The 1 ESS DECEMBER 18, 1958 lo0 publication. and reuse for required Permission DFMS. / Church Episcopal the of Archives 2020. Copyright

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A Critique Of Foreign Missions SERVICES I SERVICES In Leading Theor Christ WITNESS and His Church Churches J In Leading Churches

THE CATHEDRAL CHURCH ICHRIST CHURCH OF ST. JOHN THE DIVINE CAMBRIDGE, MA&SS. Sunday: Holy Communion 7, 8, 9, 10; EDITORIAL BOARD The Rev. Gardiner M. Day, Rector Morning Prayer, Holy Communion - W. B. SPOFFsORDnSR., Managing Editor Sunday Services: 8:00, 9:00, 10:00 and and Sermon, 11; Evensong and ser- KENNETH R. FORBES; ROSCOE T. FOUST; 11:15 a.m. Wed, and Holy Days: 8:00 mon, 4. GORDON C. GRAHAM; ROBERT HAMPSHIRE; and 12:10 p.m. Weekdays: Holy Communion, 7:30 CHARLES S. MARTIN; ROBERT F. MCGREGOR; (and 10 Wed.); Morning Prayer, 8:30; Evensong, 5. GEORGE MACMURRAY; CHARLES F. PENN IMAN; W. NORMAN PITTENGER; JOSEPH H. Tirus. CHRIST CHURCH, DETROIT 976 East Jefferson Avenue The Rev. William B. Sperry, Rector THE HEAVENLY REST, NEW YORK The Rev. Robert C. W. Ward, Asss. 5th Avenue at 90th Street 8 and 9 a.m. Holy Communion Rev. John Ellis Large, D.D. CONTRIBUTING EDITORS (breakfast served following 9 am. service.) 11 a.m. Church School and Sundays: Holy Communion, 7:30 and 9j THOMAS V. BARRETT; JOHN PAIRMAN BRowN; a.m.; Morning Service and Sermon, 11. Morning Service. Holy Days, 6 p.m. publication. GARDINER M. DAY; JOSEPH F. FLETCHER; Holy Communion. Thursdays and Holy Days: Holy Comn- FREDERICK C. GRANT; CLINTON J. KEW; JOHN munion, 12. Wednesdays: Healing ELLIS LARGE; ROBERT MILLER; and EDWARD L. Service 12. Daily: Morning Prayer PARSONS; FREDERICK A. SCILLING; MASSEY H. 9; Evening Prayer, 5:30. ST. MICHAEL AND ALL ANGELS SHEPHERD JR.; WILLIAM B. SPOFFORD JR. 20th and St. Paul BALxTIMoRa, MD. reuse ST. BARTHOLOMEW'S CHURCH The Rev. Dons Frank Ferns, D.D., Rh- for Park Avenue and 51st Street I The Rev. R. W. Knoxe, B.D., Rev. Terence J. Finlay, D.D. THLE WITNESS is published weekly from Asst to the Rector 8 and 9:30 a.m. Holy Communion. September 15th to June 15th inclusive, with ISunday: 7:30, 9:15, 11 a.m. Holy 9:30 and 11 as.m. Church School. the exception of one week in January and IEucharist daily. Preaching Servkce- 11 a.m. Morning Servce and Sermon. semi-weekly from June 15th to September 15th Wednesday, 7:45 p.m. required 4 p.m. Evensong. Special Music. by the Episcopal Church Publishing Co. on Weekday: Holy Communion Tuesday at - behalf of the Witness Advisory Board. 12:10 a.m.; Wednesdays and Saints TRINITY CHURCH Daya at 8 a.m.; Thursdays at 12:10 i MuIAI, FiA. p.m. Organ Recitals, Wednesdays, i Ii Rev. G. Irvine Hller, STD., Rector 12:10. Eve. sicda Services 8, 9, 9:30 and 11 a.ma. Pr. Daily 5:45 p.m. The subscription price is $4.00 a year; in Permission bundles for sale in parisbes the magazine sells for 10c a copy, we will bill quarterly at 7c a TRINITY CHURCH CHURCH OF THE HOLY TRINITY copy. Entered as Second Class Matter, August 316 East 88th Street Broad and Third Streets 5, 1948, at the Post Office at Tunkbannockc, COLUMBUS, OHIO DFMS. NxW YORK CITY Pa., under the act of March 3, 1879. / W. Fay, D.D. Sundays: Holy Communion, 8; Church Rev. Robert School, 9:30: IRev. Richard C. Wyatt, Assistant Morning Service, 11: Harvey, Church Army Evening Prayer, Captain Reginald 5. ISun. 8 HC; 11 MP; 1st Sun. HC; Fri.

