... 2 75 2 75 ! Salisbury, St. John’s ...... 19 00 9 79 East Plymouth, St. Matthew’s [ ¡Seymour, Trinity...... Essex, St. John’s...... 7 50 Sharon, Christ Ch...... Fairfield, St. Paul’s '...... 16 03 i Sherman, St. Polycarp’s...... Fair Haven, St. James’ . 83 11 51 65 Southbury, Epiphany...... Glastonbury, St. James’ . South Glastonbury, St. Luke’s Greenwich, Christ Ch...... 101 75 85 61 'South Norwalk, Trinity 11 00 14 71 “ Byram Abbott Southport, Trinity...... 163 90 63 20 Chapel...... ¡Stafford Springs, Grace “ (Glenville) Em ¡Stamford, St. Andrew’s. 13 00 manuel . *‘ St.John’s.... 909 76 156 25 Groton, Bp. Seabury Mission. l o:i 15 20 Emmanuel Mission " St. Paul’s Mission ... ¡Stonington, Calvary...... 5 45 Guilford, Christ Ch...... 19 14 15 00 Stratford, Christ Ch...... 56 12 24 09 Hamden, Grace...... Suffleld, Calvary...... Hartford, Christ Ch...... 938 28 302 49 ITariffVille, Trinity...... “ Good Shepherd .... 268 56 64 80 9 18 ¡Thomaston, Trinity...... 52 49 13 00 " St. James’ ...... 7 50 7 50 ¡Thompsonville, St. Andrew’s. St. John’s...... 78 00 97 00 Trumbull (Tashua), Christ Ch. 5 88 2 37 13 00 “ St. Thomas’ ...... (Long Hill), Grace.. 38 20 Trinity...... 500 00 150 00 (Nichol’s Farms), Harwinton, Christ Ch...... Trinity...... 1 50 16 00 Hazardville, St. Mary’s...... Unionville, Christ Ch...... 9 00 Hebron, St. Peter’s...... 7 70 4 45 ¡Wallingford, St. Paul’s...... Huntington, St. Paul’s...... ¡Warehouse Point, St. John’s.. 26 08 Kent, St. Andrew’s...... 5 0 i ¡Washington, St. John’s...... 1 43 1 43 Killingworth, Emmanuel...... ¡Waterbury, St. John’s...... 118 11 185 66 Lime Rock, Trinity...... 33 26 33 25 j “ Trinity...... 28 24 55 00 Litchfield, St. Michael’s...... 45 00 45 00 6 20 ¡Watertown. Christ Ch...... 219 00 165 00 Manchester, St. Mary’s...... ¡Waterville, St. Paul’s Chapel. 12 1 0. Marbledale, St. Andrew’s...... 3 29 3 29 ¡West Hartford, St. James’ ___ Meriden, St. Andrew’s...... 115 82 70 00 ! West Haven, Christ Ch...... 52 00 48 25 Middle Haddam, Christ Ch.... ¡Weston, Emmanuel...... 1 00 Middletown, Holy Trinity.... 631 64 269 18 ! Westport, Christ Ch...... 44 00 25 24 " (South Farms) ! “ Holy Trinity...... 80 00 Christ Ch 4 10 53 OS i Westville, St. James’...... Parishes Contributing to Domestic and Foreign Missions. 587

Domes­ Foreign. General. Domes­ Foreign. General tic. tic. Connecticut— Continued. E a s t o n — Continued.

Wethersfield. Trinity...... $10 00 $ Kent County. 5 83 2 80 Chester, St. Paul’s, Chester- 44 13 23 56 town...... $ 7 13 $ 2 U $42 00 Windsor Locks, St. Paul’s---- 8 00 I. U., Christ Ch...... 5 00 North Kent, St. Clement’s__ St. Paul’s, St. Paul’s ...... 53 00 Shrewsbury, Shrewsbury__ 5 00 5 00 42 25 21 00 Yalesville, St. John Evangelist 12 87 Queen Anne’s County. Yantic, Grace...... Miscellaneous...... 4221 47 296 95 11 50 Christ Church, Christ Ch., Parishes cont. D. M ...... 84 Kent Island. 1269 50 St. Luke’s, St. Luke’s, Church •• a. m ...... 21 Hill...... St. Paul’s, St. Paul's, Centre- Delawabe. ville......

Appoquinimink (Middleto’n), Queen Anne’s and Talbot Co’s. St. Anne’s...... Baltimore Mills, Grace...... Wye, St.Luke’e, Queenstown 1 5 00 5 00 Brandywine Hundred,Calvary St. Luke’s Chp’l, Wye..) “ “ Grace.. Broad Creek, Christ Ch...... Somerset County. Camden, Bt. Paul’s ...... Christiana Hundred, Christ Ch 45 00 287 87 Coventry, Rehoboth Ch., Rc- Claymonl, Ascension...... 28 10 5 80 hoboth ...... 00 Delaware City, Christ Ch...... “ St. Paul’s, Annames- Dover, Christ Ch...... 9 00 sex...... Georgetown, St. Paul’s...... 7 21 “ St. Mark’s Chapel, Greenville, St. John’s...... Kingston...... Indian River, St. George’s .... St. Stephen’s, Fair- Kenton, St. Paul’s...... mount ...... Laurel, St. Philip’s...... Somerset, All Saints’, Monie.. Leipsic, Emmanuel...... “ ...... St. Andrew’s, Prin­ Lewes, St. Peter’s ...... cess Anne...... Little Creek, St. Mark’s...... Wicomico, Grace...... Milford, Christ Ch...... Millsboro’, St. Mark’s ...... | Somerset and Worcester Co's. Milton, St. John Baptist...... Newark, St. Thomas’...... i l 48 50 00 Pooomoke, St. Mary’s, New- Newcastle, Immanuel...... 220 20 71 18 i town...... 3 40 Newport, St. James’ ...... Seaford, St. Luke’s ...... Talbot County. Smyrna, St. Peter’s ...... Stanton, St. James’ ...... 1 60 St. Michael’s, St. Michael’s, Wilmington, St. Andrew’s___ 66 00 190 00 10 00 St. Michael’s...... " Calvary...... Christ Ch...... 10 00 St. John’s...... 75 06 21 CC 106 12 John’s,Miles River Ferry. “ Trinity...... 75 00 St.Paul’sCh’p’l, (Old Swedes).. Royal Oak__ " Trinity Chapel. 'All Saints’, All Saints’ Chapel, Miscellaneous...... 37 00 26 25 ! Longwoods...... Parishes cont. D. M ...... 7 iSt. Peter’s, Trinity Cathedral. 5 00 12 68 “ F. M...... 8| 565 36 “ Christ Ch., Easton .. 19 00 33 30 “ G. M ...... 3 “ Holy Trinity, Oxford I Whitemarsh, St. Peter’s, 1 00 Easton. I Whitemarsh, 30 00 St. Paul’s, Trappe Caroline County. i St. John’s, St. Paul’s, Hillsboro i j Wicomico County. 8t. Mary’s,Whitechapel, Christ St. Matthew’s, St. Matthew’s. Ch.,Denton...... 3 50 Spring Hill, St. Peter’s...... Cecil County. I " St. Peter's Chapel, S a l is b u r y ...... Augustine, St. Augustine...... St. Peter's Chapel, St. Mary Anne’s, St. Mary Quantico...... Anne’s (North-east)...... 3 00 ¡Stepney Parish, Stepney, St. Mary Anne’s, St. Mark’s I Green Hill.. Chapel (Perryville)...... i “ St. Mary’s Ch’p’l, North Sassafras, St. Stephen’s I Tyaskin...... Trinity, Trinity (Elkton)...... 13 90 St. James’, Port Deposit...... ! Worcester County. Dorchester County. All Hallow’s, All Hallow’s, | Snow Hill.. 10 72 4 23 Dorchester, Trinity. Church j •• St. John’s, Trap- Creek...... 2 00 town...... “ Grace, Taylor’s | “ Chapel Holy Cross, _ Island...... | Sandy Hill...... East New Market,St. Stephen’s .Worcester, St. Paul’6, Berlin.. 24 00 Great Choptank, Christ Ch., | “ St. Martin’s, St. Martin’s Cambridge. 42 45 68 25 'Miscellaneous...... 6 38 7 25 " St. John’s Chpl,...... 3 75 ¡Parishes cont. D. M...... 10 St. Peter’s,Castle Haven Neck 2 50 | ‘ F.M ...... 12 118 35 97 12 226 98 Vienna, St. Paul’s, Vienna I “ “ G. M...... 10 588 Parishes Contributing to Domestic and Foreign Mimom.

Domes­ Foreign. Domes­ tic. tic. Foreign. General. Flobida. G e o b ç i a — Con tinned. Apalachicola, Trinity...... $ 5 18 $6 26 $ Crescent City, Holy Comforter ¡Cartersville, Ascension...... Cedar Keys, Christ Ch...... Cave Spring, Good Shepherd. 7 30 Fernandina, St. Peter’b...... 3 36 10 00 (Clarksville, Grace...... Gainesville, Trinity...... 18 25 i “ Holy Cross.. Jacksonville, St. John’s...... ¡Columbus, Trinity...... Key West, St. Paul’s...... ¡Dalton, St. Mark’s...... j “ St. Peter’s...... 7 47 Darien, St. Andrew’s...... “ Cuban Mission___ jGreensboro’, Redeemer... Lake City, St. James’ ...... ■Griffin, St. George’s...... Longwood, Mission...... ¡Glynn, St. David’s...... Marianna, St. Luke's...... jHawkmsville, St. Luke’s . Milton, St. Mary’s...... La Grange, St. Mark’s__ i Monticello, Christ Ch...... 30 00 25 00 Ocala, Grace...... 1 10 95 5 00 Orlando...... iMadison, Advent. Palatka, St. Mark’s...... : 19 00 5 00 Pensacola, Christ Ch...... 5 00 “ (Navy Yard) Christ iMontpelier, St. Luke’s. Chapel...... ¡Newnan, St. Paul’s — Quincy, St. Paul’s...... ¡Ogeeche, St. Mark’s ... ! 5 50 Sanford, Holy Cross...... ; 12 81 5 00 St. Augustine, Trinity...... 25 00 193 00 50 0) Tallahassee, St. John’s...... Tampa, St. Andrew’s...... j! “ St. John’s ...... St. John’s Mission...... i: “ St. Matthew’s.. Trinity Mission...... |i “ St. Paul’s...... Orange Co. Mission...... 11 “ St. Stephen’s... 8 00 Halifax Mission...... I Sparta, Ascension...... Miscellaneous...... j |St. Simon’B, Christ Ch---- I Parishes cont. D. M...... 2 ------jTalbotton,Zion ...... “ F. M...... 1 22 47 I Thomasville, St. Thomas’, 1 00 “ G.M ...... b j Washington, Mediator.... ; Miscellaneous...... 2 00 20 00 F o n d d u L a c . i! !| 130 74 273 61 80 00 Ahnapee, Grace...... I “ “ G. M.. Appleton, Grace...... Berlin, Trinity...... ! I l l i n o i s . De Pere, Messiah...... Fond du Lac, St. Paul’s Catli.. Algonquin, St.John’s . Grand Eapids, St. John’s...... Amboy,St. Thomas’.. j Green Bay, Christ Ch...... Aurora, Trinity...... “ St. James’...... Batavia, Calvary...... Manitowoc, St. James’...... Belvidere, Trinity...... Marinette, St. Paul’s...... Chicago, All Saints’. .. Marquette, Trinity...... | 20 00 Medford, St. Mary's...... Atonement...... Menasha. St. Stephen’s...... Calvary...... ! Neenah, Trinity...... Cathedral...... Oakfield, Grace...... Epiphany...... Oconto, St. Mark’s...... Grace...... 52 23 Omro, St. Paul’s...... Holy Communion... Oneida, Hobart...... 10 50 Our Saviour...... Oskosh, Grace...... St. Andrew’s ...... “ St. Paul’s ...... St. Ansgarius’ ...... “ Trinity...... St. James’ ...... 52 00 77 00 Peshtigo, St. John’s ...... (Cottage Grove) St. Plymouth, St. Paul’s...... Mark’s ...... j 5 00 51 Eipon, St. Peter’s ...... St. Stephen’s...... Rosendale, St. Mark’s...... 12 00 Sheboygan, Grace...... Dixon, St. Luke’s...... Shawano, St. John’s ...... Dundee, St. James’ ...... Steven’s Point, Intercession.. ¡Elgin, Redeemer...... | Sturgeon Bay, Christ Ch...... Evanston, St. Mark’s__ Waupaca, St. Mark’s...... Farm Ridge, St. Andrew’s ! Wausau, St. John’s ...... j 47 21 9 09 9 58 Waupun, Trinity...... j 17 08 3 80 Miscellaneous...... Geneva, St. Mark’s ...... Parishes cont. D. M...... 1 ------Highland Park, Trinity...... “ F. M...... 9 23 16 83 HinBdale, Grace...... “ G.M ...... 2 Hyde Park, St. Paul’s...... Joliet, Christ Ch...... 5 00 5 00 ; Kankakee, St. Paul’s...... G e o r g i a . Co.. St. Anne’s...... i ¡Knoxville, St, Mary’s School.. | 12 00 Albany, St. Paul’s...... La Grange, Emmanuel...... Americus, Calvary...... Lee Centre, St. Paul’s ...... Athens, Emmanuel...... Lockport, St. John’s .; ...... “ St. Mary’s...... I Manhattan, St. Paul’s ...... Atlanta, St. Luke’s...... 13 10 Marseilles, St. Andrew’s ...... St. Philip’s ...... 20’ 25 i Maywood, Holy Communion.. Augusta, Atonement...... ! ¡Momence, Good Shepherd__ “ Good Shepherd...... 10 00 Naperville, St. John’s...... “ St. Paul’s...... i ¡New Lenox, Grace...... Bainbridge, St. John’s...... I 'Oak Park, Christ Ch ...... Parishes Contributing to Domestic and Foreign Mmiom.

Domes­ Foreign. Dom es­ Foreign. General. tic. tic. I l l i n o i s — Continued. I o w a — Continued.

Onarga, Trin ity...... $ ! Davenport, (West), Christ Ch. $ £29 0 0. $ Ottawa, Christ Oh...... !,Decorah, Grace...... R o c k f o r d , Emmanuel...... 18 64 . Dennison, Trinity...... 1 80 21 71 Savanna Mission...... \ ¡Des Moines, St. Paul’s__ 30 00 Sterling, Grace...... ’ Dubuque, St. John’s...... Streator, Christ Ch...... Durant, St. Paul’s...... Sycamore, St. Peter’s ...... j ¡Dyersville, Christ Ch...... Waukegan, Christ Ch...... 3 10 ! ¡Emmetsburgh, Trinity... Miscellaneous...... 73 51 51 76 j Fairfield, St. Peter’s...... 5 35 Parishes cont. D. M ...... 10 ------¡Farley, St. George’s...... “ F. M ...... 4 142 58 | Fayette, St. Paul’s ...... “ G.M...... 3 \ Fort Dodge, St. Mark’s .., ; Fort Madison, Hope...... 5 40 I n d i a n a . Hauntown, Trinity...... j Independence, St. James’ Attica, Grace...... Iowa City, Trinity...... Aurora, Calvary...... Keokuk, Holy Cross...... 10 00 5 00 Bloomington, Trinity...... ; “ St.John’s...... Bristol, St. John’s...... ; ¡Keosauqua, St. Luke’s ... Cambridge City, St. Paul’s ... | iLansing, St. Luke’s ...... Cannelton, St. Luke’s...... 3 40 i |Le Mars, Grace...... Columbus, St. Paul's...... ! Lyons, Grace...... j (i 05 2 50 62 25 Connersville, Trinity...... I Marengo, St. James’...... Covington, St. Philip’s...... j Marshalltown, St. Matthew’s. Crawfordsville, St. John’s---- Mason City, St. John’s ...... Delphi, St. Mary’s...... ! iMontrose, Grace...... Elkhart, St. John’s ...... j ;Mt. Pleasant, St. Michael’s.... Evansville, Holy Innocents’. . jMuscatine, Trinity...... j “ Good Shepherd... I ¡Nashua, St. Mark’s...... “ St. Paul’s...... | ¡New Albion, St. Paul’s .. Fort Wayne, Good Shepherd.. ! Newton, St. Stephen’s .. “ Trinity...... iOskaloosa, St. James’... 6 10 Garrett, Emmanuel...... ! ¡Ottumwa, St. Mary's... 7 OJ 5 18 Goshen, St. James’ ...... ! 'Sioux City, St. Thomas’ Indianapolis, Christ Ch...... j Tipton, Grace...... “ Grace...... I Waterloo, St. Mark’s__ “ Holy Innocents’ j ¡Waverly, St. Andrew’s., 4 05 10 50 11 67 “ St. Paul’s Cathedral 60 00 : ¡West Union, Christ Ch.

Jeffersonville, St. Paul’s ... 10 70 5 00 rH O © Lafayette, Grace...... Miscellaneous. 2 50 St. John’s...... L Lagrange, St. John’s...... 1 85 F. M. ) 81 15 155 89 213 34 Laporte, St. Paul’s...... Lawrenceburg, Trinity..... Lima, St. Mark’s ...... K a n s a s . Logansport, Trinity...... Atchison, Trinity... 2 6(1 2 60 Madison, Christ Ch...... Michigan City, Trinity__ Blue Rapids, St. Mark’s Mishawaka, St. Paul’s...... ¡Burlington, Ascension. 7 00 Muncie, Grace...... 5 00 Cbetopa, St. Paul’s...... New Albany, St. Paul’s---- 22 70 Coffey ville, “ .... New Harmony, St. Stephen’s. -Emporia, St. Andrew’s.. ‘2(1 ()0 Peru, Trinity...... \ lEureka, St. Thomas’ ...... Plymouth, St. Thomas’...... : Fort Riley...... Richmond, St. Paul’s...... 28 78 23 76 12 00 ! Fort Scott, St. Andrew’s...... South Bend, St. James’...... | Girard, St. John’s...... 111 25 Terre Haute, St. Stephen’s__ ¡Hutchinson, Grace...... Vanderberg Co., Trinity...... | Independence, Epiphany...... Vincennes, St. James’ ...... ! Iola, St. Timothy’s Mission .. 1 00 Warsaw, St. Andrew’s...... I Junction City, The Covenant. Worthington, St. Matthew’s .. 4 50 j ¡Lawrence, Trinity...... 8 05 Miscellaneous...... 6 50 50 00 i ¡Leavenworth, St. John’s...... Parishes cont. D. M...... 10 i| “ St. Paul's...... “ F. M ...... 4 74 55 j Manhattan, St. Paul’s...... “ G. M...... 3 | ¡Marshall Co., Zion...... j ¡Monmouth, Emmanuel...... Iowa. ! ¡Mt. Sterling, Good Shepherd. j ¡Osage, St. Peter’s...... Albia, Grace...... : iOskaloosa, St. Mark’s Auamosa, St. Mark’s...... 12 37 ! (Ottawa, Holy Comforter...... 1 50 Bellevue, St. Paul’s...... ¡Parsons, St. John’s Memorial. 2 20 Boone, Grace...... ¡Salina, Christ Ch...... Brooklyn, St. Mark’s ...... I Topeka, Grace Cathedral...... 10 00 12 25 j 31 50 Burlington, Christ Ch...... Troy, Trinity...... “ Good Shepherd.. j ¡Wakefield, St. John’s...... ! 12 27 Cascade, Trinity...... ¡Wamego, 8t. Luke’s...... Cedar Falls, St. Luke’s...... ¡Wichita, St. John’s...... 3 28 Cedar Rapids, Grace...... 22 00 20 00 ! Williamsburgh, St. Timothy’B Chariton, St. Andrew’s...... Mission...... Clermont, Ch. of the Saviour. Williamsburgh, St. Barnabas’ Clinton, St. John’s...... 5 00 20 00 12 40 Wyandotte, St. Paul’s ...... Council Bluffs, St. Paul’s ---- Winfield, Grace...... 3 00 Cresco, Grace...... ¡Miscellaneous...... 58 07 Croston, St. Paul’s...... ¡Parishes cont. D. M ...... 9 Davenport, The Cathedral... 111 65 I “ “ F. M...... 3 37 85 58 82 “ Trinity...... 1 “ “ G. M...... 4 590 Parishes Contributijig to Domestic and Foreign Missions.

Domes­ Foreign. General. Domes­ Foreign. tic. tic. General. Kentucky. L o n g I s l a n d — Continued.

Anchorage, St. Luke's...... $ $ $ Brooklyn, St. Peter’s Chapel.. Bowling Green, Christ Ch___ St. Stephen’s ...... Caseyville, St. Paul’s...... (E. D.) Ascension___ Columbus, Christ uh...... “ C a lv a ry Covington, Trinity...... 9 00 Christ Ch ... 10 26 Cynthiana, Advent ' ...... Grace...... Danville, Trinity...... 3 40 St.Mark’s ... 9 10 10 47 Dayton, St. John’s...... 3 00 St. Paul’s ... 24 04 EddyviUe, St. Stephen’s...... St. Thomas’ Elizabethtown, Christ C h___ Chapel ... 10 Frankfort, Ascension...... 119 50 Cold Spring Harbor, St. John’s Georgetown, Holy Trinity___ College Point, St. Paul’s Ch’p’l 53 20 00 Harrodsburgh, St. Philip’s ... Cypress Hills, Holy Com’n ... Henderson, St. Paul’s ...... East New York, Trinity...... Hickman, St. Paul’s ...... Flatbush, St. Paul’s...... 3 00 Hopkinsville, Grace...... Flushing, St. George's...... 60 106 30 Jefferson Co., St. James’ ...... | “ “ Mission. " St. Matthew’s .. 3 45 :Fort Hamilton, St. John’s .... Lebanon, St. George’s...... ¡Garden City, The Cathedral.. Lexington, Christ C i...... 350 00 “ Chapel. Louisville, Advent...... 19 16 iGlen Cove, St. Paul’s...... 62 00 Ascension...... ¡Greenfield, St. John’s Calvary...... Hempstead, St. George's 54 20 62 Christ Ch...... 291 20 50 0J ¡Huntington, St. John’s 65 6 00 Emmanuel...... ¡Islip, Emmanuel...... 6 25 00 Grace...... 4 20 14 55 i “ St. John’s. Our Merciful ! “ St. Mark’s. Saviour...... Jamaica, Grace...... 102 70 00 St. Andrew’s...... 21 79 126 74 ¡Little Neck, Zion...... 410 139 35 St. John’s ...... ¡Long Island City, St. John’s .. St. Paul’s ...... 450 64 ¡Manhasset, Christ Ch...... 10 Portland, St.Peter’si ¡MaBpeth, St. Saviour’s...... 61 241 50 Trinity...... ■Newtown, St. James’ ...... 271 42 05 Zion...... ¡Oyster Bay, Christ Ch...... ] 10 Maysville, Nativity...... ! 25 25 25 25 jPatchogue, St. Paul’s...... Mt. Sterling, Ascension. | ¡Ravenswood, St. Thomas’ ___ Newport, St. Paul’s...... ¡Richmond Hill, Resurrection. Owensboro’, Trinity___ 1 1 Riverhead, Grace...... Paducah, Grace...... Rockaway, Trinity...... Paris, St. Peter’s...... i 10 00: 10 00 -Roslyn, Trinity...... Pewee Valley, St. James’ ; i ;Sag Harbor, Christ Ch...... Princeton, St. John’s ... St. Johnland, Ch. of Proctor, St. Paul’s ...... i | Testimony of Jesus. 26 78 Richmond, Christ Ch... 2 75 ! Say ville, St. Ann s...... Shelbyville, St. James’. Setauket, Caroline...... <> 4 00 Uniontown, St. John’s.. : | ¡Smithtown, St. James’...... 1 Versailles, St. John’s__ 30 501 ¡South Oyster Bay, Grace...... ' Miscellaneous...... 91 40 136 00 j 40 00 West Islip, Christ Ch...... ¡ Parishes cont. D. M ___ ¡Whitestone, Grace...... “ F. M .... 436 34 927 73 i 423 71 ¡Woodside, St. Paul’s...... | *• G. M ___ Miscellaneous...... | 626 Parishes cont. D. M...... 36!------Long Island. “ F. M...... 33'15883 Astoria, Redeemer...... j 306 50 G. M 6 “ St. George's ... 40 40 44 15 i Babylon, Christ Ch...... Louisiana. Bay Bidge, Christ Ch... j 30 03 357 82 ; Alexandria, St. James’...... Brooklyn, All Saints' ... Amite City, Incarnation...... Atonement.... i Areola, St. Jude’s...... Christ Ch...... ! 511 50 536 51 Atchafalaya, Grace...... Ch. Charity Found’n 25 81; 27 00 Bastrop, Christ Ch...... Chapel...... ! Baton Rouge, St. James’ ...... 10 00 Emmanuel...... 15 00 10 00 Bayou Goula, St. Mary’s...... Evangelist...... Belle Air, Grace...... Good Shepherd 616 43 200 00 Cheneyville, Trinity...... 12 56 Grace...... 10214 38i2484 66 ; 200 oo Clinton, St. Andrew’s...... Grace Chapel. . Covington, Christ Ch...... Holy Trinity... 513 65 i Donaldsonville, Ascension.... Holy Trinity Chapel Franklin, St. Mary’s...... ! Houma, St. Matthew’s...... 13 00 8 00 Messiah...... ! 17 50 Jackson, St. Alban’s...... ! Our Saviour...... 120 00 Lake Providence, Grace...... i Redeemer...... ! 97 31 i 91 05 Laurel Hill, St. John’s...... Reformation...... : 3 65 15 25 Mansfield, Christ Ch...... ! St. Andrew’s...... Monroe, Grace...... | St. Ann's...... 1182 39; 400 50 Natchitoches, Trinity...... j 0 05 8t. Barnabas’ . . . . j 1 Napoleon ville, Christ Ch...... j St. George’s...... 58 79, 38 7

t Parishes Contributing to Domestic, and Foreign Mimons. 591

1 Domes­ Foreign. Domes­ Foreign, jGeneral. tic. tic. Louisiana—Continued. M a r y l a n d — Continued. Ì...... New Orleans, St. John’s...... Naval Academy...... $ $ $ " St. Paul’s...... St. James’, St. James’, Her­ " Trinity...... ring Creek ...... 28 61 17 90 “ Trinity Chapel. St. James’, St. Mark’s Chapel, “ Prot. Epis. Ch. Home. 2 00 Friendship...... 1 35 Opelousas, Epiphany...... Severn, St. Stephen’s...... Pineville, St. Peter’s ...... j “ St. Paul’s Chapel, Plaquemines, Emmanuel...... [ Crownsville.. Ponchatoula, Annunciation.. St. Margaret’s, Westminster, Prairie Jefferson, Redeemer ! St. Margaret’s...... 10 00 38 00 (Moorehouse)...... St. Margaret’s, Marley Chapel. Prairie Merouge, St. Andrew’s “ St. Mary’s, Rosedale, Nativity...... Hooversville.. Shreveport, St. Mark’s...... " St. Peter’s, St. Francisville, Grace...... Patuxent Forge.. 1 86 St. Joseph, St. Joseph’s...... •* Christ Ch., St. Martinsville, Zion...... West River.. 20 00 23 00 Thibodeaux, St. John’s...... Vermilionville, St. Luke’s...... ■ Baltimore City. Washington, St. John's...... West Baton Rouge, St. John’s St. Paul’s, St. Paul’s...... 860 75 250 00 West Feliciana, St. Mary’s___ Christ Ch...... 314 00 192 82 Williamsport, St. Stephen’s... Advent Mission...... 40 f>4 Miscellaneous...... 75 20 00 ! Ascension...... 90 00 Parishes cont. D. M...... 6 Emmanuel...... 163 25 801 07 F. M...... 2 32 65 Grace 1690 19 1487 48 " G. M...... 1 Chapel...... Henshaw Memorial.. 5 88 6 12 Holy Comforter...... M a in e . ¡Holy Innocents’ ...... 5 00 ¡Holy Trinity...... 60 20 00 Ashland, Emmanuel...... 3 00 ¡Memorial...... 35 00 60 00 8 50 Augusta, St. Mark’s...... 128 93 I “ Mission___ Bangor, St. John’s ...... Messiah...... 100 00 Bath, Grace...... ¡Mount Calvary...... 95 00 8 00 27 72 Biddeford, Christ Ch...... Mount Calvary Chp’l, St. Mary Brunswick, St. Paul’s...... 62 55 the Virgin...... 40 00 Calais, St. Anne's...... 2 00 St. Andrew’s...... Camden, St. Thomas’...... St. Barnabas’ ...... 237 96 159 72 Dexter, Messiah...... St. Bartholomew’s__ 22 15 22 15 Dresden, St. John’s...... ¡ St. Luke’s...... 5 00 5 00 Eastport, Christ Ch...... 25 00 1 St. Mark’s...... 16 90 14 10 Exeter, Holy Trinity...... St. Peter’s...... 405 00 Ft. Fairfield,' St. Paul’s .... i St. James’ ...... 1 Gardiner, Christ Ch...... 100 00 20 00 ¡¡St. John Baptist’s__ Hallowell, St. Matthew’s .. | ¡St. Matthew’s Chapel 3 00 Houlton, St. John’s ...... i St. Stephen’s...... ! 10 00 Lewiston, Trinity...... 6 80 19 34 i St. Thomas’ ...... Milford, St. Peter’s...... ¡Trinity...... Oldtown, St. James’ ...... 2 63 2 42 Advent Chapel...... Portland, Cathedral...... 215 50 IA11 Saints’ ...... 2 00 “ St. Paul’s...... ¡Church Home . 124 25 “ St. Stephen’s___ 20 00 Rockland, St. Peter’s...... ! Baltimore County. Saco, Trinity...... Thomaston, St. John Baptist. 14 75 Reisterstown, St. Michael’s... Waterville, Mission...... 20 47 j “ Hannah More Academy. 40 00 i Winn, St. Thomas’ ...... | St. Michael’s ...... Wiscasset, St. Philip’s...... 1 65 | Sherwood, Sherwood...... 8 00 Miscellaneous...... 27 00 ■St. James’, St. James’ __ Parishes cont. D. M...... St. Thomas’, St. Thomas’ 2 78 12 00 “ F. M...... 96 08 " G. M...... 10 John’s., 43 83 25 00

! Mount...... i M a r y l a n d . 'Redeemer, Gorvanstown .. j ¡St. Mary, Franklin...... Alleghany County. St. Michael and All Angels.. Emmanuel, Emmanuel, Cum Immanuel, Glencoe___ 65 00 j 18 31 berland...... St. John’s, Huntingdon 16 39 Emmanuel, Providence Chap, ¡St. John’s, Mt. Washington .. el, Flintstone...... :St. Mark’s, Pikesville...... 27 00 St. George, St. George’s, Mt, iSt. Mary’s, Hampden___ 1 Savage ...... St. Paul’s Chapel, Avalon St. J ohn’s, Frostburg...... ¡St. Thomas’,Homestead., 1 81 St. Peter’s, Lonaconing...... 74 62 St. Paul’s, Eckhart Mines... r 1 \ Green...... Trinity, Towsontown 11 00 132 28 Anne ArundelCounty. All Saints’ 12 00

All • Hallows’, All Hallows’ j Baltimore and Harford Co’s. j Chapel, Davidsonville...... I St. Anne’B, St. Anne’s, Annap­ ■! olis...... f. 28 83 11 Falls. 5 9 2 Parishes Contributing to Domestic and Foreign Missions.

i Domes- Foreign. General. Dom es­ Foreign. General. i tic. tic. M a r y la n d — Continued. ! —------— M a r y l a n d — Continued.

Calvert County. j $ Harford County. All Saints’, All Saints’, Sun-; Church ville, Christ Ch. .. 5 00 5 00 derlandville ...... 1 Deer Creek, St. James’...... : Christ Ch., Christ Ch., Port Havre de Grace, St. John’s ...; 11 00 Republic...... Havre de Grace, St. George’s,: Christ Ch., Trinity Chapel I Spesutiae.. i St. Paul’s, St. Paul’s, Prince! Christ Ch., Kock Spring | Frederick...... j Emmanuel, Bel Air...... '■ St. Mary’s, Emmorton...... 1 30 00 Carroll County. j Grace Chapel, Hickory......

Holy Trinity, Trinity...... Howard County. “ St. Barnabas’ Chapel, Sykes ville...... Grace, Elk Bidge Landing__ Ascension, Ascension, West­ Mount Calvary...... minster...... St. John’s...... 100 00 Ascension, St. Mark’s Chapel, St. Mark’s...... Uniontown...... 1 St. Peter’s, Ellicott City...... 10 58 Chapel of the Good Shepherd, Charles County. I Jonestown...... Chapel of the Beloved Disci­ Durham, Durham, Nanjemoy. ple, Patapsco Institute ! “ St. James’ Chapel... I St. James’ College Chapel 1 Port Tobacco, Christ Ch., Port; Tobacco...... [ 6 26 19 41 Howard and Anne Arundel Co’s.' Port Tobacco, St. Paul's Chp’l, Zakia Swamp...... I Queen Caroline, Christ Ch.,; Port Tobacco, St. James’ Chp’l, 20 63 Newtown...... I Trinity, Trinity...... 58 48 94 28 Trinity, Trinity...... ! Trinity Chapel...... ! Trinity Chapel, Old-; fields...... ; Montgomery County. William and Mary, Christ Ch.,i Picawaxen...... > Prince George’s, Christ Ch., Kockville...... District o f Columbia. St. Bartholomew’s, St. Bar­ tholomew’s, Brookville...... 12 54 Ascension, Ascension, Wash­ St. John’s, Mechanicsville___ 16 70 ington...... 39 02 39 00 St. Peter’s, St. Peter’s, Pooles- Epiphany, Epiphany, Wash­ ville...... ington ...... 832 00 301 28 St. Peter’s, St. Peter’s, Barnes- Grace Church, Grace, Wash­ ville...... ington...... 3 50 Silver Spring, Grace, Sligo__ Holy Cross, Washington I St. Luke’s, Brighton...... Memorial, St. Mark’s, Wash-; ington...... 10 60 2 50 Prince George’s County. St. Andrew’s, Washington ! St. James’, Washington...... Holy Trinity, Holy Trinity, St. John’s, St. John’s, Wash­ Collington...... j ington ...... ! 103 36 105 70 Queen Anne, St. Barnabas’ ... St. John’s, Holy Communion St. John’s, St. John’s, Broad! Chapel, Washington...... Creek ...... St. Mary’s, Washington ' “ St. Barnabas’ Chapel St. Paul’s, St. Paul’s, Wash-, St. Paul's, St. Paul’s...... 34 00 16 2 ) ington...... i ‘ St. Mary’s Chapel, Trinity, Trinity, Washington.. I Woodville...... 34 00 Trinity Mission, Washington! St. Thomas’, St. Thomas’...... Washington, Christ Ch.,WaBh-| Atonement...... ington...... 1 St. Matthew’s, St. Matthew’s, j 20 38 Incarnation, Washington I 72 22 29 61 ‘ St. Luke’s, Bladensburgj 2 60 79 45 Grace Ch., Grace, Georgetown. 8 50 Zion, St. John’s Chapel, Belts-, Georgetown, St. John’s, ville...... Georgetown.. 50 00 50 00 Epiphany, Forrestville...... Christ Church, Georgetown.. 100 00 Trinity, Upper Marlboro’ 40 19 Anacostia, Emmanuel,...... Rock Creek, St. Paul’s, Wash- Prince George’s and Anne ington...... I 45 67 25 00 79 00 Arundel Counties. St. Alban’s, St. Alban’s...... | 1 00 St. Philip’s, St.Philip’s, Laurel Soldiers’ Hom e...... 1 Prince George’s and Charles Co.’s Frederick County. St.John’s, ChriBtCh.,Accakeek All Saints’, All Saints', Freder­ St. John’s Chapel.. ick City...... 44 00 299 41 Catoctin, Hariott Chapel, St. Mary’s County. Catoctin Furnace.. St. Mark’s, St. Mark’s, Peters- All Faith, All Faith...... ville...... King and Queen, Cirist Ch., St. Paul’s, St.,Paul’s, Point of Chaptico...... Bocks...... King and Queen, All Saints’ Zion, Zion, Urbana...... 5 00 Chapel...... Grace, Newmarket...... 5 00 St. Andrew’s, St. Andrew’s.... 6 25 St. James’ Chapel Garrett County. “ St. Peter’s Chapel St. Matthew’s, St. Matthew’s. St. Mary’s, Trinity...... Parishes Contributing to Domestic and Foreign Missions. 593

Domes­ Domes­ tic. i_ Foreign. General.' tic. Foreign. General. J L i s y l a d e — Continued. Massachusetts— Continued. St. Mary's, St. Mary’s Chapel. $ Hinghani Mission...... $ 1 66 S $ William and Mary, St.George’s Holyoke, St. Paul’s...... 10 00 10 00 Hopkinton, St. Paul’s ...... Washington County. Hyde Park, Christ Ch...... 4 00 25 00 St. John’s, St.John’s, Hagers­ IpSwich, Ascension...... town ...... 49 16 31 81 Lanesboro’, St. Luke’s...... St. Ann’s Chapel, Smithburg. Lawrence, Grace...... 216 88 145 76 St. Andrew’s, Clear Spring ... I “ St. John’s...... St. Mark’s, Lappen's Cross Lee, St. George’s...... Boads...... 8 91 Lenox, Trinity...... 150 00 100 00 St. Paul's, Sharpsburgh...... 2 78 Lincoln, St. Anne’s...... St. Thomas’, Hancock...... Longwood, Our Saviour...... 207 17 308 40 College St. James’ Chapel.. .. 5 00 “ St. James’ ...... Worcester Co., Snow Hill...... 2 50 94 50 Lowell, House of Prayer...... Miscellaneous...... 315 21 1683 39 “ St. Anne’s...... 221 74 107 73 Parishes cont. D. M ...... 51 I “ St. John’s...... “ F. M...... 47 5535 74 6930 31 ; 600 69 Lynn, St. Stephen's...... ' 35 CO 22 54 G. M ...... 16 Malden, St. Paul’s...... ! 1 00 10 00 52 62 Marblehead, St. Michael’s___ 113 37 8 76 Massachusetts. Medford, Grace...... 15 00 Melrose, Trinity...... | 3 00 9 00 Amesbury, St. James’ ...... Milford. Trinity...... Amherst, Grace...... 30 00 8 27 Millville, St. John’s ...... | Andover, Christ Ch...... 21 14 33 oa Nantucket, St. Paul’s...... Arlington, St. John’s...... Natick, St. Paul’s...... Ashfield, St. John’s...... 1 00 New Bedford, Grace...... j 48 73 149 39 Aubumdale, Messiah...... 6 40 “ St. James’...... Beverly, St. Peter’s...... , 5 00 Ncwburyport, St. Paul’s...... ; 120 52 40 00 Boston, Advent...... 92 00 25 0.) Newton, Grace...... 24 00 87 22 " (Dorchester), All Saints’ 18 51 5 S6 Newton (West), Messiah...... " (Jamaica Plain), St. ; 9 oo 17 25 John’s.. 86 50 31 50 ¡North Adams, St. John’s. ! 8 00 Christ Ch...... 12 00 10 00 ‘Northampton, St. John’s 24 00 “ Emmanuel...... 1233 00 1957 29 ¡North Attleboro’, Grace.. Evangelists’ ...... 3 00 Oakdale, Good Shepherd. 20 00 “ Good Shepherd 56 00 73 00 ¡Otis, St. Paul’s...... " Messiah...... 37 00 21 00 31 44 Oxford, Grace...... j (Roxbury), St. James’ 181 62 104 62 Peabody, Calvary...... “ (Highlands) St. John’s 64 00 33 00 i “ St. Paul’s...... 5 00 1 00 “ (East), St. John’s...... 5J PittBfield, St. Stephen’s . ' 130 00 50 00 “ (Charlestown), St. Plymouth, Christ Ch___ 50 00 John’s.. 80 00 5 00 Quincy, Christ C h...... 170 80 114 87 (Brighton), St. Mar­ Rochdale, Christ Ch...... 11 07 garet’s...... Salem. Grace...... 10 00 37 61 St. Mark’s ...... 54 00 10 00 I “ St. Peter’s...... ' 210 01 10 00 “ (Dorchester), St. Mary’s 73 61 68 57 42 91 Sheffield, Christ Ch...... 4 00 St. Mary’s ...... 8 99 Somerville, Emmanuel.. “ (Dorchester), St. Ann’s South Adame, St. Mark’s Chapel...... 29 00 12 00 Southborough, St. Mark’s .... 42 90 “ (South), Grace Chapel. 25 CO 23 00 Springfield, Christ Ch__ ! 62 98 98 89 “ “ Mission 18 00 Stockbridge, St. Paul’s.. ; 143 C9 44 03 “ St. Matthew's...... 35 00 87 50 Swansea, Christ C h...... St. Paul’s ...... 803 40 316 76 Taunton, St. John’s...... i 6 CO 10 00 St. Stephen’s...... ' “ St. Thomas’... 109 37 130 25 Trinity...... 1411 92 4801 00 Van Deusenville, Trinity 7 50 Bridgewater, Trinity...... Wakefield, Emmanuel__ Brookline, St. Paul’s ...... 465 45 1067 65 ¡Waltham, Christ Ch...... 99 11 113 00 Cambridge, Ascension...... Ware, Trinity...... Christ Ch...... 182 31 55 65 WebBter, Reconciliation. 15 CO 1 “ (North), St. James’ 110 00 125 00 Westfield, Atonement__ “ St.John’s...... 89 00 206 76 Weymouth, Trinity...... 18 00 St. Peter’s...... 37 00 68 05 3 00 3 00 Memorial Chapel. 5 30 “ Harvard University, Woburn, Trinity...... 3 00 St. Paul’s Society. ¡Wood’B Hole, Messiah.... Chelmsford, St. Anne’s...... ■Worcester, All Saints’. . .. 451 79 104 93 Chelsea, St. Luke’s ...... | “ St. Matthew’s. Clinton, Good Shepherd 8 57 16 65 iWrentham, Trinity...... Danvers, Calvary...... 7 75 Miscellaneous...... 414 46 57 46 93 87 Dedham, St. Paul’s...... 5 00 10 00 “ Good Shepherd 1120 43 50 F. M. 5 8738 30 11313 19 380 75 East Hampton, St. Philip’s ... G. M. L East Somerville, St. Thomas’ . Fall River, Ascension...... 10 00 20 81 Michigan. Fiskdale, Grace...... Adrian, Christ Ch...... 5 13 Fitchburgh, Christ Ch 282 00 44 00 JAlgonac, St. Andrew’s — 5 00 Framingham, St. John’s...... 'Alpena, Trinity...... 12 50 50 00 Gloucester, St. John’s 23 98 10 00 13 18 ¡Ann Arbor, St. Andrew’s. 32 18 62 14 Great Barrington, St. James’ . ¡Bay City, Trinity...... 22 00 12 00 5 00 Greenfield, St. James’...... 39 00 ¡Brooklyn, All Saints’ ...... 10 00 Groveland (South), St. James’ lì Hanover, St. Andrew’s 13 32 18 33 25 00 All Angels. Haverhill, St. John the Evan­ gelist’s...... 1 00 5 65 Clifton, Grace . Haverhill, Trinity...... 22 00 26 00 25 00 ¡Clinton, St. John’s ., Hollieton, Redeemer...... Corunna, St. Paul’s. 594 Parishes Contributing to Domestic and Foreign Missions.

Domes­ Domes­ tic. Foreign. tic. Foreign. General. M i c h i g a n — Continued. M i n n e s o t a — Continued. Da via ville,-Christ Ch...... $ ! Faribault, Norwegian Chapel. $ 5 55 Dearborn, Christ Ch...... I " Shattuck School, 64 61 Detroit, Christ Ch...... 113 33 25 00 597 75 I Good Shepherd. “ Emmanuel...... 2 00 30 00 ! " St. Mary’s H all.... 12 48 “ Grace...... 10 00 * \ ¡Farmington, Advent...... “ Holy Trinity...... Grange Mills...... “ Mariner’s...... 40 00 15 00 ! Granville...... 2 00 “ St. James'...... 10 00 Green vale...... “ St. John’s...... 494 10 313 12 12 00 | Hassan, St. John’s...... “ St. Mark’s...... ' Hastings, St. Luke’s...... *' St. Paul’s...... 419 52 179 06 417 00 Janesville, St. John's...... “ St. Peter’s...... Kasson, St. Peter’B...... “ St. Stephen’s ...... Kenyon, Ascension...... Dexter, St. James’ ...... Lake City, St. Mark’s...... East Saginaw, Holy Trinity... | Leech Lake Mission...... “ St. Paul’s...... Le Sueur, St. John’s...... Escanaba Mission...... Litchfield, Trinity...... 2 50 Fenton, St. Jude’s ...... Mankato, St. John’s...... : 2 25 Flint, St. Paul's...... 6 50 Mantorville, St. John’s...... Grosse Isle, St. John’s...... 6 00 Minneapolis, All Saints’...... Hamburgh, St. Stephen’s ...... “ Gethsemane...... 5 00 135 50 Henrietta, St. Luke’s...... ! I “ Holy Trinity...... 5 00 Hillsdale, St. Peter’s...... i “ St. Andrew’s...... Houghton, Trinity...... j “ St. Mark’s...... Howell, All Saints’...... Trinity...... Hudson, Trinity...... ■ “ (North),St. Mark’s Free Ishippinning, Grace Chapel.. 2 00 , ¡Moorhead, St. John’s...... Jackson, St. Paul’s ...... 9 39 25 00 24 94 ; ¡Morris, All SaintB’ ...... Jonesville, Grace...... 4 78 4 77 | Northfield, All Saint’s...... Lansing, St. Paul’s...... | Oak Grove...... Lexington, Good Shepherd... 2 00 i Orono, Trinity...... Linden, Messiah...... 1 Owatonna, St. Paul’s...... 2 00 Mackinac, Trinity...... I Pine Island, Grace...... Manchester, Calvary...... Point Douglas, St. Paul’s.. 1 45 Marine City, St. Mark’s...... Bed Lake, St. Antipas’...... Marquette, St. Paul’s...... Red Lake, St.John in the Wil­ “ Swedish Mission.. derness ...... Midland, St. John’s ...... ; Bed Wing, Christ Ch...... 37 98 8 65 Monroe, Trinity...... 10 00 ; Rich wood Station...... Mt. Clemens, Grace...... 6 50 : Rochester, Calvary...... Negaunee, St. John’s...... 3 00 | Rushford, Emmanuel . 14 00 6 00 New Baltimore, St. Luke’s... ; Sauk Centre, Good Samaritan. 4 80 Ontonagon, Ascension...... , Sauk Rapids, Grace...... Owosso, Christ Ch...... I Shakopee, St. Peter’s...... Pontiac, Zion...... 5 00 ; Springvale, Trinity...... Port Huron, Grace...... 14 78 16 50 Staunton...... Romeo Mission...... 3 48 Stillwater, Ascension...... Saginaw City, St. John’s...... 10 00 Stockton, Trinity...... South Saginaw, Holy Trinity St. Charles, Trinity...... 4 00 St. Clair, Trinity...... St. Cloud, St. John’s...... St. John’s, St. John’s...... j St. Paul, Christ Ch...... 22 50 St. Louis, Emmanuel...... I j “ Good Shepherd...... 6 18 Stockbridge, Christ Ch...... !1 “ St. Mark’s...... Tecumseh, St. Peter’s...... 18 00 12 00 | St. Paul’s...... Trenton, St. ThomaB’...... 1 87 ¡St. Peter, Holy Communion.. 10 00 Wenona, St. Paul’s...... I .Twin Lake...... Wyandotte, St. Stephen’s__ iVermillion Station...... 95 York, Grace...... ! ¡Wabashaw, Grace...... Ypsilanti, St. Luke’s ...... 25 00 25 73 ! ¡Waterville, St. Andrew’s ...... Miscellaneous...... 358 18 21 53 Wells, Nativity...... Parishes cont. D. M...... 26 ¡White Bear, St. John’s...... “ F. M...... 16 1642 67 775 32 1108 22 ¡White Earth, St. Columba___ 1 00 “ G. M...... 6 ¡Wild Rice River, Epiphany... ¡Wilmar, St. Luke’s...... Minnesota. ¡Wilton, Calvary...... IWinona, St, Paul’s...... Albert Lea Station...... Miscellaneous...... 21 00 Alexandria, Emmanuel...... Parishes cont. D. M...... 20 Anoka, Trinity...... “ F. M ...... 7 145 66 124 33 Appleton, Gethsemane...... “ G. M ...... 4 Austin, Christ Ch...... Basswood Grove, St. Mary’s .. 3 10 Mississippi. Belle Plain, Transfiguration.. Bellewood, St. Barnabas’ ...... 1 60 ¡Aberdeen, St. John’s...... Benson, Christ Church...... Ancona, Advent...... Bloomington...... Biloxi, Redeemer...... Brainerd, St. Paul’s ...... 'Bovina, St. Alban’s...... 5 25 Brownsville, Holy Comforter. ¡Brandon, St. Luke’s...... Caledonia, Trinity...... ¡Canton, Grace...... Cannon Falls, Redeemer...... jCarrolton, Grace...... Chatfield, St. Matthew’s...... Chatawa, Gethsemane__ Duluth, St. Paul’s...... 1 00 (Church Hill, Christ Ch... Eden Prairie, St. John's...... ¡Claiborne Co., Epiphany. Empire...... Clinton, St. Matthew’s. .. Faribault, Cathedral Church Columbus, St. Paul’s...... of Our Merciful Saviour.,,. 10 00 25 00 25 00 jComo, Holy Innocents’. . . Parishes Contributing to Domestic and Foreign Missions. 59

I DOt^eS' Foreign.! General.! i M ississippi— Conti n luni. M i s s o u r i —Cont in ued. Corinth, St. Jude’s...... | $ ¡Montgomery,Holy Comforter. De Soto Co., St. John's...... ¡Nevada City, All Saints’ ...... Diamond Place, Holy Com­ ¡Oak Hill, Holy Innocents’ ___ munion...... ! 3 00 I Palmyra, St. Paul’s...... Dry Grove, Holy Comforter .. j Plattsburgh, St. Mary’s ...... Early Grove, St. John’s...... j Pleasant Hill, Calvary...... Grand Gulf, St. Paul’s...... \ Prairieville, St. John's...... Greenville, St. James’ ...... j Sedalia, Calvary...... Grenada, All Saints’...... \ Shelbina, Emmanuel...... Hazlehurst, St. Stephen’s...... | Springfield, Christ Ch...... Hernando, Ascension...... i St. Charles, Trinity...... Hinds Co., Redemption...... St. Joseph, Christ Ch...... 21 93 Holly Springs, Christ Ch...... \ St. Louis, Advent...... Holmes Co., Calvary...... : Christ Ch...... 2>J8 50 36 50 10 00 Jackson, St. Andrew’s...... j Co., Emmanuel__ Kirkwood, St. Philip’s...... I “ Good Samaritan.... Lake Washington, St. John’s. “ Good Shepherd___ Laurel Hill, St. Mary’s ...... ^ Grace...... Lexington, St. Mary’s...... j Holy Communion. 19 05 Macon, Nativity...... i Mt. Calvary...... 20 00 Madison Co., Ch’l of the Cross St. George’s ...... 112 45 Marshall Co., St. Andrew’s ... (ElleardBville) Meridian, Mediator...... 1 00 1 00 ! “ St. James’ ...... Mississippi City, St. Mark’s .. “ St. John’s ...... 15 00 Monticello, Christ Ch...... j (South) St. Paul’s .. Natchez, Trinity...... j 25 00 “ St. Peter’s...... Noxubee, Immanuel...... | Trinity...... “ Co., Messiah...... I Suray, Holy Communion...... Okolona, Grace...... | ¡litica, Trinity ...... Osyka, The Saviour...... ; ¡Warrensburgh, Christ C h___ Oxford, St. Peter’s ...... i Wavcrly, St. Thomas’ ...... Pass Christian, Trinity...... | IWeston, St.John’s ...... Pikeville, St. Thomas’...... | ¡Miscellaneous...... 20 00 Pontotoc, St. John’s...... i ¡Parishes cont. D. M...... 12 Port Gibson, St. James’ .. ! “ “ F. M ...... 8 672 23 90 55 10G 15 Raymond, St. Mark’s...... ! “ “ G. M ...... 6 Sardis, Redeemer...... Shieldsboro’, St. Luke’s.. Summit, Christ Ch...... N e b r a s k a . Terry, Good Shepherd...... Vieksburgh, Christ Ch...... ! Ashland, St. Stephen’s. ... Holy Trinity___ 25 15 25 00 Beatrice, Christ Ch...... Warren ton, St. Barnabas’...... ¡Bellevue, Holy Trinity___ Washington, Advent...... ¡Brownville, Christ Ch...... 20 65 Water Valley, Nativity...... Central City...... Winona, Advent...... Columbus, Grace...... \ Woodville, St. Paul’s...... Clarksville, St. Paul’s...... j Yazoo City, Trinity...... Crete, Trinity Memorial j Yazoo Co., Crucifixion...... Decatur, Incarnation...... j Miscellaneous...... 3 25 25 00 Falls City, St. Thomas’...... Parishes cont. D. M...... 5 Fremont, St. James’ ...... [ “ F. M...... 3 62 65 75 I Grand Island, St. Stephen’s .., “ G. M...... 2 La Platte, St. Paul’s...... j Lincoln, Holy Trinity...... Missouri. Nebraska City, St. Augustine’s Blackburn, Mediator___ 9 00 “ Blessed Saviour. Boonville, Christ Ch...... “ St. Mary’s...... 14 00 11 25 Brunswick, St. Paul’s ... ¡Nemaha, St. John’s ...... Cameron, St. John’.s.... .North Platte, Our Saviour___ 27 60 Canton, St. Peter’s...... 3 10 Omaha, St. Barnabas’ ...... Cape Girardeau,Christ... Trinity Cathedral___ 62 10 40 00 Carrolton, St. Paul’s...... St. Mark’s...... 3 00 10 00 Carthage, Grace...... “ Agency Mission...... Chillicothe, Grace...... Palmyra, Christ Ch...... Clarksville, Grace...... Peru, St. Mary’s...... Columbia, Calvary...... 7 00 Plattsmouth, St. Luke’s...... De Soto, Trinity...... Rulo, St. Peter’s...... Fayette, St. Mary’s...... 5 00 Schuyler, Holy Trinity...... Glen wood, St. John’s Mission. 2 00 Seward, St. Peter’s ...... Hannibal, Trinity...... 23 50 5 00 Silver Creek, St. Stephen’6 ... Independence, Trinity...... Washington Co., St. Mary’s .. Jefferson City, Grace...... 2 50 Wyoming, Grace...... Joplin, St. Philip’s...... Miscellaneous...... 59 85 Kansas City, St. Mary’s ...... Parishes cont. D. M...... 5 “ Grace...... “ F. M...... 1 108 95 10 00 131 75 Kirkwood, Grace'...... 116 30 “ G. M...... 3 Kirksville, Trinity...... Lebanon, St. Paul’s ...... New Hampshire. Lexington, Christ Ch...... Louisiana, Calvary...... Ashland, St. Mark’s ...... paeon City, St. James'...... 2 00 Charlestown, St. Luke’s...... 2 00 3 61 Marshall, Trinity...... 25 15 Claremont, Trinity...... 20 «0 Mexico, St. Paul's...... “ (West), Union...... 13 40 5 00 Miami, Grace... 20 00 Concord, St. Paul’s...... 29 50 5 00 22 81 Moberly, Christ Ch'.. . . " ...... “ Chapel of St. Paul’s Monroe City, St. Jude’s . School...... 30 00 596 Parishes Contributing to Domestic and Foreign Missions. Domes­ Domes­ Foreign. tic. Foreign. General. tic. General. Xkw Hampshire—Continued. New Jeesey—Continued. \ Cornish, Trinity...... $ $ $ Rahway, St. Paul’s...... $ 7 50 $29 48 $38 00 Dover, St. Thomas’...... I “ (Upper)Holy Comforter. DrewsviUe, St. Peter's...... 6 10 5 50 Rancocas, St. Peter’s...... Dunbarton, St. John’s...... ¡Red Bank, Trinity...... Epping, St. Philip’s...... 3 50 Riverton, Christ Ch...... 20 00 10 00 23 90 Exeter, Christ Ch...... ¡Rocky Hill, Trinity...... Goffstown, St. Matthew’s...... Roselle, St. Luke’s...... Hanover, St. Thomas’ ...... Rumson, £>t. George’s...... Holdemess, Trinity...... 'Salem, John’s...... 88 00 41 00 Hopkinton, St. Andrew’s...... ¡Sand Hill, St. Barnabas’ ...... Keene, St. James’ ...... 125 00 25 00 10 69 ¡Shrewsbury, Christ Ch...... 21 50 8 50 2 50 Lancaster, St. Paul’s ...... (Somerville, St. John’s...... 36 00 21 00 33 50 Littleton, All Saints’ ...... 2 53 ! South Amboy, Christ Ch...... 13 27 Manchester, Grace...... 6 56 20 00 iSpotswood, St. Peter’s...... Nashua, Chapel of the Good iSwedesboro’, Trinity...... 12 50 10 60 Shepherd...... 26 61 (Trenton. St. Michael’s...... 73 75 North Conway, Christ Ch---- i “ St. Paul’s...... 10 00 Pittsfield, St. Stephen’8 ...... 3 00 5 25 j “ Trinity...... 129 26 Portsmouth, St. John’s...... 1 00 25 00 ¡Vincentown, Trinity...... 12 9(> Tilton, Trinity...... 8 41 22 60 (Vineland, Trinity...... Wolfbero’ Junction, St. John ¡Waterford, Christ Ch...... Baptist’s...... I Westfield, Grace...... 7 4P 9 40 Woodsville, St. Luke’s...... ¡Woodbridge, Trinity...... 122 00 Miscellaneous...... Woodbury, Christ Ch...... 62 79 Parishes cont. D. M...... 7 Miscellaneous...... 346 80 74 75 130 (10 “ F .M ...... 8 211 36 161 57 (Parishes cont. D. M...... 33 •• G.M ...... 10 “ F. M...... 31 1861 74 1495 73 623 33 ! “ “ G .M ...... 15