Church t 12 N, HC; Evening, Weekday, Len- ten Noonday, Special services an- GENERAL THEOLOC.TCAL * SEMINARY CHAPEL I nounced. Chelsea Square, 9th Ave. & 20th St. SER VICESI NEW YORK OF THE INCARNATION Episcopal Daily Morning Prayer and Holy Com- In Leading Churches ICHURCH 3966 McKinley Avenue munion, 7; Choral Evensong, 6. 4, TExAS

the 5DALLAS The Rev. Edward E. Tate, Rector of ST. STEPHEN'S CHURCH COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY The Rev. Donald G. Smith, Associate Tenth Street, above Chestnut The Rev. W. W. Mahson, Assistant Ssnvr PAUL.'S CAPEL. PHILADELPHIA, PENNA. Nnw YORK IThe Rev. J. M. Washington, Assistant The Rev. Alfred W. Price, D.D., Rector Sundays: 7:30, 9:15, 11 a.m. and 7:30 The R1ev. John M. Krunms, Ph.D., The Rev. Gustav C. Meckling, B.D., p~. Weekdays: Wednesday and Archives Chaplain * Minister to the Herd of Hearing Daily (except Saturday): 12 noon Sun- I Holy Days, 10:30 a.m. day; Holy Communion, 9 and 12:30; Sna:9and 11 a.m., 7:30 p.m. Morning Prayer and Sermon, 11; Weeekdays: Mon., Tues., Wed., Thurs., 2020. j CHURCH OF ST. MICHAEL Holy Communion: Wed., 7:45 a.m. Fri., 12:30-12:55 p.m. Services of Spiritual Healing, Thurs., : AND ST. GEORGE 12:30 and 5:30 p.m. The Rev.J.FacsSnRto ST. THOMAS I 5th Ave. & 53rd Street Th Rev. Alfred L.Mattes, Mnse Copyright NEW YORK CIrY ST. PAUL'S IThe Rev. David S. Gray, Asst., and Rev. Frederick M. Morris, D.D. 13 Vick Park B. College Chsaplain IROCHESTER, N. Y. 5Sundays: 8, 9:30, 11 a.m., High MP 11; Ep Cho 4. Daily ex. Sat. HIC SThe Rev. George L. Cadigan, Rector School, 4 p.m., Canterbury Club, 8:15, Thurs. 11, HD, 12:10; Noon. Rev. Frederick P. Taft, Assistant IThe 7 p.m. day ex. Sat. 12:10.I Sundays. Edward W. Mills, AssistantI Noted for boy choir; great reredos Sudy:8, 9:20 and 11. and windows. Holy Days 11; Fri. 7. ST. JOHN'S CHURCH i I Lafayette Square I WASHINGTON, D.C. PRO-CATHEDRAL OF THE ST. PAUL'S MEMORIAL I The Rev. Donald W. Mayberry, Rector HOLY TRINITYI Grayson and Willow Sts. I Weekday Services: Mon., Tues., Thurs., PARIS, FRANCE SANl ANTONIO, TEXrAS SSaturday, Holy Communion at noon. 23 Avenue, George V Re.James Joseph, Rectom.; Wed, and Fri., Holy Communion at Services: 8:30, 10:30 (S.S.), 10:45 Sun., 7:30 Holy Eu.; 9:00 Par. o. I 7:30 a.m.; Morning Prayer at noon. Boulevard Raspail I11:00 Service. Sunday Services: 8 and 9:30 a.m., Holy Student and Artists Center Wed, and Holy Days, 10 a.m. Holy Communion; 11, Morning Prayer and The Rt. Rev. Norman Nash, Bishop Eu. Saturday-Sacrament of Forgive. Sermon; 4 p.m., Service in French; The Very Rev. Sturgis Lee Riddle, Dean 7:30, Evening Prayer. Iness 11:30 to 1 p.m. VOL. 45, NO. 40 The WITNESS DECEMBER 18, 1958 FOR CHRIST AND HIS CHURCH