New Jersey. i I N e w Y o b k . Allentown, Christ Ch...... | Dutchess County. Beverly, St. Stephen’s ...... 112 66 17 00 i Amenia, St. Thomas’ ... Bordentown, Christ Ch...... 4 50 I Annandale, St.Stephen’s Chp’l Bridgeton, St. Andrew’s...... 10 74 j Barrytown.St. John the Evan- Burlington, Holy Child Jesus. II geiist’s...... 100 03 12 50 Holy Innocents'. ¡Beekman, St. Mary’s ... St. Barnabas’ .. . . j IBellvale Home S. S...... St. Mary’s...... 81 90 27 90 5 00 i (Carthage Landing, St. Mark’s. Hall... 40 00 I ¡Clinton, Apostles’ ...... Camden, St. John’s...... ¡Fishkill, Trinity...... 11 00 •* St. Paul’s...... 135 00 25 00 iGlenham, St. John Baptist... “ Ch. of Our Saviour. 5 00 ! Harrison Station S. f-’...... 1 Chew’s Landing, St. John's.. 'Hyde Park, St. James’ ...... 1 25 00 Claremont, Christ C h...... ¡Lithgow, St. Peter’s...... 1 13 1 12 Clarksboro’, St. Peter’s ...... j ¡Madalin, Trinity...... Colestown, St. Mary’s...... ! ¡Manchester Bridge,St. John’s. Cranford, Trinity...... ¡Matteawan, St. Luke’s...... 45 47 134 89 94 29 Crosswicks, Grace...... jMillbrook, Grace...... 5 97 5 98 Eatontown, St. James'...... ! Pine Plains, Regeneration. Elizabeth, Christ Ch...... 68 73 25 00 ! Pleasant Valley, St. Paul’s---- 2 00 2 00 Grace...... 5 00 5 26 Poughkeepsie, Christ Ch, 2 35 St. John’s...... 142 78 598 96 1 91 41 91 41 90 “ Trinity...... 1 00 “ St. ¡Paul’s... 135 50 170 87 Fairview, Trinity...... 5 84 3 16 52 25 Red Hook, Christ Ch...... ; 52 78 13 11 Flemington, Calvary...... [ “ St. Paul’s ...... Florence, St. Stephen’s ...... j ¡Rhinebeck, Messiah...... Freehold, St. Peter’s...... 20 00 3 85 13 25 : Rbinecliff, Ascension---- Glassborough, St. Thomas’ .. 8 0J 9 86 ¡Staatsburg Chapel...... Gloucester, Ascension...... ¡Tivoli, St. Paul's...... 28 00 Haddonfield, Grace...... 25 00 25 00 11 Wappinger’s Falls, Zion.. 191 32 44 18 Hammonton, St. Mark’s...... Hightstown, Trinity...... \ j New York County. Keyport, St. Mary’s...... New York, Advent...... LambertvUle, St. Andrew’s .. “ All Angels’ ...... 12 00 7 09 Little Silver, St. John’s Ch’l. “ All Saints’ ...... Long Branch, St. James’ ...... “ Annunciation...... 66 97 57 97 Matawan, Trinity...... “ Anthon Memorial. Metuchin, St. Luke’s...... “ Ascension...... 259 00 1300 00 Middletown, Christ Ch...... 2 50 10 00 20 00 Millville, Christ Ch...... Atonement, Madison Moorestown, Trinity...... 2 25 5 00 Avenue.. Mount Holly, St. Andrew’s ... 135 40 56 63 “ Trinity...... 25 00 20 00 Beloved Disciple___ 31 08 57 91 Navesmk.AU Saints’ Memorial 1 50 1 50 Bethlehem Chapel.. New Brunswick, Christ Ch... 48 40 44 09 Calvary...... 3549 84 2587 11 “ St. John Evangelist 76 67 63 48 Calvary Chapel...... 192 25 229 11 Paulsboro’, St. Paul’s...... Pemberton, Grace...... Flock.. Pennsville, St. George’s ... Christ Ch , 711 13 444 39 Perth Amboy, St. Peter’s .. 60 63 91 86 650 00 “ Holy Cross... 7 10 5 00 Epiphany . 116 05 Piscataway, St. Jame»’ . . . . Grace...... 3618 06 4348 15 Plainfield, Grace...... 18 05 16 00 24 14 Grace Chapel__ 113 00 (North), Holy Cross 60 25 6 62 (Harlem), Grace. Princeton, Trinity...... 158 32 162 68 Parishes Contributing to Domestic and Foreign Mission». 597

Dom es­ Foreign. General. Foreign. tic. >te w Y o b k — Continued. N ew Y o rk — Continued. New York, Heavenly Best $325 00 $553 40 Newburgh, St. Paul’s...... “ Holy Apostles’ ...... ! 130 00 92 55 New Windsor, St. Thomas’ ... “ Holy Communion 144136 290 00 Port Jervis, Grace...... “ Holy Comforter...... j South Middletown, Grace---- “ Hc(ly Martyrs...... Walden, St. Andrew’s ...... •• Holy Sepulchre j 6121 27 50 Warwick, Christ Ch...... “ Holy Spirit...... ; 10 00 Holy Trinity...... 160 00 Putnam. County. Holy Trinity Chapel .. Cold Spring, St. Mary’s__ “ (Harlem), Holy Trinity 131 48 239 52 Patterson, Christ C h...... “ Incarnation...... 1 432 02 784 50 Philipsetown (Garrison’s), St. “ Intercession...... 80 00 Philip’b ...... 305 00 21 90 “ Mediator...... “ (South Yonkers), Richmond County. j Mediator.. Castleton, St. Mary’s ...... ! 2 10 “ Nativity...... i Clifton, St. John’s...... 59 40 169 88 " Our Saviour (Floating' Edgewater, St. Paul’s...... ! 49 15 4;* 00 Chapel) ...... ; 2 00 ¡New Brighton, Christ Ch...... ;1060 00 ¡1174 11 Reconciliation...... j INew Dorp Mission. 5 00 “ Redeemer...... j 33 14 Richmond, St. Andrew's...... ; 97 63 “ Reformation...... Rossville, St. Luke’s ...... ! “ Resurrection...... ; Southfield, Holy Comforter... I “ Santiago...... ! Stapleton, St. Simon’s, Clove, St. Alban’s...... Mission...... ! “ St. Ambrose’s...... West Brighton, Ascension___ j 15 00 133 51 “ (Harlem), St. Andrew’s 98 85 23 82 “ St. Ann’s...... ■ 14 ) 75 20 25 102 75 Rockland County. j “ (Morrisania), St. Ann’s 32 60 ; 30 33 Clarkstown, St. John’s...... j " St. Bartholomew’s 4'!05 50 2702 00 Haverstraw, Holy Trinity-----1 St. Clement’s ...... ;il09 33 22 45 165 25 St. Luke’s ...... \ •• St. Esprit...... Nyack, Grace...... j 103 00 95 00 1547 47 32 92 13 73 St. George’s Chapel of Ramapo, Christ Ch...... Free Grace...... Spring Valley, St. Paul’s. St. George’s German; Mission...... Sullivan County. j St. Ignatius’ ...... ¡Monticello, St. John’s ...... 980 96 71 31 (Fordham), St. James’. 667 61 76 65 j Ulster County. St. John Baptist...... 1 50 ¡EUenville, St. John’s Memo.. St. John Evangelist... ¡Esopus, Ascension...... 390 50 138 70 ¡Kingston, St. John’s...... 996 71 310 00 ¡Marlboro’, Christ Ch...... 1 St. Mark’s Chapel ! Milton, All Saints’ ...... 2 46 (Manhattanville), St. Grace, Chapel...... 2 50 Mary’s .. 35 00 20 00 Rondout, Holy Spirit...... (Mott Haven), St. Saugerties, Trinity ...... j 137 01 Mary's.. Stone Ridge, St. Peter’s ...... St. Mary the Virgin... Westchester County. St. Michael’s...... 44 46 118 14 (Morrisania), St. Paul’s Arm onk, St. Stephen’ s ...... 130 88 2 50 Bedford, St. Matthew’s ...... 21 93 60 00 St. Philip’s. 55 00 Beechwood, St. Mary’s ...... 70 25 20 00 Briar Cliff, All Saints’ ...... 40 89 24 07 2123 53 1637 13 City Island, Grace...... 3 00 3 00 St. Thomas’ Chapel... iCortlandt, St. Peter’s ...... St. Timothy’s...... 65 00 17 00 ¡Croton, St. Augustine’s ...... Transfiguration...... 1727 20 16 13 ¡East Chester, St. Paul’s...... 8 G7 Trinity...... 472 59 140 68 ¡Greenburgh, Zion ...... 50 40 66 90 St. Augustine’s Ch’l. 140 22 80 76 (Harrison, Mission ...... St.Chrysostom’sCh’l 132 58 67 53 ¡Irvington, St. Barnabas’ ...... 158 45 275 45 St. Cornelius’ Chapel ¡Katonah, St. Mark’s ...... j St. John’s Chapel... 274 25 40 94 L ew isboro’, St. Joh n ’s ...... j St. Paul’s Chapel---- 530 25 213 52 ¡Mamaroneck, St. Thom as’ ------j 70 10 58 10 Trinity Chapel...... 3578 33 2966 82 ¡Montrose, Divine Love ...... ( Chapel Good Shep­ ¡Mount Pleasant, St. M ark’s ... j herd Flock...... ¡Mount Vernon, Trinity...... j 2 36 (Morrisania), Trinity.. Newcastle, St. M ark’s ...... 3 00 Zion...... 589 47 297 23 New Rochelle, Trinity...... 100 30 39 65 Leakes & Watts Or­ N orth Castle, St. M ary's...... phan Asylum...... ‘ i St. Stephen’s . .. Gen. Theo. Seminary. N orth Salem, St. James’ ...... St. Luke’s Hospital___ Peekskill, St. Peter’s C h apel.. 25 00 Sheltering Arms...... Pelham, Christ C h...... 93 11 140 36 T rin ity ...... Orange County. Pelhamville, Church of the Canterbury, St. John’s...... R edeem er...... Cornwall, Highland Falls, i Pleasantville, St. John’s ...... Holy Innocents’ ...... ‘ 60 00 20 00 Portchester, St. Peter’s ...... 50 00 34 00 Cornwall, St. John’s 7 50 7 50 Rye, Christ Ch...... 302 70 319 81 Goshen, St. James’ ...... 100 00 100 00 33 00 Scarsdale, St. James the Less, 32 62 55 05 Greenwood Iron Works, St. Sing Sing, St. Paul’s...... 10 00 10 00 19 10 John’B...... “ T r in ity ...... 63 34 Monroe, Grace...... 24 00 Somers, St. Luke’s...... 8 10 Staatsburgh Chapel...... iiewburgh, St. George’s...... 68 16 68 30 “ St. George’s Chapel. ¡Tarrytown, Christ Ch...... 161 92 49 55 598 Parishes Contributing to Domestic and Foreign Missions.

Domes­ Foreign. Domes­ Foreign. tic. tic. General. N e w Y o b k — Continued. Nobth Cabolina— Continued. Tuckahoe, St. John’s...... $10 15 $ 3 50 Statesville, Trinity...... $ 1 50 $ $23 30 Westchester, St. Peter’s ... 211 84 189 90 ¡Swift Creek, St. Paul’s...... White Plains, Grace...... jTarboro, Calvary...... 82 00 40 00 Wilmot, St. John’s...... 7 71 “ St. Luke’s ...... Yonkers, St. John’s ...... 147 99 112 55 I ¡Yanceboro’, St. Paul’s...... 1 68 1 40 “ St. Paul’s...... 14 00 80 00 j 245 75 ¡Wadesboro', Calvary...... 4 00 Yorktown, St. Mary’s...... Warrenton, Emmanuel...... Miscellaneous...... 34867 81 21506 78 1191 37 Washington Co., St. Luke’s... Parishes cont. D. M...... 89 Washington, St. Peter’s ...... “ F. M...... 87 69902 46^47403 4812335 98 Waynesville, St. James’ ...... “ G. M...... 15 Weldon, Grace...... Wilkesboro’, St. Paul’s...... 1 00 N o b t h C a b o l i n a . Wilkes Co., Gwynn Chapel... 3 00 Williamsboro’, St. John’s...... Asheville, Trinity...... 27 78 48 66 Williamston, Advent...... “ Freedmen’s Chapel Wilmington, St. James’ ...... 74 55 50 00 Bath, St. ThomaB’ ...... I “ St.John’s...... 7 00 Beaufort, St. Paul’s ...... “ St. Mark’s ...... 3 01 Beaufort Co., St. James’...... |j “ St. Paul’s...... 31 24 37 84 “ St. John’s...... Wilson, St. Timothy’s...... 2 25 “ Trinity...... i 2 35 Windsor, St. Thomas’ ...... 4 97 “ Zion, Cabin Br’h Woodvillc, Grace...... Mission...... 2 19 1 15 Miscellaneous...... 41 95 143 00 66 60 Bertie Co., Grace...... ¡Parishes cont. D. M...... 26 St. ThomaB’ ...... “ F. M...... 20 424 30 509 13 241 63 Chapel Hill, Chapel of the “ G.M ...... 9 Cross ...... Charlotte, St. Peter’s...... j Nobthebn New Jersey. Clinton, St. Paul’s...... Deep River, St. Mark’s ...... ¡Allendale, Epiphany Chapel.. 14 50 Durham’s Creek, St. John’s... !Bayonne, Calvary...... Edenton, St. Paul’s...... 13 62 ! 3 13 j “ (Bergen Point) Trinity. 86 89 37 94 Elizabeth City, Christ Ch...... ¡Belleville, Christ Ch...... 4 25 7 68 Evansville, St. Paul’s...... iBelvidere, Zion...... 12 00 10 00 Fayetteville, St. John’s...... ¡Bloomfield, Christ Ch...... “ St. Joseph’s...... iBoonton, St. John’s...... 18 25 18 25 Franklin, St. John’s...... ¡Dover, St. John’s...... Gatesville, St. Mary’s...... Edge water, Mediator...... 8 32 8 23 Goldsboro’, St. Stephen’s...... \ ¡Englewood, St. Paul’s...... Greensboro’, St. Barnabas’ . .. ■ ¡Fort Lee, Good Shepherd...... Greenville, St. Paul’s...... j ¡Franklin, Grace...... TTn.lifaT, St. Mark’s...... | ¡Greenville, Grace...... 4 00 4 00 Hamilton, St. Martin’s...... ! ¡Hackensack, Christ Ch...... 7 40 5 35 29 86 Henderson, Holy Innocents’. . ■ 5 50 ¡Hackettstown, St. James’ .... Henderson Co., Calvary...... 10 00 ! 4 00 lHaledon, St. Mary’s...... Hertford, Holy Trinity...... ¡Hamburgh, Good Shepherd.. Hickory, Ascension...... ¡Hoboken, Holy Innocents’ ... Hillsboro’, St. Matthew’s ...... 15 00 ! “ St. Paul’s...... Hope Mills, Christ Ch...... 7 60 j “ Trinity...... Hyde Co., St. George’s...... I Hope, St. Luke’s ...... Iredell Co., St. James’...... I ¡Irvington, Trinity...... Jackson, Ch. of the Saviour.. I ¡Jersey City (Hudson), Ascen- Kinston, St. Mary’s ...... ! sion...... Kittrell’s Springe, St. James’ . Jersey City, Christ Ch...... LeaksvUle, Epiphany...... 5 30 1^90 j j “ Grace...... 30 88 Lenoir, St. James’ ...... 6 98 27 35 I “ (Hudson), Holy Lenoir Co., Holy Innocents’ . . Trinity., 4 20 Lincolnton, St. Luke’s ...... 3 47 3 94 1 14 70 “ (Bergen), St, “ St. Stephen’s Mission John’s Free... 9 00 Louisburgh, St. Paul’B...... 5 32 4 13 “ St. Mark’s...... Lewiston, Grace...... 7 50 2 50 | “ St. Matthew's___ 83 58 3 49 Morganton, Grace...... (Bergen),St.Paul’s New Berne, Christ Ch...... ¡Knowlton, St. James’...... Oxford, St. Stephen’s...... ¡Madison, Grace...... 51 71 50 00 Pittsboro’, St. Bartholomew’s 50 00 16 75 ¡Mendham, St. Mark’s ...... 1 20 Pitt Co.. St. John’s...... IMillburn, St. Stephen’s ...... 41 59 Plymouth, Grace...... ¡Montclair, St. Luke’s...... 102 15 92 70 Raleigh, Christ Ch...... 10 41 ¡Morristown, Redeemer...... 10 00 19 16 “ Good Shepherd...... i “ St. Peter’s ...... 250 38 “ St. Augustine’s...... Newark, Christ Ch...... “ St. Mary’s...... “ Grace...... 60 50 45 00 " St. Mary’s School----- 40 00 “ House of Prayer----- Bavenscroft Mission...... “ St. Barnabas’...... 7 74 Ringwood, St. Clement’s...... “ St.John’s .,...... Bock Fish, Christ Ch...... St. Mark’s ...... 70 Bocky Mount, Good Shepherd “ St. Matthew’s...... 47 Rowan County, Christ Ch---- “ St. Paul’s...... 1 00 1 00 “ St. Andrew’s. 1 65 “ St. Philip’s...... “ St. Stephen’s...... 10 00 Rutherfordton, St. John’s---- 113 20 Salisbury, St. Luke’s...... 12 00 “ Trinity...... 70 51 191 18 Scotland Neck, Trinity...... “ (East), Rutherford Scuppemong, St. David’s .... Memorial.. Sladesville, St. John Baptist.. Newton, Christ Ch...... 10 00 Smithville, St. Philip’s...... 2 29 ¡Norwood, Holy Communion . Orange (East), Christ Ch...... 381 55 43 67 Snow Hill, St. Barnabas’ ...... 710 30 South Creek Mission...... I " Grace...... 93 40 80 00 Parishes Contributing to Domestic and Foreign Missions. 599

Domes­ Domes­ tic. Foreign. General. tic. Foreign. General. N orthern N. J.— Continued. Ohio—Continued. Orange, (West) H’y Innocents Sandusky, Calvary...... $ 5 00 $ 5 00 S *« St. Mark’s ...... | “ St. John’s Chapel.. 2 25 1 00 “ (East) St. Paul’s...... ; “ St. Luke’s Chapel. 3 21 2 75 Passaic, St. John’s ...... ¡Steubenville, St. Paul’s...... 28 00 Paterson, Holy Communion. Tiffin, Trinity...... *• St. Paul’s ...... Toledo, Grace...... 1 82 phillipsburgh, St. Luke’s ... " St. John’s...... P o m p to n , Christ Ch...... “ (South), St. Paul’s___ Ridgefield, St. James’ ...... ! “ Trinity...... 37 74 Ridgewood, Christ Ch...... ¡Unionville, St. Michael’s ...... Rutherford Park, Grace— * 12 00 ¡Venice, Our Redeemer...... South Orange, Holy Commun \ ¡Wakeman, St. John’s...... 13 00 ion...... 75 00 ¡Warren, Christ Ch...... Summit, Calvary...... Wellsville, Ascension...... Tenafly, Atonement...... ¡Willoughby, Grace...... Vernon, St. Thomas’...... ¡Windsor, ChriBt Ch...... West Hoboken, St. John’s ... ¡Wooster, St. James’ ...... 9 26 Miscellaneous...... 73 00 iYoungstown, St. John’s...... Parishes cont. D. M ...... 2 (Miscellaneous...... 50 00 117 00 “ F. M...... 21 2357 67 786 56 978 16 Parishes cont. D. M...... 33 “ G.M...... *6 " F. M...... 29 2445 49 2584 74 168 78 *■ G.M...... 4 O h i o .

Akron, St. Paul’s...... 100 00 P ennsylvania . Ashtabula, St. Peter’s. 2 63 Bellevue, St. Paul’s---- 12 00 .Andalusia, Chapel of the Re- Berea, St. Thomas’ ...... 13 78 ¡J deem er...... 1 68 Boardman, St. James’ . ¡Angora Church Home...... 100 00 Canfield, St. Stephen’s. ¡Bridgeport, Christ Ch ...... Canton, St. Paul’s...... ¡Bristol, St. Jam es’...... Cleveland, AH Saints’ . . 2 75 ! 10 00 Centreville, Trinity ...... 10 40 “ Christ Ch.. Cheltenham, St. Paul’s ...... 195 25 Emmanuel...... Chester, St. Luke’s ...... Good Shepherd... 7 37 6 24 St. P aul’s...... 160 00 60 00 Grace...... 72 67 171 67 Clifton, St. Stephen’s...... 37 25 (Newburgh) Grace. Coates ville, Trinity...... 89 79 89 78 31 90 St. James’ ...... Concordville, St. J o h n 's...... 2 00 “ St. John’s...... IConshohocken, Calvary...... 8 27 St. Luke’s...... ¡D ow ningtown, St. Jam es’ ___ 25 30 St. Mark’s...... 5 48 14 52 ¡Doylestown, St. Paul’s ...... 69 94 73 22 St. Mary’s...... 10 00 32 50 ¡Great Valley, St. Peter’s ...... 1 19 “ St. Paul’s...... 423 33 680 08 120 00 Gwynedd, Messiah...... St. Peter’s...... 19 07 Honeybrook, St. Mark’s ...... " Trinity...... 1094 21 1 435 66 25 00 H ulm eville, G race...... Collamer, St. Paul's...... 4 00 9 00 Jenkintown, Our Saviour___ 119 31 61 99 Cross Creek, St. James’ ...... Lower Merion, Redeemer___ 452 72 10 00 Cuyahoga Palls, St. John’s ... 6 28 22 94 St. Joh n ’ s ___ 532 24 346 45 Defiance, Grace...... Mantua, St. Andrew’s ...... 37 26 Dennison, St. Barnabas’ ...... 1 00 Marcus Hook, St. Martin’s ... 28 28 10 10 East Liverpool, St. Stephen’s. ¡Media, Christ C h...... 34 95 16 87 East Plymouth, St. Mat­ ¡New London, St. John’s ...... thew’s ...... Newtown, St. Luke’s ...... 5 66 3 30 East Springfield, St. John’s... Norristown, St. John’s ...... 32 50 47 76 Elyria, St. Andrew’s...... 11 44 Oak Grove, Christ Ch. Ch’l ... Fremont, St. Paul’s...... Oxford, St. Andrew’s ...... Galion, Grace...... Parkesburgh, Grace...... Gambier, Holy Spirit...... 231 86 355 87 Perkiom en, St. Jam es’...... 7 77 . “ Harcourt Parish.... ¡Pequea, St. John’s ...... Geneva, Christ Ch...... Hudson, Christ Ch...... ties), Advent...... 1 00 6 00 Huron, Christ Ch...... 25 00 10 00 ¡Philadelphia, Advocate. Jefferson, Trinity...... Kent, Christ Ch...... Saints'...... 88 73 36 27 36 44 Kinsman, Grace...... (Moyamensing Lima, Christ Ch...... 1 50 33 Saints’...... 90 00 151 00 Lyme, Trinity...... 2 34 Ascension...... 47 60 5 00 Mansfield, Grace...... 78 00 10 00 Atonement___ 343 15 5 55 Marion, St. Paul's !.!!! Beloved Disciple... Massillon, St. Timothy's...... 28 00 42 60 187 00 Maumee, St. Paul b ...... Monumental 37 00 Medina, St. Paul’s...... 2 00 2 00 (Germantown) Milan, St. Luke’s ...... vary...... 348 17 195 15 Mill Creek, St. Mark’s ...... (Germantown), Monroeville, Zion...... 4 16 Christ Ch.. 110 00 389 16 Mount Vernon, St. Paul’s...... 7 25 50 16 Christ Ch...... 313 35 5 00 Napoleon, St. John s...... (Lower Dublin), New Lisbon, Trinity...... 41 00 6 00 Christ Chapel__ 6 52 Norwalk, St. Paul’s...... 13 00 133 24 Covenant...... 82 00 8 00 Oberlin, Christ Ch...... 8 50 PainesvUle, St. James’...... 30 61 cifixion. 34 00 10 00 “ Lake Erie Sem’ry 7 00 Peninsula, Bethel...... manuel. 35 60 21 50 35 00 Ravenna, Grace ...... Salem, Our Saviour...... manuel. 34 56 10 00 Sandusky, Grace...... 216 37 211 31 Epinhany. 216 90 104 28 6 0 0 Parishes Contributing to Domestic and Foreign Missions.