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

Story of the Week

is an increase of $423,320 over Divided Church Called Scandal the 1958 budget. The increase was attributed By Former Presiding Bishop mainly to expanded needs of Church World Service, relief * Former Presiding Bishop ern Orthodox communions, for agency of the Council. Of the Henry Knox Sherrill called on the progress it has made in co- total nearly half - $5,864,850 operative programs, he noted, publication. Americans "never to forget the will go for world missions, relief "It is no longer an experiment and rehabilitation. and scandal of a divided Church." but a recognized and permanent Other expenditures will in- Addressing t h e National fact." reuse Council of Churches' General clude $2,941,350 for interpreta- More than 250 clergy and lay tion of the Christian message for Board meeting, Bishop Sherrill the coun- leaders from all over through teaching, evangelism, declared that there was much try attended the luncheon. talk about Church unity but not radio, television and films and required much evidence that the Earlier, Eugene Carson Blake for "application of Christian Churches in this country were of Philadelphia, stated clerk of ethics to all areas of life." greatly concerned about the the United Presbyterian About 10 per cent, or cause of unity. The NCC's Church, urged Americans to $1,286,780 will be spent for Permission first president and a co-presi- create "a climate of opinion and home mission extension, minis- dent of the World Council of good will" that would enable the try to migrants, and develop- take a more DFMS. Churches, he spoke following a government to ment of cooperation among the / luncheon in his honor in active role among nations in Churches. Chicago. developing standards of human The Council's publishing

Church rights. operations and film productions "In general," he said, "there Lauding world-wide progress will require $1,562,280. Ad- to wrestle with is a reluctance since the Universal Declaration ministration of its overall pro- the more serious divisions in was adopted Episcopal of Human Rights gram and supervision of general theology and Church order. For by the United Nations 10 years services will take $307,540. the one thing, the Churches here

of ago, Blake at the same time are passing through a remark- pointed out that American re- COBURN DECLINES able period of material growth, joicing over these achievements marked by an increase in mem- WASHINGTON

Archives must be "mixed with chagrin" bership, larger building pro- because of the increased racial * Dean Coburn of the Episco- grams, with greater plans for 2020. bitterness and violence since the pal Theological School an- atmos- expansion. In such an Supreme Court ordered public nounced on December 9th that phere, each denomination seems school desegregation. he has declined his election as is more self-sufficient than of Washington. Copyright bishop coadjutor actually the case. A statement adopted by the Board commemorating the 10th He said that his tenure of only a "In other parts of the world birthday of the UN Declaration, year and a half as dean was a where civilizations are older and Dec. 10, urged rededication of primary factor in making his conditions more stable, with churches to the furtherance of decision. less opportunity for growth or human rights in the U.S. and The convention on November where the total Christian popu- throughout the world. 24th was recessed in the event lation is a tiny proportion of the that Coburn did not accept. It whole, the question of unity is Record Budget will now be reconvened for an- more pressing." * A net operating budget of other election by Bishop Dun Praising the eight-year-old $12,129,270 for the 1959 pro- after consultation with the National Council, which com- gram of the Council was ap- standing committee, probably prises 33 Protestant and East- proved at the meeting. This sometime in January. Three DECEMBER 18, 1958 REV. GEORGE L. CADIGAN available at strategically discuss with interested persons ELECTED IN MISSOURI located parishes, for several the qualifications of each candi- days before the convention, to date. * The Rev. George L. Cadi- gan, rector of St. Paul's, Rochester, N. Y., was elected bishop coadjutor of Missouri on The Church of South Africa Acts December 4th on the first bal- lot. Before the voting he had After Address by Archbishop asked that his name be with- * Joost de Blank, Anglican Bantu education act. In 1956, drawn, but in a telephone con- Archbishop of Capetown, in his he warned against the removal versation with Dean Ned Cole first major public statement of non-European students from of Christ Church Cathedral, after returning from visits to universities and spoke strongly England and the United States, against the inevitable results of Cadigan said that if it seemed delivered a blistering attack on removing entrenched clauses of right to the nominating com- the South African government's the Union constitution." publication. mittee to place his name before policy of racial segregation. The Archbishop told the and the special convention then, if The Archbishop has spoken synod "I remind you of these elected, he would wrestle with out many times before on this matters in order to set in per- reuse his decision whether or not to subject, but his latest state- spective the calumny and con- for accept. ment was one of the most forth- tumely to which I have been If he does accept he will take right and comprehensive he has subjected since coming to this uttered. He made it at the country." required over the dutied of the Presiding Bishop, Arthur Lichtenberger, biennial synod of the Capetown "I came," he said, "deter- immediately after his consecra- See after spending three months mined to follow the example of tion, and will succeed him as attending the Lambeth Confer- Buddha, to maintain 'a noble