D om es­ Foreign. Dom es­ Foreign. General tic. tic. Pennsylvania—Continued. Pennsylvania— Continued.

Philadelphia,EpiphanyChapel $15 63 $74 56 Philadelphia “ (Southwark), Evan­ St. Matt! $58 37 $101 61 $ gelists’ ...... (Germantown), St. " (Southwark), Gloria Dei. Michael’s.. 22 29 24 72 Good Shepherd...... St. Paul’s...... 24 12 “ Grace...... 123 88 269 70 (Aramingo), St. Paul’s. (Mt. Airy), Grace 43 43 905 47 (Chestnut Hill), Holy Apostles'...... 50 00 St. Paul’s...... 332 64 45 00 Holy Comforter 268 42 57 19 St. Peter’s...... 1863 00 846 49 (West Phila.), Holy (Germantown), St. Comforter.. Peter’s.. 802 17 3140 30 (Taconey), Holy In­ (Spring Garden), St. nocents’ ...... Philip’s.. Holy Trinity...... 1964 22 5135 32 (Spring Garden), St. Holy Trinity Chapel. 35 00 54 87 Sauveur...... Holy Communion... 130 St. Stephen’s...... 315 21 178 50 (Branchtown), House (Bridesburg), St. of Prayer...... Stephen’s.. 25 00 (Spring Garden), In­ (Roxborough), St. carnation ...... 130 00 90 00 Timothy’s.. 484 52 77 80 (Spring Garden), In­ St. Thomas’ ...... 15 00 15 60 tercessor...... (West Phila.), The “ Mediator ^ ___ 160 14 79 88 Saviour.. 206 84 334 00 Merciful Saviour__ (West Phila.), Trans­ (Port Richmond) figuration...... 118 19 Messiah.. 14 00 14 12 (West Phila.), Trin­ “ Messiah...... 16 00 5 55 ity .. 55 00 55 00 (Spring Garden), (Southwark), Trinity 29 -26 Nativity.. 8 75 (Oxford), Trinity---- 2636 30 887 93 (Moyamensing), Our Crescentville Chapel 160 00 Saviour...... (Crescentvile,) Good Prince of Peace...... Samaritan...... 6 00 “ (Spring Garden), Re­ (Falls of Schuylkill), demption...... Trinity...... Redeemer...... 63 03 (Falls of Schuylkill). “ (Nicetown), Resur­ St. James the Less.. rection. . (South Penn Town­ (Roxborough), St. ship) Zion...... 29 00 36 00 Alban’s.. 3 57 4 00 Episcopal Hospital.. 240 00 152 55 82 00 St. Andrew’s...... 41 00 333 93 Burd Orphan Asylum. 56 61 8 00 St. Andrew’s Chapel. Angora Church Home. 18 62 (West Phila.), St. PhoenixvUle, St. Peter’s 5 00 4 50 Andrew’s.. 10 00 40 44 Pottstown, Christ Ch... 20 35 (Haddington), St. Radnor, Good Shepherd 42 06 Barnabas’ .. 3 00 St. David’s __ 36 00 20 30 “ (Kensington), St. Rockdale, Calvary...... 35 53 Barnabas’ .. 134 83 72 00 (Kensington), St. Memorial...... 41 08 27 97 Bartholomew's.. Warwick, St. Mary’s...... St. Clement’s 5 12 2 00 Westchester, Holy Trinity 340 00 170 00 “ (Manayunk), St. West Marlboro’, St. James’ . .. David’s.. 100 00 73 00 West Whiteland, St. Paul’s ... “ (Manayunk), St. West Vincent, St. Andrew’s .. David’s Chapel... 48 68 Whitemarsh, St. Thomas’ ---- (Kenderton), St. Yardleyville, St. Andrew’s---- George’s.. Miscellaneous...... 2801 14 1922 40 88 00 (West Phila.), St. Parishes cont. D. M...... 8 George’s .. f 22629 96 19467 17 536 66 “ St. James’ ...... 902 67 314 50 1 (Hestonville), St. James’ .. PlTTSBUBGH. " (Kingsessing), St. James .. -W 131 96 80 45 33 84 “ fN. Penn Township), St. James the Less Beaver Falls, St. Mary’s .. " (N. liberties), St. Blairsville, St. Peter’s ---- i John’s.. 20 75 5 00 Blooming Valley, Advent. 72 i (Germantown), St. 47 85 John Baptist.. U 00 10 00 (Southwark), St. 40 00 | 25 00 J ohn Evangelist.. “ St.John’s.. ' 10 00 (Spring Garden), St. Butler, St. Stephen’s---- Jude’s...... 107 15 95 03 Chartier's, St. Luke’s___ “ St. Luke’s ...... 1^05 17 1077 47 Clearfield, St. Andrew’s.. (Bustleton), St. Conneautville, Trinity .. i Luke’s.. 21 00 Connellsvffle, Trinity ... 2 35 1 (Germantown), St. Corry, Emmanuel...... 22 50 6 22 Luke’s.. 700 98 214 85 Crafton, Nativity...... " St. Mark’s ...... 1023 30 Emporium, Emmanuel.. •• (Frankford), St. Mark's. ^ 97 195 75 Erie, St. John’s ...... “ (Frankford Road), ■ St. Paul's...... 40 96 St. John’s Free.. ' Cross and Crown... “ (Hamiltonville), _____ ¡Franklin, St. John’s...... 3 08 3 46 St. Mary’s. 102 85 70 53 iFreeport, Trinity...... “ (Francisville), St. Georgetown, St. Luke’s . Matthew's.. 126 40 Greensburgh, Christ Ch. 20 00 Parishes Contributing to Domestic and Foreign Mission*. 601

Dom es­ Foreign. ! Domes­ Foreign. General. tic. tic. P i t t s b u b g h — Continued. R h o d f . I s l a n d . Indiana, Christ Ch...... Ashton, St. John’s Chapel___ $ $ $ Johnstown, St. Mark’s...... Barrington, St. John’s 5 00 11 00 Kittanning, St. Paul's...... 16 25 22 62 ¡Bristol, St. Michael’s.. 120 00 80 00 i McKeesport, St. Stephen’s— 8 50 i “ Trinity...... Meadville, Christ Ch...... 150 00 26 92 IBurrillville, Calvary. Menallen, Grace...... 'Central Falls, St. George’s___ Miles Grove, Grace...... 3 00 Cranston, St. Bartholomew’s. i Monongahela, St. Paul’s...... 5 00 5 00 ¡Crompton, St. Philip’s...... ! 3 00 3 00 New Brighton, Christ Ch...... ¡East Greenwich, St. Luke’s... 1 87 86 44 28 i New Castle, Trinity...... (Greenville, St. Thomas’ ...... New Haven, Trinity...... ¡Jamestown, St. Matthew’s__ 1 Ohio, St. Paul’s ...... Lonsdale, Christ Ch...... 30 00 30 00 I I Oil City, Christ Ch...... Manton, St. Peter’s...... 1 Pittsburgh, All Saints’...... iManville, Emmanuel...... 14 00 1 *• Calvary...... 180 77 226 23 ¡Middletown, Chapel of the | “ (Mt. Washington),Grace 5 00 5 00 1 Holy Cross...... “ Good Shepherd...... 17 58 7 30 INarragansett Pier. St. Peter’s. “ St. Andrew’s ...... 600 45 105 00 326 33 Newport, All Saints’ Chapel.. “ St. Cyprian’s...... “ Emmanuel...... 100 93 84 96 “ St. James’...... “ Trinity...... 451 97 82 13 " (Birmingham), St. Z ion ...... Mark’s .. Pawtucket, Good Shepherd... “ St. John’s...... “ St. Paul’B...... 15 15 24 75 14 87 “ (Birmingham), St. “ Trinity...... Luke’s .. Pontiac, All Saints’ Chapel... 2 00 12 00 “ (LaceyviUe), St. Paul’s. Portsmouth (North)St. Paul’s “ St. Peter’s...... 419 48 371 00 (South) St. Mary’s 30 87 9 40 “ Trinity...... 397 48 1730 52 Providence, All Saints’ Memo. 214 72 202 84 Ridgeway, Grace...... “ Christ Ch...... 13 35 12 00 Rochester, Trinity...... “ Epiphany...... Rouseville, St. John’s...... Grace...... 159 16 208 00 Sewickley, St. Stephen’s...... 22 00 Messiah...... Sharon, St. John’s...... 18 81 Redeemer...... 15 00 49 00 Sugar Hill, Intercessor...... St. Gabriel’s...... Tidioute, Christ Ch...... (East), St.Mary’s. j Titnsville.St. James' Memorial “ “ St. Luke’s. Townville, Calvary...... St. James’...... 2 00 Smethport, St. Luke’s...... 2 50 2 50 ^1945 70 1482 93 Uniontown, St. Peter’s...... 31 20 58 10 5 42 125 00 Verona, St. Thomas’...... 18 00 12 00 Warren, Trinity Memorial__ Scituate, Trinity...... Washington, Trinity...... 10 50 17 16 Wakefield, Ascension... 2 00 Waterford, St. Peter’s...... 36 80 25 00 i Wayne, St. Michael’s...... 6 63 1 75 101 27 56 25 West Brownsville, St. John s. 10 00 Wickford, St. Paul's___ 18 58 13 38 Miscellaneous...... 73 00 5 00 ! 25 00 Woonsocket, St. James'. 32 50 15 53 Parishes cont. D. M...... 24 Miscellaneous...... 2288 80 3024 00 32 7.i •' F. M...... 20 2682 14 | 548 05 Parishes cont. D. M...... 22 " G. M...... 7 ;5710 08 5615 45 47 62 1 | Q u i n c y . S o u t h Ca b o i j n a . Aledo, Grace...... Abbeville, Trinity...... Bowling, Grace...... Aiken, St, Thaddeus’ ...... 1 00 100 ! Cambridge, Trinity...... Anderson Court House, Grace 2 05 10 63 Carthage, St. Cyprian’s...... 4 25 Barnwell, Holy Apostles’ ...... Cambridge, St. Matthew’s ___ 2 77 Baraboo, Trinity...... Farmington, Calvary...... 5 00 3 20 Beaufort, St. Helena’s...... 20 oo ; Galesburgh, Grace...... 8 48 Berkley, St. John’s...... Geneseo, Trinity...... Black Oak, Trinity...... Henry, St. John's...... Bluffton, Holy Cross...... Kewanee, St. John’s...... Camden, Grace...... Knoxville, St. John’s...... Charleston, Calvary...... 1 37 4 63 “ St. Mary’s School.. Christ Ch...... 3 00 3 00 Lewistown, St. James’ ...... Grace...... 50 00 Limestone, Christ Ch...... 3 60 Holy Communion 20 00 Mendon, Zion...... St. Andrew’s...... 25 16 Osco. Grace...... 9 00 St. Luke’s...... 78 82 Peoria, St. John’s ...... (Hampstead), St. St. Paul’s...... John’s Chapel.. Pittsfield, St. Stephen’s ...... St. Mark’s...... Preemption, St. John’s...... “ St. Michael’s...... i Princeton, Redeemer...... “ (Radcliffeboro’), I Quincy, Good Shepherd...... | 35 00 25 00 " St. John’s Cathedral. 46 00 30 68 50 00 | Robin’s Nest, Christ Ch...... 10 00 St. Stephen’s. Rock Islani Trinity...... 10 00 | 21 03 32 50 | Rock Island Co., Grace...... ¡Chester, St. Mark’s...... Tiskilwa, St. Jude’s...... jChrist Ch. Parish, Christ Ch.. Warsaw, St. Paul’s ...... 1 30 ¡Clarendon, St. Mark’s .. i 5 00 5 00 j Wyoming, St. Luke’s...... Columbia, Mediator___ Miscellaneous...... 10 00 1 00 2 00 | Parishes cont. D. M 7 Combahee, Ascension. “ F .M 2 43 40 13 60 68 20 Christ Ch.. ** G. M...... 4 Edgefield, Trinity...... 5 00 602 Parishes Contributing to Domestic and Foreign Missions.

Dom es­ Foreign. tic. General. South Caeolina— Continued. Southern Ohio— Continued.

Edisto Island, Trinity...... Delaware, St. Peter’s ...... $33 60 $99 98 Fairfield, St. John’s...... Dresden, Zion ...... “ St. Stephen’s__ Gallipolis, St. Peter’s ...... Florence, St. John’s...... 'Glendale, Christ Ch ...... 10 50 7 20 5 00 Georgetown, Prince George’s, G ranville, St. L u ke’s...... 3 50 Winyah...... G reenville. St. Paul’s ...... Glenn Springs, Calvary__ Hamilton, Christ C h ...... Goose Creek, St. James’ ... 'Hillsboro’, St. Mary’s ...... Graham ville, Holy Trinity ... ¡Ironton, Christ Ch...... St. Luke’s... ¡Lancaster, St. John’s ...... 10 00 24 00 Greenville, Christ Ch...... Madison, St. Matthew’s ...... Hardeeville Mission...... [Marietta, St. Luke’s ...... 8 50 John’s Island, St. John’s .. Middletown, Ascension...... 7 64 Marion Court House, Advent. M ontauk, St. Thom as’ ...... li 50 Mar’s Bluff, Christ Ch...... Newark, Trinity...... 118 41 130 00 Newberry, St. Luke’s...... Piqua, St. Jam es’ ...... 33 GG 19 75 North Santee, Messiah__ Pomeroy, Grace...... 26 00 17 70 Orangeburgh, Redeemer.. Portsmouth, All Saints’ ...... 40 85 92 03 Pedee, Prinec Frederick... 5 00 “ Christ Ch...... 9 96 Pendleton, St. Paul’s...... 3 45 Springfield, Christ Ch...... 40 25 25 67 Prince William’s, All Saints’. 3 29 7 32 ¡Troy, Trinity...... 2 83 Providence, St. Matthew’s___ ITrbana, E p ip h a n y ...... 13 60 2 60 Richland, St. John’s...... ¡Worthington, St. John’s...... 36 40 45 37 “ St. Matthew s .. ■Xenia, Christ C h ...... “ Zion...... Yellow Springs, Christ Ch ----- Ridgeway, St. Stephen’s ... Zanesville, St. James’ ...... 111 61 80 00 20 00 Rock Hill, Our Saviour__ 4 00 6 75 Miscellaneous...... 125 00 150 00 Santee, St. James’ ...... Parishes cont. D. M ...... 30 Society Hill, Trinity...... 7 00 1 00 “ F. M ...... 26 2524 38 2012 89 Spartanburgh, Advent...... “ G .M ...... 7 Stateburgh, Claremont__ 7 58 G 74 Holy Cross ... Sebingfteld. St. Andrew’s Parish...... 22 80 Albion, St. John’s ...... 1 00 St. Luke’s Parish...... ¡Alton, St. Paul’s ...... St. Matthew’s...... ¡Areola, Christ Ch...... St. Philip’s Parish...... Bloomington, St. Matthew’s .. St. Stephen’s Parish, ¡Bunker Hill, Christ Ch ...... St. Stephen’s. Cairo, Redeemer...... St. Thomas’ and St. Dennis’ Carlinville, St. Paul’s ...... 2 05 Parish...... 4 60 iCarrolton, Trinity ...... | Summerville, St. Paul’s... 1 ¡Centralia, St. Joh n ’s...... j Sumter, Holy Comforter. . Champaign, Emmanuel j 15 03 Union, Nativity ..... 5 35 Chester, St. Mark's...... ; Upper St. John’s, Epiphany.. 92 00 i ¡Chesterfield, St. Peter’s...... Waccamaw, All Saints’ ...... I jCollinsville, Christ Ch...... i Walterboro’, St. Jude’s__ 2 55 ¡Danville, Holy Trinity ...... Welford Mission...... 5 00 ¡Decatur, St. John s...... Willington, St. Stephen’s .. ¡Gillespie. St. Jolin’s ...... Wilton, Christ Ch...... ¡Greenville, Grace...... i Winnsboro’, St. John’s---- Jacksonville, Trinity...... 5 00 Yorkville, Good Shepherd___ 11 50 5 50 Lincoln, Trinity...... Miscellaneous...... 3 25 14 25 Mansfield, Christ C h ...... Parishes cont. D. M ...... 18 Mound City, St. Peter's...... “ F. M ...... 21 350 46 303 18 Mattoon, Trinity ...... 4 00 ( " G.M...... 16 ¡Paris, G race...... iPekin, St. Paul’s ...... S o u t h e r n O h i o . ¡Petersburgh, Trinity...... ¡Rantoul, St. Paul’s ...... Berkshire, Grace...... ¡Springfield, St. Paul’s Cath’l .. Bellaire, Trinity...... 5 00 5 00 | 20 00 5 00 Chillicothe, St. Paul’s ...... 39 38 32 75 1 50 00 Cincinnati, Advent...... 335 10 84 13 Parishes cont. D. M...... “ (Riverside), Atone­ “ F. M...... lj 92 i;8 | 5 00 18 25 ment. . 5 00 34 37 “ G. M...... 3ji | (Clifton), Calvary ... 611 50 197 12 Christ Ch...... 20 0U 411 38 T e n n e s s e e . “ Emmanuel...... Ashwood, St. John’s...... j | “ Free Chapel...... j Athens, St. Paul's...... “ (Avondale), Grace... 96’50 75 00 ¡ ¡Bolivar, Advent...... j 10 00 “ (College Hill), Grace. 10 00 j “ St. James’ ...... ; i 8 00 “ (Mount Auburn), “ St. Philip’s...... Our Saviour.. 110 00 i 5 00 “ (Fern Bank), Resur­ iBuntyn, St. John’s ...... rection ...... ¡Chattanooga, St. Paul’s I “ St. John’s ...... 33 20 ¡Clarksville, Trinity...... ; “ St. Luke’s Chapel... ¡Cleveland, St. Luke’s...... : 9 25 G 00 St. Paul’s...... 194 33 48 33 ¡Columbia, St. Peter’s...... j (Cumminsville), St. ¡Covington, St. Matthew’s ___ Philip’s.. ¡Edgefield, St. Anue’B...... ? •• Trinity...... ¡Franklin, St. Paul’s ...... | 4 55 Circle ville, St. Philip’s...... 35 00 I 31 98 ¡Greenville, St. Jam es'...... Clinton, Christ Ch...... 5 00 I i Jackson, St. Luke’s ...... 25 00 12 50 Columbus, Good Shepherd... 8 75 I 7 27 Knoxville, Epiphany...... St. Paul’s ...... 25 00 I 10 0J St. J oh n 's...... 10 00 “ Trinity...... 386 51 I255 90 25 00 La Grange, Immanuel...... Dayton, Christ Ch...... Loudon, Grace...... Parishes Contributing to Domestic and Foreign Mission«.

I 1>®™es‘ [-Foreign. General. T e n n e s s e e — Continued. T exas— Confi mtrd. Mason, St. Paul’s ...... Willie, Mission...... $ $ $ Trinity...... i Miscellaneous...... 60 00 40 00 Memphis, Calvary...... ' Parishes cont. D. M...... 2 “ (Chelsea),Good Shepherd ; “ " F. M...... 1| 10 1 00 87 85 “ Grace...... j “ G .M ...... 5 j Immanuel...... : ■■ St. Lazarus’...... ! [ V e r m o n t . “ St. Mary’s Cathedral__ Arlington, St. James’ ...... 5 00 “ St. Saviour...... ¡ Bellows Falls, Immanuel...... 27 30 6 70 Murfreesboro’, St. Andrew’s.. 1 St. Agnes' Hall 52 00 Nashville, Advent...... Bennington, St. Peter’s ...... 35 00 15 00 Christ Ch...... Berkshire, Calvary...... Holy Trinity...... ; Bethel, Christ Ch'...... 28 50 31 00 St. Peter’s ...... Brandon, St. Thomas’ ...... St. Ann’s...... 3 95 2 40 Brattleboro’ , St. M ichael’s ,.. 10 00 10 00 Pulaski, Messiah...... Burlington. St. Paul’s ...... 32 50 1 5 00 20 00 Eipley, Immanuel...... Chester, St. Luke’s ...... Sewanee, St. Paul’s...... Enoslmrgh, Christ Ch...... St. Augustine’s Ch’l 15 00 10 00 lEnosburgh Falls, St. Matthew's Shelby C«., St. John’s...... | [Factory Point, Zion ...... Shelbyville, Redeemer...... I ¡Fairfax, Christ C h ...... 10 00 Somerville, St. Thomas’ ...... [ 23 00 10 00 [Fairfield, Trinity ...... 1 82 Tipton, Trinity...... j [Georgia, Emmanuel...... Trenton, Holy Innocents’ ___ ; Grand Isle, St. John’s ...... Tullahoma, St. Barnabas’...... j [Guilford, Christ Ch...... Williamsport, St. Mark’s...... I Highgate, St. Joh n ’s ...... 1 7 00 i 6 00 Winchester, Trinity...... j ¡Hydeville, Christ C h ...... Miscellaneous...... j 5 00 1 00 j Island Pond, Christ Ch ...... Parishes cont. D. M...... 6:- [Jericho, Calvary...... ! 2 00 ¡ 2 00 “ F. M...... 5! 60 75 57 65 47 60 Manchester, St. John’s ...... “ G.M ...... 5! (Factory Point), Zion . 10 00 ' 10 00 : i Texas. j Montgomery, Union... • 60 Montpelier, Christ Ch. Anderson, Redeemer...... ] Northfield, St. M ary’s . . Austin, St. D avid’s ...... | 25 00 ¡Poultney, St. John s . .. 12 70 Bastrop, Calvary...... 1 T r in ity ...... Beaumont...... ¡Randolph, Grace...... Belleville, St. M ary’s...... j iJ “ (West), St. Joh n ’s .. Belton, St. L u ke’s ...... j j SRoyalton, St. Paul’s ...... Brazoria, St. J oh n ’s ...... I [Rutland, Trinity...... 105 00 50 00 Brenham, St. Peter’s ...... j 15 00 33 00 ;[ “ (West), Grace...... Bryan, St. Andrew ’s ...... ■ 3 85 S ¡Shelburne, T rinity ...... Calvert, Epiphany...... j Sheldon, Grace...... C 49 fi 49 Cherino, M ission...... j Springfield, St. Mark’s ...... Columbia, St. Luke’s...... St. Albans, St. Luke’s ...... Columbus, St. Joh n ’s ...... St. Johnsbury, St. Andrew’s.. 4 35 Crockett, All Saints’ ...... Swanton, Holy Trinity...... Englewood Mission...... ; ! IVergennes, St. Paul’s ...... 10 00 Galveston, Grace...... ! ! Wells, St. Paul’s ...... 2 70 2 39 T r in ity ...... j [Windsor, St. Paul’s ...... 4 75 5 0U Georgetown, Mission...... j ! ¡Winooski, T r in ity ...... Giddings, M ission...... ¡Woodstock, St. James’ ...... Groesbeck, M ission ...... ■ 'Miscellaneous...... 39 06 115 00 Harrisburgh, M issio n ...... | [Parishes cont. D. M ...... lfi ------Hearne, St. P h ilip’s ...... i I “ “ F. M ...... 17 379 12 Hempstead, St.Bartholomew’s i “ “ G .M ...... 5 Henderson, Mission...... Houston, Christ C h . VlBGINIA. | Huntsville, St. Stephen’s .. Accomac County. \ Independence, Grace...... St. George’s, St. James’s, St.! Jefferson, Christ Ch ...... George’s,...... ; Rosso Mission...... Accomac, Emmanuel...... | j La Grange, St. James’ ...... i Lampasas, Mission...... Albemarle County. ■ Longview, Mission...... Fredericksville, Christ Ch....; 76 00 ! 205 00 63 60 Marlin, M ission ...... St. Paul’s ...... 14 50 j 7 00 Marshall, Trinity...... i “ Brick Mountain... I Matagorda, Christ C h ...... i St. Ann’s, Christ Ch...... ! [ 23 00 Mexia, Mission...... j “ Trinity...... M illican, M ission...... I Greenwood, Emmanuel...... 5 00 I 4 35 Nacogdoches, Christ Ch ...... ! 10 00 Navasota, St. Paul’s j Walker’s, Grace...... 1 12 37 Orange, St. M ark’s ...... j Alexandria County. Palestine, St. Philip’s...... I Fairfax, Christ Ch...... 30 00 ! 169 41 Pennington, Mission...... i St. Paul’s...... 1 215 00 Richmond, Calvary...... j Grace...... ; 11 00 Round Rock, Mission ...... ! “ Episcopal High Sch’l Rockdale, M ission...... i Amelia County. Rusk, M ission...... j 3 00 Sabine Pass, M issio n ...... ! Raleigh, Grubb Hill...... San Augustine, Christ C h ___ I 1 00 Amherst. County. Taylor, M ission ...... i Lexington, Ascension...... ) 13 13 31 05 Tyler, Christ Ch...... “ St. Mark’s ...... J i 7 80 11 85 Waco, St. Paul’s ...... | St. Luke’s...... 604 Parishes Contributing to Domestic and Foreign Missions.

Domes­ Domes­ tic. Foreign. tic. Foreign. General. V ebginia— Continued. Y e b g in ia —Continued. Augusta County. Bristol, St. John’s...... $ $ St. Paul’s ...... 22 36 Augusta, Trinity...... $75 00 $170 00 St. Stephen’s...... 27 73 14 27 Boyden Chapel---- St. Paul’s Ch. Home.. Good Shep. Mission.. 7 48 Bath County. Warm Springe, Christ Ch__ Elizabeth City County. Bedford County. Elizabeth City, St. John’s...... Hamner, St. Stephen’s...... Centurion---- Bussell, Trinity...... West Russell, St. Thomas’ ... Essex County. Heber, St. John’s...... 3 25 Lee, St. Mark’s...... South Famham, St. John’s. 1 5 00 St. Paul’s.; Botetourt County. St. Ann’s, Vauter’B...... Botetourt, St. Mark’s...... 22 50 “ St. Matthew’s...... Woodville, Trinity...... 16 36 Fairfax County. Brunswick County. St. Andrew’s, St. Andrew’s .. 16 17 Fairfax, St. John’s...... < Trinity...... Truro, Zion...... 15 76 St. John’s ...... Buckingham, County. “ ChriBtCh...... 2 00 “ Meade Chapel...... Tillotson, Emmanuel...... ) 2 25 Theological Seminary Chapel. 175 00 “ Grace...... ) Herndon, St. Timothy’s...... 10 00 “ St. Peter’s ...... Falls Church...... 6 00 [Epis. High School...... 50 00 Campbell County. Fauquier County. Moore, Trinity...... 2 50 ¡Hamilton, St. James’ ...... 15 00 50 00 St. John’s ...... ¡Emmanuel, Grace...... “ Castle Graig Ch...... 2 50 Meade, Trinity...... 6 25 " Good Shepherd...... 5 00 Whittle, Trinity...... 22 50 Lynchburgh, St. Paul s ...... 10 00 20 17 “ Grace...... Grace Memorial 18 65 Leeds, Leeds...... 11 65 37 96 12 54 Piedmont, Emmanuel...... Caroline County. “ St. Stephen’s...... 1 00 St. Margaret’s, St. Margaret’s. Fluvanna County. St. Mary’s, St. Peter’s 1 Rivanna, St. John’s ...... 29 37 Grace...... j “ Fork Union......

Charles City County. Franklin County. Westover, Westover...... 1 20 34 Franklin, Trinity...... 6 00 “ Mapsico...... ) Frederick County. Charlotte County. Frederick, ChriBt Ch...... 10 00 30 00 Cornwall, Christ Ch...... ) St. Thomas’, St. Thomas’. . " Grace...... ) Gloucester County. Chesterfield County. Abingdon, Abingdon---- 2 88 2 87 Dale, Trinity...... 2 00 Ware, Ware...... Manchester, Meade Memorial. 37 05 Sherwood Mission...... Clover Hill Church...... 10 00 Goochland County. Clark County. St. James’, Northam, Grace. 1 50 4 59 5 17 Cunningham Ch’p’l, Christ Ch 24 50 St. Thomas’ ...... Greenway Court, Meade Mem. Clark, Grace...... 7 39 80 00 Greenville County. Clark and Jefferson Counties. Meherrin, Christ Ch.... Wickliffe, Wickliffe...... Halifax County. Antrim, Grace...... Culpeper County. “ St. John’s...... 26 00 Roanoke, Christ Ch__ 4 00 St. Mark’s, St. Stephen’s ...... “ St. Luke’s__ Little Pork...... 4 00 Ridley, Christ Ch...... ) Hanover County. St. Paul’s ...... I Slaughter, Emmanuel...... St. Martin’s, Trinity...... 1 Cumberland County. Fork...... ) 6 00 7 86 St. Paul’s, Immanuel...... Leighton, St. James’ ...... St. Paul’s...... Lyttleton, Grace...... St. Martin’s, St. James the LesB Dinwiddie County. Ashland, St. James’ ...... 28 76 45 24 Bath, Calvary...... “ Sapony...... Harrison County. Bristol, Grace...... 103 19 Bethel, Christ Ch...... Parishes Contributing to Domestic and Foreign Mmiom. G05

D om es­ Foreign. General. Domes­ Foreign. I General. tic. tic. V i r g i n i a — Continued. V ib g in ia — Continued. Henrico County. Montgomery County. Christ Ch...... $ $26 50 ¡Montgomery...... Grace...... 13 35 17 59 Emmanuel...... 5 69 Nansemond County. Monumental...... 70 00 95 00 Moore Memorial ... 34 08 56 00 Upper Suffolk, St. Paul’s., St. James’ ...... 30 00 151 50 Lower Suffolk, Glebe...... St. park’s...... 20 00 “ St.John’s. St. Paul’s...... 5 00 St. Phillip’s...... St. Andrew’s...... 10 00 42 12 Nelson County. St. John’s...... 90 00 Nelson, Christ Ch .. Bethlehem. Henry County. “ Trinity...... Patrick, Christ Ch.. New Kent County. “ Emmanuel. t. Peter’s, St. Peter’s ... Isle of Wight County. “ St. James’ ... Newport, Christ C h...... 20 25 10 00 Norfolk County. James City County. Elizabeth River, Christ Ch 25 00 CO 00 St. Luke’s 12 00 26 28 85 50 Bruton, Bruton Parish ! 13 50 23 00 St. Paul’s 50 38 76 30 Christ Ch...... 12 00 Berkley, St. Paul’s Chapel. Portsmouth, St.John’s__ 2 33 King George County. Trinity...... 5 00 St. Paul’s, St. Paul’s...... Northampton County. Hanover, St. John’s...... ) “ Emmanuel...... j Hungar’s, Christ Ch...... 38 69 Brunswick, Lamb's Creek.... Hungar’s...... 16 69 King William County. Nottoway County. St. David’s, St. David’s__ Nottoway, St. Luke’s...... Lancaster County. Northumberland County. Christ Church, Grace...... 1 00 St. Stephen’s, Emmanuel... Christ Ch...... 1 00 Whitechapel .. 1 00 Orange Comity. Loudoun County. St. Thomas’, Christ Ch... 15 18 St. Thomas’. Shelboume, St. James’ . 12 00 97 67 “ Christ Ch.. 4 75 Pittsylvania County. “ Cotocton.. 3 03 Johns, Emmanuel...... 6 25 Banister, Emmanuel. 25 17 Meade, Trinity...... Camden, Epiphany... 51 04 Hamilton, St. Paul’s__ 14 75 Prince Edward County. Louisa County. St. Ann’s, Emmanuel...... 1 Green Spring, St. John’s., Trinity, Trinity...... Powhatan County. ! Lunenburg County. Powhatan, St. Luke’s ...... j 30 00 King William, Manikin...... Cumberland, St. John’s. St. James’, Southam, Emman-, “ St. Paul’s.. uel...... | Genito, Grace...... j Madison County. Princess A n n e County. | Bloomfield, Piedmont.. Trinity...... Lynnhaven, Emmanuel...... 18 89 “ Eastern Shore Chapel Matthews County. Prince George County. i Kingston, Christ Ch.. . | “ Trinity...... i Martin’s Brandon, St. John’s .: 13 20 ; “ Merchant’s Hopei 8 65 Mecklenburg County. | “ Brandon...... I

St. Luke’s, St. Luke’B...... I 5 50 | Prince William County. J “ St. Timothy’s ..; " Old Church______Dettengen’s, St. James’ | 6 77 ot. James’, St. James’,...... 12 50 Trinity...... 1 78 “ St. Andrew’s...... Leeds, St. Paul's...... 3 69 Middlesex County. Pulaslci County. Christ Church, Christ Ch. J Pulaski, Emmanuel 6 0 6 Parishes Contributing to Domestic and Foreign Missions.

Domes­ I Foreign. General. j Foreign. I General. tic. I_____ V i r g i n i a — Continued. ; W estebn M ichigan — Cont’d.

Rappahannock County. \ j ;Burr Oak, Grace...... $ : S Baldwin, Mission...... i $ Bloomfield, St. Paul’s ...... < $ $ ¡Breedsville, Mission...... “ Trinity...... (Charlotte, Grace...... 1 59 IColdwater, St. Mark’s ...... 7 25 Richmond County. •Coopers ville, Epiphany...... 1 33 50 iCourtland, St. Paul’s...... Lunenburg, St. John’s...... '< 10 00 Decatur, Mission...... North Farnham, Farnham___ j ¡Eaton Rapids, St. Matthew’s.. 2 24 2 24 ¡Elk Rapids, St. Paul’s...... 4 46 4 96 Roanoke County. ' 1 “ Trinity...... ! lEvart, St. John’s...... Salem, St.John’s. 13 36 ¡Farwell, Trinity...... “ St. Paul’s.. 64 39 ¡Grand Haven, St. John’s...... Grand Rapids, Good Shepherd Rockbridge County. \ Chapel...... “ Grace...... 3 00 1 02 Latimer, Grace...... | 35 50 54 00 “ St. Mark’s...... 81 01 69 25 St. Paul’s Mem. 2 00 Rockingham County. ; Greenville, St. Paul’s...... 3 50 1 50 ¡Hastings, Emmanuel...... 1 02 47 10 Rockingham, Emmanuel...... j i Hersey, Mission...... ¡Holland, Grace . . • 54 25 Shenandoah County. | ¡Homer, Christ Ch...... 1 19 Ionia, St. John’s...... 4 00 4 26 Beckford, St. Andrew’s — Ishpenning, Grace...... 10 00 . Kalamazoo, St. Barnabas’ Smyth County. Chapel, “ St. John’s...... 4 01 4 01 Smyth County, Christ Ch . " St. Luke’s...... 59 84 36 15 10 00 Lawton, Mission...... Southampton County. ¡Ludington, Grace...... 6 10 1 85 ¡Lyons, Grace...... St. Luke’s, Ch. of Our Saviour. 4 50 ¡Marshall, Trinity...... 37 22 16 00 “ ’Franlrtin...... Mendon, St. Paul’s...... MnsTfpirrYn St.. Pn.nVs____ 5 38 2 28 Spotsylvania County. | Newaygo, St. Mark’B Mission.. 1 00 | Niles, Trinity...... 2 50 St. George’s, Christ Ch... 1 P a w P a w . St. M a r k ’ R...... 1 25 2 33 6 0U St. George’s. Pentwater, St. James’ Mission “ Trinity...... 1 Plainfield, Christ Ch.:...... Berkeley, St. John’s...... 1 Quincy, Mission...... Rockford, Mission...... 2 90 85 Stafford County. Saranac, Trinity...... Saugatuck, All Saints'...... 7 70 1 06 Overwharton, Aquia...... ¡South Haven, Mission...... St. Andrew’s... iThree Rivers, Trinity...... 2 04 2 05 ¡Traverse City, Grace...... 5 2» 2 00 Surrey County. !Tustin, Mission...... ¡Union City, Grace...... 87 87 Southwark, Grace...... Whitehall, Redeemer...... 9 00 9 00 ¡Miscellaneous...... 1 00 20 00 Sussex County. ¡Parishes cont. D. M...... 27 “ F. M ...... 25 292 54 182 55 91 30 Albemarle, Emmanuel...... “ G.M ...... 5

Washington County. W e s t e r n N e w Yoek. Goodson, Emmanuel. Addison, Redeemer...... 5 00 Holston, St. Thomas’ . 21 61 Albion, Christ Ch...... ¡Allen’s Hill, St. Paul’s...... 10 00 5 00 Warren County. 'Angelica, St. Paul’s...... , ...... 80 00 177 50 10 00 ¡Avon, Zion...... St. Thomas', Calvary...... 10 64 ¡Batavia, St. James’ ...... 10 84 9 29 Bath, St. Thomas’...... 35 15 14 00 Westmoreland County. IBelmont, St. Philip’s...... Belvidere, Christ Ch...... Copie, Nomini...... Bradford, St. Andrew’s...... 2 15 2 20 “ Yeocomico...... Branchport, St. Luke’s...... 10 00 5 00 Montrose, St. James’ — Brockport, St. Luke’s ...... 7 63 5 68 Washington, St. Peter’s , 5 00 Buifalo, Ascension...... 13 50 “ Christ Ch...... 17 50 52 50 Wythe County. “ Grace...... 34 Cl 22 23 “ St. James’ ...... 1U 85 9 82 Wythe, St. John’s...... 5 00 j “ St. John’s...... 20 17 21 00 Miscellaneous...... 174 25 1243 33 31 45 “ St. Luke’s ...... Parishes cont. IX JM...... 35 ¡«Jf TITmt’v,k 6 69 “ F. M ...... 80 913 32 4079 16 604 98 St. Paul’s Cathedral.. 308 20 60 00 “ G .M ...... 21 “ St. Philip’s ...... “ Trinity...... 136 71 88 81 W e s t e b n M i c h i g a n . Canandaigua, St. John’s...... 46 47 17 06 Canaseraga, Trinity...... 1 50 1 50 25 00 Albion, St. James’ ...... 4 91 Catharine, St. John’s...... 8 00 2 24 Allegan, Good Shepherd 8 00 4 00 ■ Clifton Springs, St. John’s ... 13 00 Battle Creek, St. Thomas’ 1 19 12 9 00 Clyde, St. John's...... Big Rapids, St. Andrew’s ! 7 55 Coming, Christ Ch...... 8 80 6 00 76 30 Parishes Contributing to Domestic and Foreign Missions. 607

Dom es­ Foreign. j Pomes- | roreign. tic. W e s t e b n N e w Y o k e — Ckmt’d. W est Virginia — Continued.:.

Brooke County. 1 Cuba, Christ Ch...... * 2 34 Dansville, St. Peter’s...... 7 25 St. John’s, St. John’s...... ‘ $ Dresden, St. John’s ...... 1 77 “ Wellsburgh, Christ Ch..; ! Dunkirk, St. Johr.’s...... East Aurora, St. Matthias’---- Cabell Caunty. \ East Bloomfield, St. Peter’s... East Pike, Holy Innocents’ ... Trinity, Huntington...... j Ellicottville, St. John’s...... Forestville, St. Peter’s...... Grembrier County. j I Fredonia, Trinity...... 22 Geneses, St. Michael’s...... 14 42 St. John’s Mission, Lewis- Geneva, De Laneey Memorial. burgh..: i Grace...... White 11 “ St. John’s Chapel___ Sulphur Springs. j j St. Peter’s...... 209 138 65 St. Philip's...... 6 7 27 Hampshire County. “ Trinity...... 878 488 79 Hammondsport, St. James’. . . 2 03 Romney...... : j Havana, St. Paul’s ...... 2 30 Hinsdale, St. Peter’s...... H ardy County. Honeoye Falls, St. John’s ___ Hornellsville, Christ Ch__ Emmanuel, Emmanuel, ] j Howard, Trinity...... Moorefield. J | Hunt’s Hollow, St. Mark’s___ ' I Jamestown, St. Luke’s ...... H arrison County. j j Le Eoy, St. Mark’s ...... Lewiston, St. Paul’s...... Bethel, Christ Ch., Clarks- j j Lima, Christ Ch...... burgh..11 Lockport, Christ Ch...... “ Grace...... Jackson Caunty. \ ^ Lyons, Grace...... Mayville, St. Paul’s ...... 1 25 Ravenswood, Grace.. Medina, St. John’s...... " Ripley. Middleport, Trinity...... Mount Morris, St. John's___ 29 89 27 76 Jefferson County. \ Newark, St. Mark s...... Niagara Falls, St. Peter’s ...... 5 92 St. Andrew’s, Grace, Lee-1 Nunda, Grace...... town | 3 50 1 Oakfield, St. Michael’s...... “ St. Barthol- ¡- i Olean, St. Stephen's...... 5 00 omew’s, Mid- j Palmyra, Zion...... 10 27 dleway j , 3 50 16 50 | Penn Yan, St. Mark’s ...... 20 Trinity, Shep- Perry, Holy Apostles’...... herdstown.. 4 00 54 55 Phelps, St. John’s...... Zion, Charles­ Pittsford, Christ Ch...... 10 20 town...... 77 05 353 53 234 89 Rochester, Christ Ch...... “ St. John’s, “ Epiphany...... Charlestown.1 “ Good Shepherd...... “ Harper’s Ferry. \ St. Andrew’s...... 66 38 Wickliffe.Wickliffe...... [ St. Clement’s...... 15 St. James the Greater Kanawha County. \ “ St. Luke’s...... 479 262 12 3 60 “ St. Paul’s ...... 32 20 72 St. John’s, St. John’s ...... ■ “ Trinity...... 2 2 00 St. John's Chapel...... 24 51 Salamanca, St. Mary’s...... Bangor, St. Mark’s, Coalburg. Sodus, St. John’s...... 6 Sodus Point, Christ Ch...... 2 Lewis County. Stafford, St. Paul’s...... 3 Suspension Bridge, St. Am­ St. Paul’s, St. Paul’s ...... ■1 10 00 ' 20 00 brose Chapel. 18 13 " Epiphany...... Marion County. \ \ Tonawanda, St. Mark’s...... Warsaw, Trinitv...... ' 2 75 Christ, Christ Ch., Fairmont. 1 00 Watkins, St. James’ . ! 38 00 13 75 Wayne, St. John’s...... Marshall County. Wethersfield Springs, St. „ Clement’s .. Trinity, Trinity, Moundsville. wellsviUe, St. John’s...... Westfield, St. Peter’s.. 5 88 17 60 Mason County. Wolcott, St. Stephen’s ... . ! Youngstown, St. John’s...... Point Pleasant, Christ Ch...... Miscellaneous...... 197 43 226 45 280 51 “ Bruce Chapel. Parishes cont. D. M . . 50 “ F. M ;43 3144 24 1849 25 Monongalia County. “ G. M ...... 4 Trinity, Morgantown...... ! West Y e b g in ia . Berkeley County. Monroe County. Norborne, Martinsburg, Trinity. 15 31 11 00 33 73 Madison, All Saints’...... Mt. Zion, Hedges- 35 00 5 00 10 00 ville...... 7... Morgan County. Christ Ch., Bunker Hill. 2 50 2 50 Bath...... ! 608 Parishes ContributiJig to Domestic and Foreign Missions.

I Domes­ tic. General. W e s t V e b g i n i a —Continued. W is c o n s in —Continued. Ohio County. Waukesha, St. Matthias Waupaca, St. Mark’s St. John’s, St. John’s...... Whitewater, St. Luke’s St. Matthew's, St. Matthew's Miscellaneous Wheeling. 74 10 Parishes cont. D. M .. “ St. Matthew’s Chapel •• F. M...... 5 143 35 145 58 40 00 “ G. M...... 1 Pleasant County.

St. John’s, St. John’s ...... O b e g o n a n d W a s h i n g t o n M i s s i o n . Pocahontas County. Madison, Huntersville,Hills-1 boro’ and Clover Lick, i Albany, St. Peter’s ...... Astoria, Grace...... Taylor County. Baker City, St. Stephen’s. Butteville, Incarnation .. Grafton.. Canneinah, St. Paul's Chapel.. Canyon City, St. Thomas___ Wood County. Cove, Ascension.... 20 00 20 00 Corvallis, Chapel of the Good Emmanuel, Emmanuel___ Samaritan...... “ St.John’s...... East Portland, St. David’s___ Trinity, All Saints’ ...... Eugene City, St. Mary's. “ T rinity...... 17 50 47 45 La Grande, St. Peter's... Miscellaneous...... 67 50 13 00 Milwaukee, St. John’s ... Parishes cont. D. M ...... a ------McMinnville, St. James’ . “ F. M...... 12 167 Oregon City, St. Paul’s .. “ G. M ...... 8 Pendleton, Redeemer__ Portland, St. Helen’s Mission Chapel.. St. Helen’s Hall. “ St. Matthew’s Mission Chapel...... Ashippan, St. Paul’s ...... “ St. Stephen’s...... Baldwin, St. Luke’s...... “ Trinity...... Baraboo, Trinity...... 10 00 Roseburgh, St. George's.. Beaver Dam, St. Mark’s... Salem, St. Paul’s...... Beloit, St. Paul’s...... The Dalles, St. Paul’s...... Bloomfield, Holy Communion “ St. Stephen’s . Butte des Morts. Christ Ch... Union, St. John’s...... Black Biver Falls, St. Alban’s. Upper Astoria, Chapel Holy Broadhead...... Innocents’...... Chippewa Falls, Zion...... Weston, All Saints’ Columbus, St. Paul’s...... Delafield, St. John Chrysos­ tom’s ...... WASHINGTON TEKBITORY. Delavan. Christ Ch...... Eau Claire, Christ Ch...... Colfax...... Elkhom, St. John’s ...... Kalama, St. Andrew’s Chapel. Evansville, St. John’s ...... Olympia, St. John’s ...... 9 25 Fox lake, Christ Ch...... Port Townsend, St. Paul’s___ 6 60 « 95 Geneva, Holy Communion Seattle, Trinity...... Janesville, Christ Ch...... Tacoma, St. Peter’s...... “ Trinity...... New Tacoma, St. Luke’s...... Kenosha, St. Matthew’s ...... Vancouver, St. Luke’s...... 36 80 St. Peter's Chapel.. Walla Walla, St. Paul’s...... 24 40 La Crosse, Christ Ch...... Miscellaneous...... Lancaster, Emmanuel...... Parishes cont. D. M...... 7 Madison, Grace...... “ F. M ...... 7 Milwaukee, All Saints’ Cath’l. 40 00 “ G. M...... 13 “ Christ Ch...... “ St. James’...... 50 00 Dakota Mission. “ St. John’s...... “ St. Paul’s ...... Bismarck...... “ Trinity...... Canton ...... Mineral Point, Trinity...... Eden...... Montfort, Calvary...... Elk Point, St. Andrew'b. Nashotah, St. Sylvanus'...... 18 00 Fargo, Christ Ch , Oak Creek, St. Mark's...... Gethsemane...... Oconomowoc, Zion...... Firesteel, Holy Trinity. Pine Lake, Holy Innocents’... Fort Abercrombie...... Platteville, Trinity...... Fort Randall. Portage, St. John’s ...... 10 58 10 58 Fort Dakota. Prairie du Chien, Trinity...... Mitchell. Racine, Emmanuel...... Morriston, Mission.. “ St. Luke’s...... Sioux Falls, Calvary. Racine, St. John's Chapel___ Springfield. Biver Falls...... Swan Lake, Good Samaritan.. Sparta, St. John’s ...... Vermillion. Star Prairie, St. John’s...... Yankton, Christ Ch. Sun Prairie, St. Paul's...... Miscellaneous. Superior, Redeemer...... Parishes cont. D. M...... 2 Sussex, St. Alban’s...... “ F. M 1 4 01 11 35 Watertown, St. Paul’s ...... « G. M . Parishes Contributing to Domestic and Foreign limionx. 609

D o m e s ­ F o re ig n . I G en eral. tic. Colobado Mission, I Nevada Mission— Continwd. Including Colorado and Wyom­ ing. Belmont, St. Stephen's $ Carson, St. Peter’s...... COLOBADO. Dayton...... Eberhardt, Trinity Chapel__ BaldwmsviUe, Heavenly Rest.i $ Empire...... Bergen Park, St. Mark’s...... Eureka, St. James’ ...... Boulder, St. John’s...... Genoa, St. James’ ...... Canyon City, Christ Ch...... Gold Hill, St. John’s...... Central City, St. Paul’s...... Hamilton, St. Luke's...... Colorado Springs, Grace...... Pioche, Christ Ch...... Del Norte, Epiphany...... ¡Reno, Trinity ...... j 50 00 " Incarnation...... ¡Silver City, Grace...... j Denver, All Saints’ ...... Treasure City...... : " (West), Emmanuel... •Virginia, St. Paul’s...... j 30 00 (North), Mission. Wadsworth...... j St.John’s...... | 19 ¡Miscellaneous...... j Trinity Memorial___ ! ¡Parishes cont. D. M...... 2| — Evans, Redeemer...... j j “ “ F. M...... 1 1G2 00 Fort Collins, St. Luke’s...... ! 10 00 ! “ “ G. M...... 2j Georgetown, Grace...... j (Empire), Emmanuel ! Niobraha Mission. ! Golden, Calvary...... I Greeley, Holy Trinity______| Cheyenne River Reserve, Idaho Springs, Calvary...... I St. John’s Lake City, St. James’ ...... Station.j Littleton, St. Paul’s...... i “ “ St. Paul’s Manitou, St. Andrew’s...... Station.! Morrison...... St. Stephen’s Nevada, Christ Ch...... Station. Ouray, St. Paul’s...... ¡Crow Creek Reserve, “ St. John’s...... 3 65 Christ Ch, Poncha Springs, St. Stephen’s. “ “ St. John Bap­ Pueblo, St. Peter’s...... 56 6U tist’s Ch’l. Itosita, St. Matthew’s...... “ “ St. Thomas’ . Silver Cliff, St. Luke’s...... Flandreau, St. Mary’s...... West Plum Mission...... Fort Randall...... Lower Brule Reserve, Ch. of WYOMING TEBBITOBY. ! The Saviour. ! “ “ St. Alban’s.. Cheyenne, St. Mark’s...... S “ “ St. Barnabas' Evanston, St. Paul’s...... | “ “ St. Luke’s... Shoshone Agency...... McKenzie’s Point, St. Paul’s.. Laramie, St. Matthew’s...... (Pine Ridge Reserve...... Miscellaneous...... 20 00 Rosebud Reserve, Ch. of Jesus Parishes cont. D. M ...... 3 Margaret Mem. 32 83 ! 26 97 " F. M...... 86 60 Santee Reserve, Our Most “ G. M...... 2 Merciful Saviour. “ Chapel of Our M ontana Mission, Blessed Redeemer. Including Montana, Utah, and Chapel of Our Idaho. Holy Faith. “ St. Mary’s School. 4 00 MONTANA. Yankton Reserve, Holy Fel­ Bozeman, St. James’ ...... 36 95 lowship Cath. 11 09 Butte, St. John’s...... “ Ch’p of Holy Name. 6 66 Deer Lodge, St. James’ ...... 8 00 “ “ Holy Comforter. Fort Benton, St. Paul’s Miss.. 12 85 St.Philip the Helena, St. Peter's...... 31 20 Deacon. 3 90 Madison Valley, Trinity...... 4 15 Miscellaneous...... 5J Missoula, Holy Spirit...... 18 00 Parishes cont. D. M...... 9 Sheridan, St. Luke’s...... 4 05 “ F. M...... 3 35 47 Virginia City, St. Paul’s...... 14 45 “ G. M...... 1

UTAH. i N o b t h e b n T e x a s M is s i o n . Corinne, Chapel Good Samari­ ¡Arlington, Mission...... tan ...... Bonham. Trinity Mission__ Logan, St. John’s...... 11 53 Breckenridge, Mission...... Ogden, Good Shepherd...... 27 40 ¡Brownwood. Mission...... Plain City, St. Paul's...... 7 61 ¡Clarksville, Christ Ch.Mission. Salt Lake City, St. Mark’s .... 169 79 ¡Cleburne, Holy Comforter.... 9 30 4 00 “ “ St, Paul’s Chapel 23 55 ¡Comanche, Mission...... 15 00 ¡Corsicana, St. John’s...... 25 7,1 2 70 I d a h o . •Dallas,St.Matthew’« Cathedral Boise City, St. Michael’s... 16 90 I “ Ch’p of Incarnation... Idaho City, St. Mark’s...... 5 00 Denison, St. Luke’s ...... Silver City, St. James’ ...... 5 00 Ennis, St. Thomas’ ...... Blackfoot Mission 4 20 Fort Griffin...... Lewiston, Nativity...... 5 00 Fort Worth, St. Andrew’s.. Miscellaneous...... 21 bü 14 50 Gainesville, St. Paul’s...... Parishes cont. D. m ! .!!!.!! is ¡Hillsborough, Mission...... “ f . m 2 427 18 10 65 j 34 50 ¡Honey Grove, St. Mark’s.. “ G. M 1 ¡Kaufman...... Kimball...... N e v a d a M i s s i o n . McKinney, St. Peter’s...... Austin, St. George’s...... 112 00 10 00 Paris, Holy Cross...... " St. John’s...... Sherman, St. Stephen’s__ 610 Parishes Contributing to Domestic and Foreign Missions.

D om es­ tic. Foreign. General. N. Texas M ission— Continued. N. Cal. Mission—Continued. Sulphur Springs, Mission___ Santa Rosa. Incarnation___ Terrell, Good Shepherd...... Smartsville, Mission...... Texarkana, St. James’ ...... 4 35 St. Helena...... Weatherford, All Sa-ints’ ...... Suisin, Grace...... Waxahatchie, Mission...... Vallejo, Ascension...... Miscellaneous...... 15 50 Wheatland, Grace...... Parishes cont. D. M...... 3 Woodland, Mission...... “ F. M...... 3 54 85 Yreka, St. Laurence...... “ G. M...... 1 Miscellaneous...... Parishes cont. I). M 1 “ " F.M ...... 2 W e s t e b n T e x a s M is s i o n . “ G. M 1 Boerne, Mission...... New Mexico, Brownsville, Advent...... Including Arizona. Chocolate, St. Paul’s ...... Corpus Christi, Good Shep­ NEW MEXICO. h erd ...... Cuero, Grace...... Albuquerque, St. Stephen’s. ElPasa, St. Clement’s ...... St. John’s__ Fort Concho. Chaplaincy...... Las Vegas, St. Paul’s...... Fort McKavitt, Mission...... Las Cruces...... Goliad, Mission...... Maxwell Grant...... Gonzales, Mission ...... Messilla, St. James’ Mission. Hallettsville, M ission ...... Santa F(5, Holy Faith...... H oney G rove, St. M ark’s ...... Santa F^, St. Thomas’ Miss.. Indianola, Ascension ...... Silver City...... Lavaca, Grace...... Miscellaneous...... Lavernia, Mission ...... Parishes cont. D. M 1 Lockhart, Immanuel...... “ F. M ...... Luling, Mission ...... “ G. M % Rockport, Mission...... San A ntonio, St. M ark's j F o b e i g n C h u r c h e s . j Cathedral.. 20 00 “ St. Luke’s Chaxjel... < 10 10 (England, Attleborough, ! “ St. J oh n ’s C h a p el... 11 25 j near Norfolk.! j San Marcos, St. Mark’s...... j 3 25 ¡Canada, Ontario, St. Cather-i : San Saba, Mission...... ; ine’s/ 10 00 i Seguin, St. Andrew’s...... i “ Montreal...... i 5 00 i Sutherland Springs, Mission..! Africa, Cape Mount...... j 20 00 1 Victoria, Trinity ...... j i China, Shanghai, St.John’s! | 1254 72 ! Miscellaneous...... j 2 00 50 00 | College Chapel.1 Parishes cont. D. M ...... 2 ¡Italy, Rome, St. Paul's...... : “ F. M ...... 1 15 35 11 25 70 00 'Italy, Rome, St. Peter’s ; 48 70 “ G. M ...... 11 ¡Japan, Tokio, Trinity Clip ’l.1 45 12 i 45 13 I ! “ Osaka, Mission Chp’l.; 39 52 \ 168 18 ! “ Tokio, “ J. H. Q.” ... N o b t h e h n C a TjTf o b n i a M i s ­ "E.” ...... : s i o n . “ “ “A Missionary.” j France, Nice, Ch. Holy Spirit 5 00 j fl 00 Auburn, Christ Ch...... ■ Miscellaneous...... 100 00 . Benicia, St. Pauls...... Bridgeport, Trinity Chapel... j i 189 64 j 1504 03 I 4S 79 10 00 10 00 Legacies...... 371C0 13 ¡229/7 06 Folsom, Trinity...... Miscellaneous...... 3245 19 ¡25941 3G i Grass Valley, Emmanuel . Proportion of General Mis- ! ! Lakeport, Trinity, Mission ... sion offerings as per de­ Marysville, St. John’s...... tails in the third column Napa, Christ Ch...... of this table...... 8738 25 9193 97! Nevada, Trinity...... Mite Chests not credited to | ! Petaluma, St. John’s...... Parishes...... 142 28 \ I Placerville, The Saviour...... 1------1------Sacramento, St. Paul’s...... Total...... 220393 29 ¡185789 33.

t Two dollars of the amonnt acknowledged in last year’s Annual Tables as from St. Catharine’s, Ontario, Canada, should have been credited to this Church.

TOTAL CONTRIBUTIONS FROM ALL SOURCES.* F oe D omestic Mîssions (including proportion of contributions for General Missions), ...... $220,593 29 F oe F oreign Missions (including proportion of contributions for General Missions, ...... $185,789 88 Total, ..... $106,388 12

* These amounts include “ Specials,” which cannot be used to meet the appropriations of the Board. The “ Specials” received by the Domestic Committee aggregated $40,333.05. The Specials received by the Foreign Committee aggregated $.5,788.05. And for the Mexican Loan, $2,050.00. The whole amount, therefore, under the control of the Board was: F o b D o m e s t i c M i s s i o n s , .... $180,260 24 F o b F o b e i g n M i s s io n s , . 157,920 24

T o t a l , ...... $338,180 48 * SUBSCRIBERS TO GENERAL MISSIONS, SEPTEMBER 1st, 1880, TO SEPTEMBER 1st, 1881.

(So fa r as Lists have teen furnished.)

BISHOP’S SUBSCRIPTIONS. Trinity Church, C laverack. The Rt. Rev. Richard H. Wilmer, D.D., A laba m a . W. M. Cook, Mrs. M. L. White, Ida E. Now, .Mrs. The Rt. Rev. William Croswell Doane, S.T.D., A lban y. Cornelius Shaw, Mrs. Allen Fryman, Mrs. Milton Pulver, Elmer Sheldon. Mary J. Reichel, Mrs. Eliza The Rt. Rev. M. A. De Wolfe Howe, D.D., LL.D., Dunham, Mrs Eliza Tiel, Mrs. Charles Hoffman, Central Pennsylvania. Frank P. Studley, Idella V. Studley. Rev. W. M. The Rt. Rev. John Williams, D.D., LL.D,,Connecticut. Cook, H. G. Adams, Mrs. Pletus Ricnmon, Mrs. W. The Rt. Rev. Alfred Lee, D.D., D elaw are. D. Pierce, Mr. R. Ludlow, J. Eugenia Brink, ifi The Rt. Rev. John Watrus Beckwith, D.D., G eorgia. St. Paul's Church, Fi'anlclin. The Rt. Rev. William Edward McLaren, DD., Illin ois. Mrs. A. Barnes, Mr. A. Rathbun, Miss Mary Bogie, The Rt. Rev. Joseph Cruikshanlt Talbot, D.D., LLD., Miss Mary Lloyd, Mr. William Jester, Mr. ‘Dexter. In d ian a. Mr. B. T. Cook, Mrs. R. T. Johnson ...... $ 5 2 0 The Rt. Rev. Thomas Hubbard Vail, D.D., LL.D., K ansas ARKANSAS. The Rt. Rev. Thomas U. Dudley, D.D., K en tu ck y. St. Paul's Church, Fayetteville. TheRt. Rev. John Nicholas Galleher, D.D., L ou isia n a . Mrs. North, Joe Hobson, J. T. Cravens. Mrs. Moore, The Rt. Rev. Henry Adams Neely, D.D., M ain e. Mrs. Hauptman, Mrs. Pettigrew, Miss Dickson. Mrs. TheRt. Rev. William Pinkney, D.D., LL.D., M aryla nd. Taylor, Ellwood Loy, S. R. Stone, Mrs. Walker, Miss Walker, Mrs. Boles, Mrs. Mcllvoy, Mrs. Ferguson, The Rt. Rev. Samuel Smith Harris, D.D., LL.D., Mrs. Whitlow, Cash, Mrs. P. McCormack, Miss Davis, M ichigan. MissM. Deane. George Deane, Mrs. Heame, W. Don­ The Rt. Rev. Henry Benjamin Whipple, D.D., M in n e­ nelly, Mrs. J. McCormack, Mrs. Spencer $1 i) 75 sota. TheRt. Rev.William Mercer Green, D.D., Mississippi. CENTRAL NEW YORK. The Rt. Rev. Charles Franklin Robertson, D.D., M is­ Mission Church, C a n astota. souri. Mrs. Martha Jane Hayward, William Stone Hay­ The Rt. Rev. Robert Harper Clarkson, D.D., LL.D., ward, William Leete Hayward, Martha Stone Hay­ N ebraska. ward, Bertha Fredericka Hayward, Mary Elizabeth The Rt. Rev. John Scarborough, D.D., New Jersey. H ayw ard ...... $ 1 0 8 4 The Rt. Rev. Theodore B. Lyman, D.D., North Caro­ Zion Church, Fulton. lina. M. A. Lambert. E. Williamson, Mrs. George North, The Rt. Rev. Gregory Thurston Bedell, D.D., Ohio. Edith Wood, Sarah Stocks, Sarah Dodgson, Mrs. The Rt. Rev. , D.D., LL.D., Charnley, Ellen Kelley, Elizabeth Whittle, Mrs. John Pennsylvania. Smith, Emily Fish, Mrs. M. R. Warner, Clara Louise TheRt. Rev. Alexander Burgess, D.D., Q uincy. Kellogg, Mr. and Mrs. Hiram Bradway, Allie Saunder- The Rt. Rev. Thomas March Clark, LL.D., R h od e son, Nellie Parkhouse. Mrs. E. F. Blanchard, Deborah Island. Sheridan, Mrs. J. F. Hubbard, Eliza Beahan, Bessie Cullen, Mrs. A. P. Tucker, Morris Whitaker, Nealy The Rt. Rev. William Henry Augustus Bissell, D.D., V erm ont. Whitaker, John Stocks, Anna Dyson, Charles Light- foot, Frankie Kelly, Jenny Beahan, Lilly Wilson, The Rt. Rev. Francis M. Whittle, D.D., LL D., V ir­ Hiram Bishop Bradway, Emma Horton, Fanny De ginia. Graw, Harry Dyson, Arthur Dyson, Abram Fox, The Rt. Rev. George D. Gillespie, D.D., W estern George Ketcneson, George Kelly, Carry Kelly, Anna Michigan. Morley, S. E. Rowland, Lilly Lambert, Myrtie Gil­ The Rt. Rev. George W. Peterkin, D.D., W est Vir- bert, Eugene Smith, Emma Coats, Frankie Ketclieson, • ginia. Rosie Lambert, Mr. Ramsden, Eliza A. Tremells, The Rt. Rev. Edward Randolph Wells, D.D., W isco n ­ Phoebe Moyses, Mary Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. M. sin. Brando, Mrs. J. H. Case, Mrs. Giles S. Piper, Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Morton, S. B. Whitaker and family. Lillian The Rt. Rev. Benjamin Wistar Morris, D.D., O regon. Sharpe, Mrs. W. Race, Mrs. R. L. Gilbert, Mr. and The Rt. Rev. Ozi W. Whitaker, D.D., N evada. Mrs. Luther Robertshaw, .lane Wilson, Mrs. D. C. The Rt. Rev. William Hobart Hare, D.D., N iobrara. Draper, John Morley, Laura W. Forman, Ann Reeves, TheRt. Rev. Alexander Charles Garrett, D.D., LL.D., Mrs. H. F. Carrier, Mrs. Back, Mr. and Mrs. John C. Northern Texas. Highriter, Fred. Back, Anna Holden, Herbert Smith, The Rt. Rev. R. W. B. Elliott, D.D., Western Texas. Bertha North, Belle Brando, Hatty Bradshaw, Frank Coats, Fred. Smith, Johnny Ineson, Lena Gilbert, T o ta l...... $ 1 , 4 1 0 0 0 Annie Whitely, George Wilson ...... $ 5 3 6 6 ALBANY. St. Paul's Church, Owego. All Saints' Cathedral Chapel, Albany. Thirty-five pledged givers. No names for publica­ Erastus Coming, Sarah W. Barnard, Mary Banks, t io n ...... : ...... $ 3 6 3 3 Mary 1 arker Corning, “ F.,” Mary D. Adams, Caro­ line G. Hun, Laura Van Rensselaer, Edward Bow- CENTRAL PENNSYLVANIA. ditch, Mrs. C. M. Bennett, E. W. Boyd, S. S. Fine, Church of the Good Shepherd, Milford. M g om ery H. Throop, Charlotte W. Throop, H. L Mrs. Ida Hankins, Mrs. Eldred, Mrs. Edgar Pinchot, Wadding, George A. Guion ...... $ 1 7 3 5 0 Miss Mary Poillon, Emille Riviere ...... $ 9 9 2

* See “ Annual Tables ” of Parishes contributing, etc. (page 583), for actual total of receipts from these arishes and for many contributions to General Missions from Parishes from which no lists have been furnished, or which do not desire contributors names published.—[Sec. 612 SUBSCRIBERS TO GENERAL MISSIONS.

St. Philip's Church, Summit Hill. Verzier,Miss Kate Henderling, Miss Jennie Hargraves, R. H. Kline, Mrs. N. P. Hyndman, Mrs. M. Fellows. Mrs. Levi Balster, Mrs. W. H. Nelson, Mrs. Ch. E. Miss Kate Thomas, John W. Patterson, Mrs. L. Me Chatfleld, Mrs. J. P. Castie, Mrs. Geo. Northrup, Mrs. Murtrie, J. F. Harris, John McMiehaels, N. P. Hynd­ Charles Frost...... $55 00 man, Thos. W. Renshaw, Mrs. L. Renshaw, Miss M. Rensbaw, A. L. Sinyard, M. E. Sinyard, Wm. E. Sin- DELAWARE. yard. Miss Bell Kline, George Q. Kline, Annie Ichter, St. John's Church, Wilmington. John H. Ichter, W. L. Minnick, Ella M. Minnick, Mrs. (In Memoriam), (In Memoriam), T. Gardi­ Ingersoll. Fannie Ingersoll, E. H. Kistler, Mrs. ner Littell, Helen A. Littell, John Stockton Litteil, Rutter, Miss Racheal McMurtrie...... $ 1 0 75 S. Harrington Littell, Elton G. Littell, Helen Arcadia Christ Church, Towanda. Littell, John Burnham (In Memoriam), E. Van L. Mrs. Lucy M. Adams. Miss Mary Adams, Walter G. Burnham, Eliza Burnham, John Bird Burnham, Tracy, Mrs. Walter G. Tracy, Miss Cora E. Bartlett, “ Dear Little Lucy ” (In Memoriam), Mary E. Blymer Robert H. Laning, Mrs. Wm. M. Mallory, Mrs. Robert (In Memoriam), Charles M. Bird, Leah J. Bird, John Blymer Bird, Anna Woods Bird, A. G. France, Reba McKee, Mrs. Elias W. Hale, Mrs. Sam’l. H. Sackett, G. France, Lily G. France, Annie Freese. Mary Bul­ MissM. Irene Mason, Mrs. Charles F. Cross, Mrs. E. B. lock, H. D. Child, M. Wier, Francis G. du Pont, Mrs. Felton. Mrs. J. A. Manville, Mrs. Charles E. Passmore, F G. du Pont, Francis Irenee du Pont, Eleanor du Mrs. Dr. Ladd, Mrs. Ephraim W. Elwell, T. C. DeLano, Pont. Irene Sophie du Pont, Alexis Felix du Pont, and family, James T. Hale, Esq., James A Mears.Rod- Ernest du Pont, Anonymous, Sarah H. Bates, Mrs. ney A. Mercur, E^q., Mrs. Henry C. Hildreth, Judge Austin Harrington. Mrs. Martha Ward, Sarah Ward, Ulysses Mercur, Mrs. Ulysses Mercur, Mrs. M. M. Spal­ Hannah Ward, H. H. Littell, Walter Edgar Barr, Elvie ding. Mrs. D. F. Barstow, Mrs. John J. Griffiths, Mrs. Goodley, Willie Goodley, W. D. Sedzwick, Jennie Olean.M. Smith. Miss Anna C. Smith, Mrs. George Ste­ Hawkins, Lucy Miller, Joseph Pierce, E. Alberti Van vens, John S. Beers, Mrs. John S. Beers. William W. Trump, Leighton C. Van Trump, James Geery, Nan­ Lamoreux, Mrs. Thomas B. Johnson, Mrs. William nie Dorsey, Florence Pearson, Anonymous, St. John’s Mis, Mr. James McCabe, Mr Harrison T. June, Mrs. Sunday-school, Bishop Lee Class, Alexis I. du Pont E. 0. Macfarlane, Mrs. David Rahm, Mrs. John C. C. Class, Rev. Stevens Parker Class, Rev. Leighton Buck, Mrs. Wm. A. Chamberlin...... $5 3 2 0 Coleman Class, Bishop Lay Class, Bishop Stevens Class, Rev. Henry Martyn Class, Bishop Scarborough CONNECTICUT. Class, Bishop Whipple Class, Bishop Bowman Class, Christ Church Parish, Pomfret. Bishop Clarkson Class, Bishop Elliott Class, Bishop U. C. Randall, Mrs. L. C. Hoppin, Miss Eleanor Vin­ Potter Class, Bishop Seabury Class, Bishop Morris ton, Miss Eldredge, Mrs. Goodhul, Miss Chandler, Miss Class, Bishop Kerfoot Class...... $81 12 Newman, Miss Jepson, Miss Bowers, Miss Alice Bowers, Miss Stephens, George S. Fester, Miss C. EASTON. McAlister, Alex. H. Vinton, Charles S. Thompson, Coventry. Mrs. W. Chapin ...... $ 1 3 5 0 0 No names...... $6 00 Christ Church, Trumbull. Christ Church, Talbot County. Wm. H. Bulkley, Charles Osborn, Wm. A. Mallett, E. F. Dashiell, Helen Goodsell, Cornelia Smith, Wm. Nichols, Aaron B. Mallett, S. G. Nichols, Phoebe Lydia Dawson, Rosa Dawson, Mrs. George Edmund, Sherman, Caroline A. Mallett, S. Mallett Sanford Sallie Wallaston, S. S. S. Covey, John W. Skinner, Isaac P. Wheeler, George Sherwood, George Mallett, Dr. and Mrs. Gibson, Mrs. Addie Bowdle, Addie Annie F. Bulkley, Mrs. Jesse Mallett, Orville Mallett, Bowdle, Mrs. George E. Haddaway. Minnie Valiant, Annette J. Burr, J. A. Treadwell, Harriet Mallett, E. Mrs. G. W. Tyler, Miss Emma Feddeman, Mrs. Dollie Baldwin Burr. Geo rge S. Burr, Alden Seeley, B. H. Feddeman, Nellie Willis, Mrs. John C. Adams, Mrs. French...... $1 5 75 Emily Harrison, Mrs. Kate Harrison, Mrs. Sallie Daw­ Christ Church, Easton. son, Walter Skinner, Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Denney, Deborah Jennings, Martha Jennings $ 2 5 0 Miss Olivia Harrison, Mr. Charles Denny, Mr. John 0. Adams, Mrs. Susan Dawson, George Haddaway and Grace Church, Trumbull. Sons, James McDaniel...... $3 3 30 Mrs. Geo. P. Torrence. Mrs. Horace Burr, Hobart R. Wheeler, Mrs. L. G. Beers, Miss F. Helena Beers, FOND DU LAC. Miss Sarah E. Beers, Mrs. F. L. Turney, Mrs. E. M. Trinity Church, Neenah. Beardsley, David S. Walker, Mrs. John H. Beach, Mrs. Ebenezer Wheeler, Ebenezer Wheeler, Wihnot C. Helen M. Willard, Mrs. Wm. P. Peckham, Richard Wheeler, Miss Huldah A. Beardsley, Wm. H. Broth- Stone, S. S. Neenah, Wis., Mrs. C. E. Willard..$6 33 well, Mrs. Nelson W. Burr. Mrs. Harriet F. McCoy, Mrs. Theodore A. Mallett. Miss F. Augusta Beardsley, ILLINOIS. Zalmon Hall, Miss Kate Clarke, Mrs. Edw. Piatt, Mrs. Zion Church, Freeport. L. B. Burroughs, Mrs. E. B. Borroughs, Miss E. J. Mrs. Jane Howsum, Mrs. May Van Reid, Mrs. Eli Burroughs, Stephen H. Burroughs, Mrs. Stephen H. Pettinger,; Mrs. Katharine Morgan, Mrs. Maria Black, Burroughs, Miss S. Elizabeth Burroughs, Stephen J. Mrs. W. G. Lamb, Robbie Lamb, Mrs. W. D. Rowell. Burroughs, Martin A. Beach ...... $38 2 0 Mrs. J. I. Neff, Mrs. J. A. Crain, Venette Crain, Chas, Trinity Church, Trumbull. Crain, Ellet Crain, Mrs. H. C. Hyde, Harry Hyde. Jamie Hyde, Fred. Bartlett, Fred. R. Bartlett, Mrs. F, Geo. P Torrence, Miss Juliet Beardsley, Webster B. Bartlett, Isabella Bartlett, Mrs. M. J. Robinson, Mrs. Beardsley, Mrs. Wm. H. Blood, Mrs. M. M. Smith, G. M. Clayton, Mrs. Thos. Webster, Rose Webster, Mrs. Geo. E Peet, Miss Emma H. Peet. Miss Jean­ Ada Webster, Horace Webster, Mrs Abram Braisted, nette Nichols, Mrs. David B. Plumb, Miss Frances Mrs. H. Gransden, Selina Gransden, Eva Gransden, Plumb, Orange B. Plumb, David Burr Curtis, Mrs. E. Belle Gransden, Olive Gransden, Harry Gransden, H. Thompson, Mrs. Chas. E. Booth, Miss Caroline May Stoskopf, Mrs. W. T. Giles, Jlyra Giles, Mrs. Booth, Miss Phoebe Booth, Chas. E. Booth 1 6 0 0 Dan. Adamson, May Adamson, Christie Adamson, Trinity Church, Waterbury. Mrs. Chas. Can, Chas. Can, Katharine Can, Clarence R. W. Micore, Mrs. J. M. L. Scovil, E. C. Lewis, Miss Can, Mrs. H. Buckman, W. J. Hall, Mrs. J. H. Beau­ A. O. Sperry, C. J. Pierpont, Dennis Hawley. Miss mont, Geo. Lewis, Nelson Strong, Letitia Stewart, Fisbie, A. B. Pierpont J. W. Smith, Miss Susan Conke, Mrs. J. R. Rosebrough, Mrs. J. A Sheetz, J. A. Sheetz, A. O. Shepardson, Ch. E. Lamb, Geo. L. Peck, R. Q. D. B. Breed. R. F. Sweet, Mrs. E. M. Sweet, Mrs. Wm. Pierpont, Geo. W. Welton, W. W. Bonnett, R. W. Hill, Atkinson, Helen Atkinson, Harry Atkinson, W. E. S. P. Williams, E. IX Steele, Mrs. Horace Wells, Wm. Boyington, Mrs. W. E. Boyington, Lucy Barker, Mrs. A. Hollman, A C. Nrthrup. Mrs. F. A. Warner, Mrs. Geo. F. Johnson, Stewart McCall, Sarah Naylor, Juhn Wm. H. Adams, Mrs. C. N. Parsons, Mrs. Wm. Booth, Naylor, Ada Naylor, Miss Jane Stoneman, Mrs. Oscar J. K. Smith, I. C. White, Mrs. Horace Johnson, Mrs. Taylor, Miss Winnie Taylor, E. C. Warner, Mrs. E. C. Emma R. Townsend, Mrs. E. M. Hurlburt, Mrs. A. M. Warner, Eddie Warner, Hubert Warner, Bertie War­ Young, Mrs. Mary A. Coer, Mrs. J. L. Pierpont, Mrs. ner, Roy Warner Miss Clara Boynton, Miss Sarah C. B. McKee, Mrs. G. H. Cowell, Mrs. Jas. Nicholson,Buckman, Miss Maggie Buckman, Mrs. John Arthur, Jas. M.Warren, Mrs. Addie Morris, Mrs. G. W. Conner, Emma Arthur, David Arthur, Mrs. Chas. Green, Mrs. Mrs. D. B.Wilson, H. A. Skidmore, Nathan Dikeman, Wm. Harris, Miss Clara Long, Miss Ella Long, Miss Edward E. Blakeslee, Mrs. Wm. Comber, Miss Aug. Ida Long, Miss Ada Long, Mrs. F. J. Middleditch, SUBSCRIBERS TO GENERAL MISSIONS. C13

Miss Frankie Middleditch, Mrs. Edwin Perkins, Ellen i Abrams, Andrew Abrams, Mrs. Ann E. Barber, Mat- Perkins. Jennie Perkins, Nettie Potter, William Pot­ jtie M. Bates, Humphrey Bogrett, AVillie Bogrett, ter, Jennie Potter, Kittie Potter, Mrs. J. F. Smith, ! Oscar Bogrett. Henry Neely Bogrett, Eddie Bowman, Fred. Smith...... $53 36 Georgia Bowmau, Mrs. Ann Bovd, D. N. Clark, Mrs. D. N. Clark, Albert AA\ Clark, Anna Clark, Mrs. N. W. IOWA. Clark, Annie Cassin, Katie Cassin, John Cook, Mrs. Cathedral, Davenport. John Cook, Mary A. Cook, John P. Cook, Plioebe Cook, Mrs. Cammick, Mrs. John Diggins, Miss Ada Wm. Stevens Perry, Bishop, Mrs. T. Y. Mickle, Diggins, Norah Diggins. Mrs. Wm. Doughty. Joseph Mrs. Sara’l. Perry. Mrs. J. M. Parker, H. B. Hoff­ Doughty, Asa Fearrebay, Annie Fernald’ .Miss 01. man, Mrs. Hugh Garrett. Learoyd Silvester. Amy Fessenden, R. Fiander, Mrs. R. Fiander, Thomas H. Silvester, W. W. Silvester, Mrs. M. H. W. I Francis, Bessie Follis, Bennie Follis, Sirs. Mary E. Silvester, Mrs. Hutchinson. Robert Sickles. Mrs. John Foster. George Garland, Airs. George Garland. Miss Eowe, J. D. Barrette, Thomas Hooley, Mrs. L. A. j Ada Garland, Robert Grass. Mrs. Mary Gillespie, Wood, Robert S Davis, Mrs. Wm. Braithwaite, D. R. i Frederic Gillespie, Frank Gillespie, Louisa Gillespie, Lillibridge, C. B. Barlow, Miss M. M. Griffith, Miss | Cora Gillepsie, Mrs. Ann Hall, George Hanson. AVar- Goodrich. Miss Alice Croul, Cash, Mrs. Nash, Mrs. iren Hathewav, Mrs. AV. Hatheway, Anna Hinkley, Powers. Miss Walters, G. V. Lauman, Miss Van Tuyl, j Miss Maria Holt, Mrs. Elizabeth Holland, David Hol- Mrs. Van Tuyl, Mrs. Crawford, Mrs. Allen, Mrs I land, Lavinia Holland. Willie Holland, John H. Hud- Clougher, Mrs. Culver, Mrs. Howard, W. L. Allen, i son. Maud Irvin, AVillie Irvin, P. E. Kilcup, Jeremiah Cash, Mrs. M. G. Fernald, E. D. Robeson.SI 14 65 j Kilcup, Hugh Kilcup, James Lavery, Mrs. J. Lavery, Grace Church, Lyons. George M. Lavery, David E. Lavery, Gracie Lavery, Mrs. S. A. Ashton, Mrs. G. W. Ashton, Mrs. Mary Mrs. S. D. Leavitt, Amy White Leavitt, Mrs. Eldorado Booth, Mrs. Paul Bibbs, Paul and Mary Bibbs, Mrs. i Lee, James Lee, Eliza Laskey, George Laskey, Mrs. D. M. Blain, Mrs. F. M. Cory, Mrs. I. I. Cook, Mrs. j J. R. Magee, Mrs. Chas. McConnell, Cassie McConnell, Silas Gardiner, Mrs. A. M. Gabriel, Eva Gabriel, Mrs. j Frank McConnell, Mrs. Thos. McCutcheon, Maggie Wm. Holmes, Mrs. M. A. Hazlett, Mrs, Mary Leim- j McCutcheon, Alice McCutcheon,Thomas McCutcheon, bach, Mrs. Thomas Leedham, Lillie L. Leedham, Mrs. \ Albert McCutcheon, Lizzie McCutcheon, Mrs. Chas. E. B. Lake, Mrs. A. Messmer, Harry Messmer, Mrs. I McLean, Frederic McLean, Maria McLean, Lillie Me O. McMahon, Mr. R. N. Rand, Mrs. M. Rudman, Mr. l Lean, Miss H. E. Odell. Jennie Orcutt, Samuel Ray R. T. T. Spence, Mrs. Maria H. Spence, Miss Mary T. I Orcutt, Frederick Paine, Mrs. F. Paine, Miss E. L. Spence, Mrs. N. Showerman, Mrs. F. Scofield, Miss I Paine, Geo. R. Paine, Gussie Paine, Freeman Parker Eliza Scott, Mrs. J. Welch, Mrs. M. A. Walden, In­ ; Mrs. L. B. Pettingill, Miss C. L. Pettingill, M. L. mates of Riverside Institute...... $6 2 25 Phillips, Mrs. M. L. Phillips. James Phillips. Irene Phillips, Mrs. J. H. Powell. Eddie Powell. Harry LONG ISLAND. ; Powell, Clifford Powell, Mrs. D. Renouf, Lucy Re- inouf, Theressa Renouf, Ethel Renouf, Bertha Renouf, Church o f the Redeemer, Astoria. ; Mrs. E. Rhoades, Lynda Rhoades, AV. H. Sawyer, Rev. F. D. Cooper, Mrs. E. D. Cooper, R. M. Hari- i Mrs.AV. H. Sawyer, Eliza J. Sawyer, Mary A. Sawyer, son and family, Mrs. Duncan, Annie Duncan, Jessie ; James H. Sawyer, Frederick F. Sell man, Miss Lydia Duncan Nellie Duncan, William Duncan, Mrs Shaw, ' Stickney, William Stuart, Mrs. AV. Stuart, Mary E. Mrs Flood, Mrs. A. Wade, Mary Cradock, Eliza Me Stuart, Charles Stuart, Miss Emily Stinson, Miss Loughlin, Nina White, Alice White, A. M. W., N. M., j Martha Stinson, Millidge Swett, Miss E. Thompson, John A. Bartow and family, Edwin Montell and fam­ ! Mrs. Toepfet, Rev. M. H. Wellman, Mrs. M. II. Well­ ily, Francis Montell and family, J. Lathrop and fam­ man, Thos. C. Wellman, Mrs. S. M. AA7ellman, Annie ily, Theodore Foulke, Mrs. Singleton, Mrs. Winn, Mrs. AVilson, Willie AVilson, Mary E. AVoodd — J. L. Green, Geo. A. Yandeiihoff, Mrs. Wood. Mrs. Francis, E. W. Hewitt, Mrs. E. AV. Hewitt, Miss L. J. St. Duke's Church, Portland. Hewitt, T. AA7. Hewitt, Mrs. R. Burnett, Mrs. D. Briell, Right Rev. H. A. Neely, Mrs. G. C. Codman, Miss Mr. D. Briell, airs. G. Walter, M. Riley, AA'. E. Stryker, Bradstreet, Col. J. Hamilton, Mrs. G. F. Shepley, E. Mrs. W. E. Stryker, Anna Stryker, Edith Stryker, K. Ingraham, H. W. Robinson, James White, Col. C. Mrs. Matthews, Miss J. S. Mulligan, E. AV. F., Lizzie E. Blunt. C. B. Greenleaf. C. B. Saunders, H. W. F. Fanning, Ellen AV. Fanning, Julia M. Fanning, Miss Bryant, H. M. Johnson, J. H. Hall, A. R. Stubbs, Wykoff, Miss M. Wykoff, Annie Smallwood, Mrs. Geo. E. B. Jackson, L. C. Gilson, Mrs. AV. F. Phillips, Greig, Mrs. Lockwood, Mrs. G. Beals, Mrs. Ayers, F. Mrs. Otis, Mrs. J. E. Prindle, Mrs. W. El. Clifford, Ayers, A. Ayers, H. Ayers, E. Ayers, Josie Ayers,! Mrs. T. B. Hawley. Mrs. J. Vickery, Mrs. Winship, Ralph Ayers, Mrs. Wm. D. Shipman, Nelson Ship-1 Mrs. Drummond. Mrs. Ayer, Mrs. Huckins, Mrs. M. man, Miss M. King. Mrs. H. G. Fisk, Clifford Fisk, Cain, Miss M. AV. Lord, Miss S. G. Lord, Miss S. Dr. Baylies Mrs. W. C. AVilson, C. Kelly, Mrs. Conk­ Clement, Mrs. E. Clement, Mrs. D. Clarke, Charles S. lin, Mrs. T. AVade, Mrs. Bridgman, Mrs. AV. Bridg- Deake, St. Margaret’s Class, St. Luke’s Class, St. man, Mr. W. Bridgman, Mrs. G. A. Moulton, Mr. G. Agnes’Class, St.Philip’s Class, St. Elizabeth’s Class.St. A. Moulton, Mrs. 1. C. Jackson, Mrs. D. L. Riker, Mrs. Stephen's Class, St. Clement’s Class, St. Catharine’s Bowers, Mrs. ATaughn, Ida Price, B. AA7. Hopper, Miss Class, St. Mary’s Class, Holy Innocent’s Class, St. Lowrie, Mrs. H. Potts, Mr. J. Green, Mrs. J. Green, Anna’s Class, St. James’ Class, St. Mary of Bethany Fred. Green, Arthur Green, T. Miller, Agnes Miller, Class, St. John’s Class, St. Mary Magdalene’s Class, H. Miller, Harry Miller, Mrs. C. G. Ramsay, Mrs. St. Cecilia’s Class, St. Andrew’s Class, Buds of Field, Miss Field, Blanch Field, Mr. Potterton and Promise Class, Mrs. McLaughlin, Miss McLaughlin, family, Mrs. W. Morris, Miss Burslem, Mr. Loviday Mrs. Machi, Mrs. Roche, Mrs. G. T. Davis, Mrs. Sar­ and family, Mrs. Mortimer, Mrs. AVeaver. Mrs. Car­ gent, Miss Sargent, Mrs. M. A. Boyd. Mrs. McCobb, penter, Mrs. William Moore, Mrs. Skene, Mrs. Simp­ Mr. J. A. Merrill, Mr. C. D. Merrill, Miss Annie Mer­ son and family, Mrs. Mercur, Mrs. Nichols, Mrs. rill, Mr. J. M. Mitchell, Mrs. J. M. Mitchell. Mrs. Hawks, Mr. Buck, Mrs. Buck, Raymond Buck, Laura Mussey, Mrs. C. B. Merrill...... $21 5 50 Clark, Mrs. E. Taylor, Mr. Carrington and family, G. St. Mark's WaterviUe. T. Chambers, Mrs. G. T. Chambers, G. P. Chambers, H. S. Chambers, W. A. Chambers, Maud Chambers, Rev. Edwin F.* Small, Mrs. Sarah F. Small, Mrs. Florence Chambers, Mrs. I. B. Moore, Mr. I. B. Moore, Ida F. Abbott, Mrs. J. F. Percival, Mrs. Edward Mrs. Moore, Geo. T. Williamson, A. E. Williamson, Meader, Mrs. Ann Smith, Miss Mary A. Murrell, Mrs. Katie E. AVilliamson, Mrs. Hollingsworth, Mrs. Helen Buck, Mr. J. F. Percival, Mrs. Martha Fifield, Macaulay, Mrs. L S. Beals, Mr. J. Bradbury, Mrs. J. Miss Laura Fifield, Mr. R. T. Beazley, Mrs. Myra Bradbury, Mrs. Pugh, Mrs. E. Cornell, Mrs. M. Bates, Mrs. Marcia Phillips, Mss Clara Morse, Miss Cornell, Mrs. Perry, Mrs. Pryer, Mrs. Berthet, Miss Hattie Moore, Miss Annie Moore, Mrs. L. M. Emery, J. Berthet, A. L. Berthet, Mrs. Christopher, Miss A. Miss Emily S. Phillips, Miss Catharine Tozice, Mrs. Bennett, Miss E. Bennett. Miss, M. Bennett, W. H. Evelyn Gray, Miss Eveline Bacon. Miss Fanny Hopper, Mrs. W. H. Hopper, Miss K. Hopper, Harry Woods, Mrs. Sarah Hughmet. Mrs. Elzarda Smiley, Hopper, Jesse Hopper, W. W. Wright, Mrs. Ketch- Mrs Naathlie Cole, Mrs. Mary S. Stewart,... $ 2 0 47 um, C. Williamson...... $ 3 0 6 50 Wiscasset. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Ingalls, Miss Mary J. Ingalls, MAINE. Mrs. S. B. Hilton, Mrs. Avhite, Mrs. R. Rundlett, Rev. Christ Church Eastport. Henry R Pyne. Dr. Robert Dixon, Mr. Andrew Lacy, Mrs. R. Abrams, William Abrams, James W. Dr. O. St. C. O’Brien, Mr. B. F. Smith ...... $9 25 6 1 4 SUBSCRIBERS TO GENERAL MISSIONS.

MARYLAND. Sease, M. C. Sease, R. J. Sease, Sammie Sea*e, Thos. Immanuel Church, Baltimore Co, Sease, James Sease, Mrs. Osborne, Annie Worthing $20 65 R. R. Mason (Rector), Mrs. N. V. D. Mason, Miss J. NEW JERSEY. M. Galt, Miss Louise D. Black, Miss Mollie Atkinson, Miss Edwin e Blake, Miss Grace Evans, Miss Minnie Si. Paul's Church, Rahway. Garnett, Alfred C. Thompson, William S. Carroll, Mr. E. L. Rogers, Mrs. E. Y. Rogers, Miss M. Ruff, Mrs. Louisa Carroll, Loui Carroll, Harry Carroll. Mr. John M. Tufts, Mrs. John M. Tufts, Miss Lucy Mrs. Mary W. Carroll, Miss Mary S. Carroll- $1 8 31 Tufts, Miss Martha Tufts Mrs. P. E. Tufts Mrs. N. Silvers, Mrs. H. P. Hough, Mrs. O’Done, Dr. L. Drake, St. Matthew's Parish, Bladensburg, Miss C. Drake. Mrs. Thomas M. Martin, Mrs. L. Keefe, Prince George's Co. Mrs. E. Hill, Mrs. W. A. Baker. Mrs. M. C. Freeman, Alethia McCormick, Ben. O. Foundes, Mrs. C. B. Miss E. L. Robinson, Mrs. J. B. Lamberti, Mrs. W. Page, Miss Lucy Reeves, Mrs. Wright Reeves, Mias Denike, Mrs. W. Munger, Mrs. Cleveland, Miss Nellie K. Brindley, Miss Lizzie Briudley, Mr. C B. Thomas, Shunk, Mrs. May Lauterer, Mrs. A. McGuckin. Mrs. Mrs. C. B. Thomas, Master R. Thomas, Dr. C. O. N. Moffatt...... $38 00 Lewis, Wells Lewis, Lillie Lewis, Dr. Chas. A. Wells, Trinity Church, Princeton. Mrs. Dr. Chas. A. Wells, Alfred Wells. Miss Pinkney, Miss Esther B. Stevens, Miss S. C. V. C. Stevens, Mrs. Waters, R. K. Elliot, Mrs. R. K. Elliot, Miss Mrs. Richard Stockton, Mrs. Swann, Rev. A. B. Clara McCormick, Alexander McCormick, Mrs. Alex­ Baker, Mrs. C. B. Smith, Mr. Charles R. Lynde. Mr. ander McCormick, Nannie McCormick, Ida McCor­ Frank McCarthy, Miss Rachel Stevens, Prof. H. B. mick, Mrs. Mary E. Bursely, Jas. L. White, Mrs. H. Cornwall, Mr. F. S. Conover, Mrs. F. S. Conover, E. White, Annie G. White, Ben. O. Snyder, Mrs. B. Bayard Stockton, Miss Sophy Conover $ 1 5 2 29 O. Snyder, E. P. Snyder, Amelia Gasch, Frank Gasch, John Lepper, Mrs. John Lepper, Dorcas Tuttle, Elizabeth Wells, Mary Wells, Leeana Suit, NEW YORK. Eliza B. Ingle, Laura E. Baker, William F. Deakins, Holy Innocents, Highland Falls. Elizabeth Deakins, Bettie A. Deakins. Adelaide Miss Etta Denike, Mrs. Charles H. Clark, Miss Le­ Bridwell. Sarah Bridwell, Henry Constantine. Ernest titia Sinclair, Mrs. Hill, Misses Clara and Nettie Kocke, Henry Kocke, Chas. Kocke, Nellie Middleton, Hagar, Mrs. J. Duane Pell, Mrs. Charlotte Raymond, Geo. E. Hartley, Lee Anna Hartley, Nathan R. Mrs. Campbell Mandigo, Mrs. K Denison, Mrs. Somers, Florence Somers, Elizabeth Cross. Marv Helen Moore, Miss May Drew, Miss Clara Dusenbury, Cross, Marietta Fowler...... $1 01 43 Miss Amy Francis, Miss Eva Swinge, Miss Emily Hagar, Miss Lulu Belle Tucker, Miss Mary Posorsky, MASSACHUSETTS. Miss Belle Kirsch, Miss Bessie Mitchell, Mrs. Wilson, St. Paul's Church, Malden. Miss Jane Bowne, Miss Elizabeth Kleitz, Mii-s Carrie Muller, Miss Lizzie Strahle, Miss Emma Meisie, Mrs. Addy, Mrs. Barrington, Mrs. G. T. Brown, James Turner, Charles Hagar. John Lewis, Ella Drew, Mrs. J. E. Burts, Miss Flint, Miss Gray, Mrs. Grier, Bessie and Willie Birdsley, Miss E. Berard, Mrs. A. Mrs. Hawley, Mi's. Huntington, Mrs. Neal, Mrs. Mordecai. The Misses Wherry. Mrs. Q. O’M. Gillniore, Rawlett, Mrs. Russell, Mrs. Shankland, Mrs. Shaw, Mrs. M. M. Blunt, Miss Belle Craney, Miss Gertrude Mrs. Stone, Mrs. Tate, Mrs. Waters, Mrs. Pecker, D. Thomas, Mrs. Knight, Mrs. A. Piper, Mrs. Lazelle, Mrs. Furbish. Mrs. A. Tonks, Mrs. Wade, Mrs. H. K. Mrs. Fitchett, Mrs. Ellers, Adam Meisie, Walter Oliver. Mrs. M. 0. Atwood, Mrs. Rea, Miss Sherman, Berard, Elwood Tucker. Henry Boch, Edward Boeh, Mrs. Emerton, Miss L. B. Dowse...... $18 25 Oscar Boch...... $7 0 00 MICHIGAN. St. Mark's, New Castle. Emmanuel Memorial, Detroit. Mrs. Edwin Snyder, Mrs. W. R. Stewart, Mrs. E. C. Hoag...... $3 00 Mrs. Letitia Meredith, Miss Court, Miss Alice Court, Miss Jane Court, Miss Hulbert. Miss Eliza Thomas, Christ Church, Ramapo. Mrs. Mary Campbell, Mrs. Mary Tyler, Miss J. Adie Cookson, Wallace Cookson, Mattie Carlough, Dotten...... $ 3 0 0 0 George Craft, Mamie Carlough, Emma Pierson, Archie Mansfield, Gertrude Mansfield, Katie Suffern, MINNESOTA. Harry Ritner, Lulu Duryea. Walter Durvea, Leonard Gethsemane Church, Minneapolis. Carlough, Lulu Harper, Ella Bush, Laura Bush, Allie Greene, Cassie Baker, Rollie Baker, David Fox, D. B. Kinckerboche, John J. Black, J. Atwater, Herbert Sutherland, Willie Sutherland, Katie Wana- L. Fletcher, G. C. Farnham, Mrs. Dernent, Mrs. M. maker, Cash, Offerings...... $1 3 41 B. Harvey, Miss M. Cruikshank, Miss Jerry Kurtz, Miss Minnie Kurtz, Mrs. M. A. Nimock. Mrs. Ira St. Paul's Church, Yonkers. Murphy, Mrs. Dr. Camp, Miss Isabelle King-, Miss Mrs. J. H. Clark, Isabella Clark, Farley Clark, Cash Jessie Pounds, Mr. F. R. Dodge, R. S. Good fellow, Mr. Mrs. Helen R. Croes, J. J. R. Croes. Mary It. Croes B. Stevens. Mrs. W. F. Murder, Mr. L'F. Weitzel, Helen R. Croes, Mrs. C. P. P. Searley. Mrs. Maria L. Miss M T. Abraham, E. H. Holbrook, Jr., Miss Anna Sharpe, Mrs. Isaiah Frazier. Mrs. Harriet E. Messer, M. Brown, Mrs. George Smith, E. S. Stebbins, Mrs. Mrs. M. E. Marvin, David Paton, Mrs. R. Neville, Mrs. G. V. Quillard, Sister Annette Rolf, Mrs. C. Rees, T. R. Murphy, Mrs. Mary Ann Watson, Mrs. A. Van Mr. O. T. Tuttle, Mrs. H. Hurlburt, Mrs. B. L. Taylor, Winkle, Benj. D. Smith, Eugenie Brereton, Laura R. Mrs Hilliker, Mrs. A. Livingston, Mrs. Pritchett, Mrs. Brereton, Dr. A. C. Benedict, Dr. Said Swift, Dr. J. Coolbaugh, Mrs. D. Sullivan, Mrs. McDougall, Mrs, Foster Jenkins, Chas. W. Seymour, Esq., Mrs. Eliza­ Albert Bailey, Mr. S. O. Whitcomb, Mrs. A. B. Coe, beth S. Nugent, Mrs. Jane Scriven, Mr; S. E. Mrs. Wm. Delabury, Mrs. J. A. Thompson, Miss Etta Simonds, Mrs. Margaret Carpenter, Rev. W. H. Mills. Thompson, Mr. Canfield, Mrs. D. E. Spooner, John C n n e ijt Brown, Mrs. Olesen, Mr. Orth, Mrs. Robert Johnson. NORTH CAROLINA. Mrs. Levi, Mrs. Moody, Mrs. W. S. Judd, Edward Chapel o f the Cross, Chapel Hill. Martin, Mr. Pattee, Mrs. Selah Matthews, Mrs. A. H. Sarah A. Taylor, J. DeB. Hooper, Mary Hooper, Katell, Mrs. Zellar, Mrs. Slendenbaker, Mrs. Wharton, Helen Wills, Jos. Blount Cheshire, Jr., Annie H. Fred. Brown, Mrs. Joseph Thomas, Miss Etta Mo- Cheshire, Julia H. Graves, Wm. P. Mallett, C. D. B. natt...... $ 1 4 5 0 0 Mallett, Carrie E. Mallett, Mrs. S. M. Barbee, Lizzie B. Mickle, Mrs. A. Mickle, Ann Saunders, Mrs. R. B. MISSISSIPPI. Saunders, Jos. H. Saunders, Florida C. Saunders, Trinity Parish, Natchez. Agatha Saunders, R. B. Saunders, Jr., Ellen Hale Saunders. Wm. L. Saunders, Jr., Mary R. Smith, Forty-five Contributors in the Parish. [No names Maria L. Spear, Kemp P. Battle, Mrs. Kemp P. Battle, to be published.]...... $5 5 9 0 Herbert B. Battle...... $63 25 NEBRASKA. Franklin, Macon Co. Christ Church Broumville., Mrs. J. A. Deal, Eleanor H. Deal, Mr. A. Morgan, Mrs. L. B. Holladay, Mrs. M. E. Hackney, Geo. B. Miss F. E. Siler, Mrs. C. J. Dalrymple, A. L. Parton, Moore, David Campbell. Mary Hoover, Lucy Hoover. Mrs. J. S. Siler, Nettie C. Siler, James A. Siler. $5 15 Helen Hoover, Ellen B. Johnston, Mrs. Collins, H. A. Calvary Church, Henderson Co. F. Hoover, Georgia Furman, M. C. Sease, Robert No names...... $9 50 SUBSCRIBERS TO GENERAL MISSIONS. 615

St. James' Church, Lenoir. ler, Emma Boerstler, Fanny Boerstler, Sadie L. Bell, F. L. Bush, M. Bush, T. F. Bush, C. F. Bush, M. S.Mrs. James Foster, Mrs. 'Latta, Mrs. J. Sturgeon, Bush. C. N. Baker. M. N. Faucette, M. E. Hartly, L. Mrs. Wm. J. Reese, Julia Reese, Henry Reese, Wm. C. Norwood, S. L. Norwood, B. A. Folk, G. B. Folk, C. Gaston, Sallie S. Mumagh, Mrs. S. Duncan. Mre. I. G. E. Westman. J. H. Norwood, F. B. Caison. Alice C. Butterfield, Mrs. Jacob Ulrich, Mrs. Wm. L. Caison, M. A. McNeelj-, Lina Caison. C. Leunthorpe, Rigby ...... $2 4 0 0 S. L. Patterson, M. S. Patterson, R. T. Lenoir, S. L. Lenoir, S. J. Lenoir, T. B. Lenoir, G. H. Lenoir, W. J. VERMONT. Lenoir, R. T. Lenoir, Jr., H. M. Kent, A. A. Kent, M. Zion Church, Factory Point. E. Kent. C. Freer, A. C. Miller, L. A. Miller. N. A. Mary Wilson. Martha Santhoff, Mary Smith, M. Miller, W. W. Scott. M. D., W. W. Scott, Jr., M. Scott, Lou Wyman, Hattie S. Way, J. Ross Roberts, Chris­ N. Evans, M. Evans...... $18 55 topher Roberts. Willie Roberts. Bertie Mattison. John Wait, Willie Batsford, Charlie Young, A. Phelps PENNSLYLVANIA. Wyman, Eddie Way, F. A. Benedict, E. L. Wyman, Church o f the Messiah, Philadelphia. C. U. Way, Miss Lucy Morrill, Miss Mary Clifford. A. Mrs. Stevenson, Mrs. Acklev, Mrs. Getz, Mrs. Me H. Botsford, Geo. Lewis, Miss Mary Parsons, Miss Cormick, Mrs. Kirkpatrick, Mrs. Nicholson. Miss Lucy Parsons, Miss C Stratton, Mrs. F. A. Lidger- Atkinson, Mr. Lockhard...... $5 55 wood, Mrs. M. Morrill, Mrs. P. Wyman, Mrs. E. L. St. Andrews' Church, Pittsburgh. Wyinan, Mrs. E. Benedict, Mrs. J. Lamson, Mrs. I. B. Wilson, Mrs. S. B. Young, Mrs. C. K. Young, Mrs. EL F. R Brunot, Rev. R. F. Alsop, A. M. Cavitt, E. B.M. Burgess. Mrs. A. L. Graves. Mrs. A. G. Clark, Alsop, Mrs. M. L. Alsop, Mrs. M. F. Alsop, Mrs. L. W. Mrs. T. B^ntlev, Mrs. S. Bradford, Mrs. H. Mattison, Gazzam, Mrs. J. O. Phillips. Geo. E. Chester, Geo. A. Mrs. G. Wait. Mrs. N. Cook, Mrs. E. M. Bates, Mrs. A. Gormly, O. Phillips, Mrs. Wm. Mullins__ L. Miner, Mrs. Geo. Bennett...... St. James' Church, Pittsburgh. Frank Armstrong:. Wm. Armstrong, Katie Han­ VIRGINIA. cock, Blanche Liddell, Joseph Liddell, Mrs. Alexander St. Ann's Parish Albemarle Co. Cozzens, Charlotte Hancock, Samuel Hastings, John Mr. L. Van Doren, Mrs. Peyton S. Coles, Peyton S. Perry, Maggie Livingstone, Mary Hennesy, Maggie Coles, Jr., Isaac Coles, Mrs. Eugene Halstead. T. E. Gardner, Andrew Cozzens, Jennie Ott, Mattie Boyd, Locke, Mr. Tucker S. Coles ...... $ 2 2 0 0 Annie Breen, Annie LitteH, Sadie Littell, Lizzie McLain, Eliza Marshall, Sidney Keigley, Jennie Emmanuel Church, Tillotson Parish, Buckingham. Hanlin, Thomas Harcum, John Van Ryn, Harry Mrs. Emma Glover and daughter, John Horsley, Cozzens, Wm. McGarvey. Mary Kephart, Maggie Mrs. Robertson...... $1 75 Steele, Tommy Hennety, Thomas Harper 15 50 Grace Church, Berryville. Maj. S. J. C. Moore, Mrs. Ellen Moore, Miss Alice SOUTH CAROLINA. Shepherd. Miss Katie Shepherd, Mrs. Nannie Hutch­ St. Paul's Church, Pendleton. inson. Mr. Douglas Castlemau, Miss Jennie Dodson, H., C. H., Mrs. Warley, Mrs. Holmes. Mrs. Bourn, Mr. T- C. Nicewarner, Dr. Cyrus McCormick, Mrs. Mrs. Green, Mr. Green. Mr. L. Green, Miss Dickinson, Cyrus McCormick, Mr. Chas. H. Smith. Mrs. Chas. H. Mrs. Cuthbert, Mrs. Porteous, Mr. Richards, Mrs. Smith, Mrs. Caroline Baker, Mrs. E. Kownslar. Mr. Richards, Mrs. Hunter, Mrs. Cornish, Miss Miller, Mr. Conrad Kownslar, Mrs. Leo 1J. Wheat. Mrs. J. W. and Mrs. Brinsdon, Master and Miss Brinsdon, Mr. McGuire, Miss Rose E. McCormick, Mr. Frank McCor­ and Mrs. Hascall, Miss Hascall, Misses Happoldt, mick. Mrs. R. E. McCormick. Mrs. Gertrude Taylor, Master and Miss Happoldt, Dr. Jenkins, Mr. and Mrs. Miss Mary B. Lewis. Mrs. H. L. D. Lewis, Mrs. E. L. Lewis, Misses Lewis, Dr. and Mrs. Vickens, Miss C. McCormick, Mr. Dawson McCormick, Mi's. G. W. Vickens, Dr. and Mrs. Sloan, Master H. Sloan, Misses Lewis, Miss Esther M. Lewis. Mr. Edgar Allen, Mrs. Seaborn, Mrs. Sitton...... 4 3 80 Annie Brown, Mr. B. C. Taylor, Mr. Shelby Castle- Church o f the Epiphany, Upper St. Johns. raan, Mr. R. J. Lewis, Miss L. T. Lewis, Mrs. Fannie Miss C. P. Gaillard. Mr. Charles R. Gaillard, Mr. Isbell, Miss Lucy E. Allen, Mr. Benjamin M. Vande- John Gadsden, Jr., Mrs. John Gadsden, Jr.. Mr. T. vanter, Mrs. J. C. Irwin...... 89 0 0 W. Porcher, Mrs. T. W. Porcher, Miss Jane Melford, St. James' Church, Ashland. Mrs. H. P. Gourdin, Mr John G. Gaillard, Henrv Mrs. M. E. Noland, Miss M. Noland, Mrs. Saunders, Sinkler, Rachel Sinkler. Floride Sinkler, Robertsine Miss M. Saunders, Miss B. Saunders Jas. W. Morris, Sinkler, Pe.ter Alston, Hetty ALston, Rev. F. G. Scott, Ed. S. Ruffin, Mrs. Pollard, Mrs. Lefroy, Mrs. J, A. Mrs. F. G. Scott, Mr. James Gaillard, Mrs. James Brown, Miss Sallie R. Brown. Miss Emma August, Gaillard, Miss Mary Gaillard. Miss Jennie Gaillard, Mr. Miss Rodie Angust, Prof. C. Morris, Robert W. Tom­ Arthur P. Gaillard, Mrs. K. L Simons. Miss Mattie A. lin, Mrs. John Howell, James Grammer, Mrs. Gram- Simons, Miss Susan 11. Simons, Mr. Willy G. Simons, mer, Mrs. Macmurdo, Mrs. Pemberton, Miss J. G. Dr. Joseph Palmer, Mrs. Joseph Palmer, Mss. Peter Tannor. Dr. G. W. Jones, Mrs. L. A. Jones, Wm. M. Conturier, Mr. R. H. MeKelve.y, Mrs. R H McKelvey, Jones, Emily P. Jones, Lorraine P. Jones, Joseph Mrs. C B. Coxe. Mr. Charles Sinkler. Mr. C. St. C. Jones. Margie A. Jones, Annie C. Jones, Lou. C. George Sinkler, Miss Mary W. Sinkler, Miss Carrie S. Jones, Mrs. Stebbins, Mrs. Russell, Mrs. Weisiger, Sinkler, Mr. Jno. Stoney Porcher, Mrs. Jno. Stoney Mr. John Howard...... 15 OO Porcher, C. Gadsden Porcher. Thos. Davis Porcher, Roanoke Parish. Halifax Co. Miss Annie D. Dubose, Mrs. W. H. Sinkler, Dr. P. P. Palmer, Mrs. P. P. Palmer, Miss Rebecca Palmer, Mr. Thos. J. Packard, Dr. P. H. Foster, Mr. and Mrs. Augustus Flud, Miss Augusta Flud, Miss Jane S. W. H. Sims. Maj. and Mrs. C. A. Snowden. Messrs. Flud, Miss Matilda M. Flud, Mr. Peter Gaillard, Mrs. John and W. B. Sims. Miss M. C. Sims, Mrs. J. W. Timberlake. Mrs. A. V. Womack, Mr. and Mrs. E. B. Peter Gaillaird, MissLettlia F. Gaillaird $ 9 2 0 0 Garrison, Mrs. E. Jackson, Mr. and Mrs. T. C. Wat­ kins, Mrs. Mary E. Miles, Mr. and Mrs. W. G. Morton, SOUTHERN OHIO. Mrs. and Miss Carrington, Mr. and Mrs. E. D. Church o f the Good Shepherd, Columbus. Hundley, Mr. and Mrs. R. V. Bradshaw. Mrs. Betty „A - N. Whiting, Frank Mooney, Mrs. E. G. Whiting, Garrett, Mrs. Isabella Adkisson, Mr. R. A. Hamilton, Miss B. Sheldon. H B. Beaumont, A. E. Allcott, C. F. Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Yuille, Mrs. M. G. Armistead, Wil­ Marvin, A. H. Reams, M. S. Alexander, S. A. Fish, liam Armistead, Mrs. Virginia Waddill...... §8 0 0 Jos. C. Hull, Mrs. Collins, Miss Garner, Wm. Law­ Christ and Hungars Churches, Northampton Co. rence, Mrs. Morrell, Miss Lucy Ritze, Mrs. Nowell, Dr. R. B. Taylor, Col. E. L. Costin, Mrs. E. L. Coa- Miss Nowell, Mrs. Mooney, Miss Fales, Mrs. Cowen, tin, Mrs. Dr. Thom, Miss Marian Thom, Mrs. W. U. Lizzie Cowen, Mrs. Gilkev, Miss McClelland. Mrs. Nottingham, Miss Cora Wescoat, Henry L. Upshur, Dixon. Susie Dixon, E. H. Mooney, Mrs. DeWolfe, Mrs. H. S. Neale, Mrs. Wise, Miss Isabella Wise, Mrs. Hubbard, Mrs. Halsey, Mrs. Fish, Mrs. Silber- Isabel Nottingham. Robbie Nottingham, Willie Cos- nagle, Miss Silbernagle, Mrs. Hendricks, Mrs. Hinge. tin, Mrs. Sarah Upshur. Luther Nottingham, Misa Miss Annie Hull, Mr. Fox, F. O. Granniss $ 2 7 25 Lizzie Nottingham. Mrs. Clara Nottingham, Mrs. A. St. John's Church, Lancaster. C. Spady, W. S. Stevens, Miss Emily Robins, Mr. aija J. N Rippey, Mrs. S. M. Reber, Mrs. H. A. Mithoff, Mrs. W. E. Waddy, Mr. and Mrs. T. C. Walston, Mrs. it R’ ™utz' Mrs. Dr. Boerstler, Josephine Brock, Nancy Parker, Mrs. Kate Schroeder, Miss Mary We«- m « Crummond, Mrs. James Ulrich, Mrs. coat, Mrs. C. J. Holland, Mrs. Jno. E. Nottingham, ■M.. I. Mallory, Mrs. Dr. Palmeter, Mrs. Samuel But­ Mrs. Robinson Nottingham, Samuel Nottingham, (516 SUBSCRIBERS TO GENERAL MISSIONS.

-Severn P. Nottingham, Lucy G. Nottingham, Miss S. Byrne, Harry Byrne, Miss Fannie Davison, Mrs. E- Cary, Rev. G. W. Easter and family, Mr. and Mrs. Mary Edmiston, Mrs. M. R. Ediniston, Grace Edmis- ■Wm. B. Upshur, Mrs. Dr. Donning, Mrs. Geo. Turner, ton, Arnold Edmiston, J. S. Gregory, Mrs. Fannie Mr. T. B. Fisher, Mrs. Kate Wilkins, Mrs. Virginia Gregory, Mrs. S. E. Harrison, Emma Harrison. Anna Leatherberry, Mrs. M. H. Waddy, Mrs. Maggie Mapp. Harrison, Fannie Harrison, Benj. Jackson, Wm. E. $5 5 38 Lively, Mrs. Emily Lively, N. B. Newton, Mrs. P. BI. St. Paul's Chapel and Salem Parish, Salem. Ralston, Genevieve Ralston, Ernie Ralston, W. H. H. Mrs. J. C. Green, Col. R. H. Logan, Capt. G. M. Powers, Mrs. Louise Powers, Lelia Powers, Louise Horner, Geo. Gordon Smeade, W. K. Coontz, Mrs. Powers, Marguerite Powers, Hugh W. S. Powers, A. "Wiley, T. C. Wolfenden, Mrs. James Deyerle, Miss A. Warren, Mrs. M. A. Warren, J. E. Williams, Mrs. Addie Greenwood, Miss E. D. Coles, Mrs. j. M. Terry, Laura Williams, Grace Williams...... $2 0 00 .Mrs. S. J. Griffin, Mrs, A, W. Smeade, Miss M. L. St. Matthews Church, Wheeling. Smeade, Mis? B. B. Johnston, Col. Chas. Burwell, L. Mrs. Frost. Mrs. Hildreth, Miss Dora Hildreth, Miss F. Burges, Miss Sallie Peyton, Mrs. H. D. Huff, Wm. M. E. Roberts, Miss A. B. Roberts, Mrs. C. P. Brown, P. Nelson, Mss Hansbrough, Mrs. Hatisbrough, Mrs. Mrs. A. M. Brown, Miss Helen Brown, Mrs. J. H. W. W. Ballard. W. R. Foley, P. R. Nugent, L. W. Good, Mrs. J. McCourtney, Miss Mary Lamb. Miss Wise, W. D. Boyle, L. C. Hansbrough, R. Logan, Mrs. Newham, Miss M Bonham, Mss Long, Miss V. Keller, and Miss Porcher, Miss Douglas. Mrs. H. L. Pauli, Miss J. W. List. Mr. H. Quarrier, Miss Ida Hardin. Mr. H. L. Pauli...... $ 4 2 05 Mrs. L. Hogue, Mr. R. I. Smythe, Bliss Vardy, Miss Si Maxwell, Mrs. S. B. McMeckin, Mrs. Dr. Dewey, Mrs. WESTERN MICHIGAN. J. Culbertson, Mrs. Craycroft, Mrs. M. C. Good, Hon, Emmanuel Church, Hastings. G. W. Thompson, M s. S. Patterson, Mrs. A. Patter­ Forty-one Contributions. [No names published.]... son. Mrs. L. Dunlop, Mrs. J. Greer, Sr., Mrs. J. Greer, $48 18 Jr., Mrs. Martha Johnson, Mrs. Dr. Allen, Mr. A. WESTERN VIRGINIA. Howell, Mr. N. Whittaker, Mr. L. Delaplain, Mr. A. Mount Zion Church, Hedgesville. Rogers, Mr. E. H. Caldwell, Mr. S. Brady, Mr. J. C. Mr. Garrett Wynkoop, Miss Emma Wynkoop, Mr. Brady, Mrs. W. S. Brady, Bliss F. P. Brady, Miss Walter Lingamfelter, Mrs. Mary Lingamfelter, Mas­ Carter. Miss Maggie Wood, Mss Agnes Hildreth, Miss ter John Lingamfelter, Master Watkins Lingamfel- Luln Hildreth, Bliss Jessie Bochman, Bliss "Man- ter, Mr. Wm. Kilmer, Mrs. Wm. Kilmer,, Miss Amelia Brown, Bliss Pink Russell, Bliss Mollie Russell, Bliss Kilmer, Miss Kate Kilmer, Master Boyd Kilmer, Mrs. Agnes Rose, Miss Jennie Good, Bliss Kate Tingle, Bliss Ross. Mrs. Civil, M-s. Jacob Miller, Mrs. Harley Mil­ Leila Tingle, Miss Cissa Patterson, Bliss Sallie Shoffer, ler, Mrs. Naylor, Mrs. Hensel, Mr. Apple, Mrs. Miss Florence Hoge, Bliss Daisy Hoge, Bliss Blanch Apple, Miss Mary Apple, Mrs. Rhlnaman, Mrs. Grey- Hoge, Miss Sallie Smythe, Bliss Birdie Wickham. bill, Mr. Lee Lingamfelter, Mr. Averill Miller, Mr. Miss Mattie Gore, Bliss Alice Emblen, Miss Camilla Alonzo Naylor, Mr. Geo. T. Kreglow, Miss Flora Bill, Bliss Ella M. Kennedy, Bliss Augusta L. Hoge, Kreglow, Mss AUie Kreglow, Miss Laura Kreglow, Bliss Blargaret Indan, Mss Mary Carter, Bliss M. 0. Master Webster Kreglow, Master George Kreglow, Long, Miss Anne Blue. Blr. Homer Prager, Bliss Elvo- Mrs.. Dr. Mitchell, Miss Laura Miller, Master Eugene bert Emblen, Bliss Katey Kennedy, Bliss Agnes Miller, Master Robert Miller, Master Frank Robins, Graves, Bliss Lydia McBIeckin. Bliss Fannie Small Miss Mary Robins, Miss Hat tie Naylor, Mss Sallie wood, Miss Lucy Brown, Bliss Hattie Prager, Master Lingamfelter, Miss Mabel Henshaw, Mss Fanny Willie Zaeyifelder, Bliss Hoge, Blr. Lucius Hoge, Mr. Henshaw, Miss Lucy Civil. Mss Anna Mller, Mrs. Harry Whittaker, Bliss Bloliie Caldwell, Bliss Jennie Anne Henson, Mss Emma Harley, Miss Laura Har­ Griffiths, Bliss Roberta Jordan, Blr. Perry Caldwell, ley...... -...... $ 2 0 0 0 M , Albert Whittaker, Mr. Curtis Brown. Mr. James Ewing, Blr. Robert Ewing, Miss BI. A. Hildreth. Blr. A. Mr. Geo. H. Hagley^M^J^B.’ McElroy, Mrs. Vir­ T. Clark, Mr. Chas. Blue, Mr. Wm. Hildreth, Blr. ginia Brooks. Mrs. Henry Dumm, 31 r. Jos. H. Easter, Thos. Carnohan, Blr. Benoni Good, Blr. Eugene Hil day, Mrs. S. Farmer, Mrs. L. A. Osborne, Mss J. D, dreth, Bliss Blary Smythe, Bliss Emma Winning...... Rowan, Sir. J. S. Smith, Mrs. Mary Williams, Mr. J, $74 10 H. Noland, Mss Grace B. Noland, Mr. Robert Chew| Trinity Church, Parkersburg. Mrs. Richard Washington. Mr. Jno. A. Washington Mrs. J. W. Camden. Mrs. S. Q. Butcher, Mrs. J. W. Mr. and Mrs. Thos. B. Washington, Mr. Jas. H. Grove’ Murdoch, Mrs. W. Chancellor, Mrs. T. G. Smith, BIrs. Mr. F. W. Brown, J. Aldridge Chew, T. Claiborne G. W. Thompson, Blrs. H. C. Jackson, BIrs. H. Neal, Gi-een, Jr., M . R. A. Alexander, Mrs. R. A. Alex­ Blrs. H. H. Blartin, Bliss L. Stemberger, BIrs. C. H. ander, Mr. Wm. B. Packett, Mrs. Louisa Washington, Shattuck, Mrs. C. C. Martin, Mrs. T. A. Harris, Blrs. Mrs. Lucy M. Morss, M\ S. W. Washington, Mr. and J. J. Jackson, Jr., BIrs. Will H. Smith, Mrs. A. F. Mrs. Jos. Trapnell, Col. and Mrs. W. P. Craighill, Lang. Blrs. F. V. Rathbone, Mrs. John Rathbone, Miss Bessie R. Craighill, Miss S. H. Brown, Miss E. Mrs. W. B. Paden, Mrs. J. V. Rathbone, Jr., Rev. R. R. Craighill, Mss M. L. Craighill, Mrs. John L. Craig­ A. Gibson, Mrs. R. A. Gibson. Mss Lucy Gibson, Blr. hill, Miss F. T. Craighill, Mrs. G. W. T. Kearsley, Mr. Stuart Gibson, Mr. H. H. Moss, Mrs. H. H. Moss, BIrs. J. N. Sadler, Miss Mary Leavell, Mss Jeannie Alex­ Geo. B. Neal, Blrs. C. H. Bartlett, Miss Ann Crumley, ander, Mrs. Rebecca Martin, Msses Sharry, Mrs. A. Mrs. H. B. Stinchcomb, Mrs. Ann Smith, Mrs. J. J. J. Burnett, Mr. W. Burnett, Mrs. Jas.Laur. Hoopp, Jackson, Mrs. J. B. Jackson, Mrs. J. H. Stribbling, Mrs. Thos. Brown, Miss V. Hoopp, Mss M. C. Hen­ Blrs. J. P. Wait, Mrs. L. D. Kraft, Mrs. Phister, Bliss derson, Mss Florence Hunter, Misses Warfield (3), W. Coffee. Mr. J. A. Wetherell, Rt. Rev. Geo. W. Miss Mary E. H. Gardner, Mrs. S. B. Winebrenner, Peterkin, Bliss 0. D. Hanson, William G. Peterkin, Mr. and Mrs. S. Howell, Mr. and Mrs. D. Howell, Constance L. Peterkin, Bessie Peterkin, Blrs. M. A. Msses Howell, (2), Mr. and Mrs. S. J. C. Davenport, Clement, Mss S. J. Neal, Mrs. F. B. Shrewsbury, Dr. and Mrs. J. V. Simmons, Mrs. S. W. Ambler, Mrs. Mr. B. T. Neal, Bliss Fannie Neal, Mr. Bennie Neal, Robert Earle. Mrs. J. P. Brown, Misses Brown (3), Mr. Edward Neal, Mr. Wellington Neal, Mrs. W. Misses Abell (2), Miss L. D. Broadus, Miss Ruth A. B. Vrooman, Mrs. V. S. Smith, Mrs. L. A. Cole, BIrs. J. Hurst, Mrs. A. M. Forrest, Mrs. Julia Johnson, Mrs. G. Blackford, Mrs. Etta R. Despard, Mrs. Woods, Julia Terrill, Mr. and Mrs. N. S. White, Mrs. J. J. Miss Blossie Woods, Mr. R. J. BIcCandlisli, Blrs. Wysong, Misses Terrill (2), Mss Mag. Keyes, Mss H. McCandlish, Miss Nannie McCandlish, Bliss Sallie B. Rooker, Mrs. Fr. Yates, Mss M. B. Yates, Mrs. T. McCandlish, BIrs. T. P. Butcher, Blr. L. W. Smith, C. Green, Miss Flora M. Green, Mrs. B. R. Botts, Mrs. W. P Thompson, Miss Bettie Thompson, BIrs. Mr, J. Ran. Botts, Miss E. M. Lackland, Msses Willis M. L. Murphy, M s. Flora Camden...... $4 2 15 (2), Mrs. N. H. Willis, Mss Lizzie Williams, Mrs. Thos. E. Sublette, Mr. and Mrs. B. C. Washington, NEW B1EXICO AND ARIZONA. Mr. Chas. Timberlake. Mrs. A. B. Yates. Dr. Wm. F. Church of the Holy Faith, Santa Fe. Lippitt, Mr. E. P. Kennedy (deceased), Mrs. Julia Geo. K. Dunlop, Blary C. Dunlop, Madge Dunlop, •Kennedy, Mrs. W. H. Meade, Mrs. C. T. Richardson, Sophie L • Dunlop, Chas. D. Dunlop, Robert Dunlop, Mrs. Jno. S. Selden, Mr. and Mrs. A. K. Selden, Blary G. Dunlop, Isabel B. Dunlop, Willie E. Dunlop, Mrs. A. E. Kennedy, Miss Julia P. Kennedy. $ 2 7 6 5 5 Grace A, Dunlop, Pauline Dunlop. Chas. H. Irwin, St. Paul's Churchy Weston. Mrs. Q. A. Palen, E. S. Palen, R. J. Palen, Carrie W. Mrs. Susan Arnold, Mss Flonde Arnold, Mrs. H. S. Palen, Lizzie Dyson, Mrs. L. B. Torrey, Mrs. S. Anderson, Mrs. Lavinia Bare, Miss Jennie Bare, Mrs. M’Kibbin, Bessie M’Kibbin, Mrs. W. W. Griffin, Willie Etta Bailey, Lena Bailey, Mamie Bailey, Mrs. A. B. Griffin, Eugene Griffin. Clarence Griffin, Arthur Grif­ Brannon, Mrs. Henry Brannon, Mrs. S. M. Britton, fin, H. W. Thornton, Mrs. W. S. Guyer, L. Bradford Mrs. Columbia Bland, Mrs. Elizabeth Byrne, Ralph Prince...... $5 4 90 I. ACT OF INCORPORATION.

An Act to incorporate the Domestic and Foreign Missionary Society of the Protestant Episcopal Church of the United States of America. Passed May 13, 1846, by a tiuo-thirds vote. Amended April 12, 1867, and May 8, 1880.

T h e people of the State of New York, represented in the Senate and Assem­ bly, do enact as follows:

Sectio n - 1. All such persons as now are or may hereafter become members of the “ Domestic and Foreign Missionary Society of the Protestant Episcopal Church in the United States of America,” originally instituted in the year eighteen hundred and twenty, and fully organized by the General Convention of the said Church, in the year eighteen hundred and thirty-five, shall be and are hereby constituted a body corporate, for the purpose of conducting general Missionary operations in all lands, by the name aforesaid. Nothing herein shall affect the power of the said Convention to make such rules and regula­ tions, or so to alter or amend the Constitution of the said Society, as the said Convention shall deem necessary or proper to promote the purpose for which the said Society is incorporated as aforesaid.

S e c . 2. For the object designated in the first section of the Act generally, or for any purpose connected with such object, the said Corporation shall have power, from time to time, to purchase, take by gift, grant, devise, or bequest, and hold real and personal estate, and to sell, lease, and otherwise dispose of the same, provided the aggregate clear annual income of such real estate, at any one time held, shall not exceed the sum of thirty thousand dollars. The Cor­ poration hereby created is declared subject to the provisions of Chapter Three hundred and sixty of the laws of one thousand eight hundred and sixty, entitled An Act relating to Wills.

S ec . 3. The said Society shall in its usual annual printed Report state the amount of its real and personal estate, and the income arising therefrom ; a copy of which Report shall be deposited in the State Library.

S ec . 4. This Corporation shall possess the general powers and be subject to the provisions contained in Title Third of Chapter Eighteen of the first part of the Revised Statutes, so far as the same are applicable and have not been repealed.

S e c . 5. This Act shall take effect immediately, and the Legislature may, at any time, alter, modify, or repeal the same. MISSIONARY CANON OF TH E GENERAL CONVENTION.

S i t U III.— CANON 9 .

O f t h e Constitution of t h e D o m estic a n d F o r e ig n M is s io n a r y S o c ie ty

of t h e P r o t e s t a n t E p isc o p a l C h u r c h i n t h e U n it e d St a t e s of

A m e r ic a .

S e c . I. The Constitution of the said Society, which was incorporated by an 4-ct of the Legislature of the State of New York, is hereby amended and established so as to read as follows :

Constitution of the Domestic and Foreign Missionary Society of the Prot­ estant Episcopal Church in the United States of America, as established in 1820, and since amended at various times.

a r t i c l e i . This institution shall be denominated The Domestic and Foreign Missionary Society of the Protestant Episcopal Church in the United States of America.

a r t ic l e 11. This Society shall be considered as comprehending all persons who are mem­ bers of this Church.

ARTICLE III. There shall be a Board of Missions of such Society, composed of the Bishops of this Church, and the members for the time being of the House of Deputies of the General Conven ti on, the Delegates from the Missionary Jurisdictions to the said House of Deputies, the members of the Board of Managers as herein­ after described, and the Secretarios and Treasurers of the Domestic and For­ eign Committees. The Board of Missions thus constituted shall convene on the third day of the session of the General Convention, and shall sit from time to time as the business of the Board shall demand.

ARTICLE IV. There 6ball be a Board of Managers, comprising all the Bishops, and the Secretaries and Treasurers of the Domestic and Foreign Committees, as mem­ Missionary Canon o f the General Convention. 619

bers e%-officio, and fifteen Presbyters and fifteen Laymen, to be appointed by tlie Board of Missions at every Triennial Meeting of the General Convention, who shall have the management of the General Missions of this Church, and shall remain in office until their successors are chosen, and shall have power to fill any vacancies that may occur in their number. Eight Clerical members and eight Lay members shall constitute a quorum. This Board of Managers shall, when the Board of Missions is not in session, exercise all the corporate powers of the Domestic and Foreign Missionary Society. The Board of Managers shall report to the Board of Missions on or before the third day of the session of the General Convention. But nothing herein contained shall affect the rights of any surviving life-members of the Board of Missions.

ARTICLE Y . The Board of Managers is authorized to form, from its own members, a Com­ mittee for Domestic Missions and a Committee for Foreign Missions, and such other Committees as it may deem desirable to promote special Missionary work, and is also authorized to appoint such officers as shall be needful fcr carrying on the work.

ARTICLE VI. The Board of Managers is intrusted with power to establish and regulate such Missions as are not placed under Episcopal supervision, and to enact all by-laws which it may deem necessary for its own government and for the gov­ ernment of its Committees : Provided, always, that, in relation to organized Dioceses and Missionary Jurisdictions having Bishops, the appropriations shall be made in gross to such Dioceses and Missionary Jurisdictions, to be disbursed by the local authorities thereof. The Board shall notify to the several Bishops the gross sums so appropriated ; and those Bishops shall regulate the number of Mission Stations, appoint the Missionaries, and assign to them their stipends, with the approval of the Board of Managers.

ARTICLE V ll. No person shall be appointed a Missionary who is not at the time a Minister of the Protestant Episcopal Church of regular standing ; but nothing in this Section precludes the Board of Managers from making pecuniary appropria­ tions in aid of Missions under the care of other Churches in communion with this Church, or of employing laymen or women, members of this Church, to do Missionary work. 620 Missionary Oanon o f the General Convention.

ARTICLE VIII. The Board of Managers is authorized to promote the formation of auxiliary Missionary Associations, whose contributions, as well as those specially appro­ priated by individuals, shall be received and paid in accordance with the wish of the donors, when expressed in writing. It shall be the duty of the Board of Managers to arrange for public Missionary meetings, to be held at the same time and place as the General Convention, and at such other times and places as may be determined upon, to which all auxiliaries approved by the Board of Managers may send one Clerical and one Lay Delegate.

ARTICLE IX. This Constitution may be altered or amended at any time by the General Convention of this Church. S ec. II. All Canons, and all action by or under the authority of the General Convention, so far as inconsistent with the provisions of this Canon and of such amended Constitution, are hereby repealed : Provided, however, that nothing herein shall in any manner impair or effect any corporate rights of the saiu Society, or any vested right whatever.

S ec. III. This Canon shall take effect immediately.*

A true copy. A ttest: CHAS. L. HUTCHINS, Secretary o f the House o f Deputies.

*Canon of 1871; as amended, 1877 and 1880 BOARD OF MANAGERS

OF TH E DOMESTIC AND FOREIGN MISSIONARY SOCIETY

OF THE Protestant (Episcopal £I)uvd) in tljc i l S . of -Vmcrica.

All the Bishops of the Church, members ex officio, The Secretaries and Treasurers of the Domestic and Foreign Committees, ex officio, And, appointed by the General Convention of 1880, sitting as the Board of Missions, Rev. John Cotton Smith, D.D. Mr. F. S. Winston. Rev. Henry C. Potter, D.D. Mr. J. C. Garth waite. Rev. H. Dyer, D.D. Mr. George N. Titus. Rev. Charles H. Hall, D.D. Mr. Cornelius Vanderbilt. Rev. Noah Hunt Selienck, D.D. Mr. William Scott. Rev. E. A. Hoffman, D.D. Mr. Charles R. Marvin. Rev. William N. MuVickar. Mr. William G. Low. Rev. George Leeds, D.D. Hon. Benjamin Stark. Rev. J. Livingston Reese, D.D. Mr. Lemuel Coffin. Rev. J. H. Eccleston, D.D. Hon. H. P. Baldwin. Rev. Thomas F. Davies, D.D. Mr. R. Fulton Cutting. Rev. James Saul, D.D. Mr. Howard Potter. Rev. William Tatlock, D.D, Mr. Joseph W. Fuller. Rev. S. H. Tyng, Jr., D.D. Hon. John A. King. Mr. C. M. Conyngham.

R e v . A. T. TWTNG, D.D., Secretary o f the Board.

Rev. A. T. TWING, D.D., Secretary, Rev. JOSHUA KIMBER, Secretary, Mb. LLOYD W. WELLS, Treasurer, Mit. JAMES M. BROWN, Treasurer, FOR DOMESTIC MISSIONS, FOR FOREIGN MISSIONS. 22 Bible House, N. V. 23 Bible House, X. Y.

S t a t e d M e e t i n g s .— In the City of New York, at 2 o’clock P . M., on the second Tuesday of December, March, June, and September.

irorm o f a IDimse or JBeqnest to tljc Society. I give, devise, and bequeath to the Domestic and Foreign Missionary Society of the Protestant Episcopal Church in the United Stales of America, for the use of the Society......

PUBLICATIONS OF THE BOARD.

Jfjs jljriirtt nf Hissifltis* A Monthly Magazine of Home and Foreign Missionary Literature and News. Terms, including postape. $1.50per annum. Clergymen, $1.00. Club rates; Six copies to one address, S7.80 per annum. S in g le copies, four years in advance, $5.00; ten years in advance, $10.00. The S p i r i t o f M is s i o n s will be sent for eight months for $1.00 enclosed with the order. Specimen copies will be gladly sent free. Address, The Rev. A. T. TWING, D.D., 25 Bible House, New York, or The Rev. J. KIMBER, 23 Bible House, New York.

j l o f r b t nntr I f f ? i a r m r Jtoue*

R e v . A. T . T w i n g , D.D.,) 7 Rev. Joshua Kimber, j sa rto rs. Miss M. T. E m e r y , Associate Editor. A paper for the Children of the Church, published both as a Weekly and as a Monthly, and designed for Sunday School Distribution and Home Reading. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTON—Postage Included: W e e k l y I s s u e : Single copies, 80 cents; packages of 10 or more to one address. 54 cents a copy. M o n t h l y I s s u e : Single copies, 25 cents; packages of 10 or more to one address, 10 cents a copy. Payment in advance is always expected. , Subscriptions are received at any time during the year. The volume begins with advent. Bac* numbers can be supplied. Papers delivered in New York City free of charge. Specimen copies will be gladly sent free. Address, The R e v . A. T. TWING, D.D., No. 22 Bible House, New York, or The R e v . J . KIMBER, No. 23 Bible House, New York.

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