Permission diocesan on May 15th. ence and touring the United silence' until constrained to States. raise my voice. But after see- Cadigan, 48, is a graduate of He prefaced his criticism of ing the ghastly squalor where- DFMS. Amherst College and of the / the government's racial policies in many of Christ's little ones Episcopal Theological School. by stressing that apartheid in- were forced to live in Wind- He has been rector of the volves "cruelty and callousness" emere (an African shantytown Church Rochester parish for ten years. and therefore "even the slight- on the outskirts of Capetown), He has been a deputy to the est smell of apartheid must be and the ruthless separation of last three General Conventions removed from our churches." man and wife under the native Episcopal and is one of the leaders in the "We dare not let ourselves," law amendment act, I had to the Church Federation of Roches- he declared, "be contaminated speak out." of ter, and his relations with other by such a social poison. Man Dr. de Blank, formerly Bishop clergy of all denominations cannot touch pitch without of Stepney in London, England, have made him a pastor to being defiled-and we are for- was installed as Archbishop of Archives pastors. He is also widely bidden to have any fellowship Capetown in September, 1957. known for his idealism and with unfruitful works of dark- He has frequently been criti- 2020. vision and his courage in speak- ness." cized by pro-apartheid elements ing on issues of the day. He is Noting that his predecessor, and demands have been made to a frequent contributor to The the late Geoffrey Hare Clayton, have him "deported" from the Copyright Witness. had also spoken out against country. Others nominated by the com- racial legislation, de Blank "I need not remind you," the mittee were Bishop Campbell, said it was the implementation Archbishop continued, "that it suffragan of Los Angeles; of apartheid in 1949 with its is your Christian duty to resist Archdeacon David Thornberry consequential humiliation of fel- inhumanity wherever it may be of Southern Ohio; the Rev. low human beings that first found. This is not a matter of William G. Wright, director of aroused Archbishop Clayton's party politics, but of funda- the home department of the wrath. mental Christian obedience. In National Council. An interest- "In 1953," he said, "he the face of inhumanity, can ing and unusual procedure in itemized the folly and dangers anyone who professes the name connection with the election was of the group areas act, and the of Christ dare keep silent?" that one or more members of following year he spoke with He stressed that "in all this the nominating committee were the strongest disapproval of the controversy in w h i c h the Fow THE Wmsm Church is still involved, one the start "if such a school is "We are interested in ferret- thing which surprised me is the feasible." ing out any violators and with vociferous minority who be- One of the Negro lay dele- the help of men like Mr. Gus- lieve that concern for humanity gates said he welcomed both weller," Kaplan emphasized, "we and social justice is politics and resolutions, declaring that it will take action against any not Christianity." was the first time a synod had city employees found to be "Something must be seriously "got down to brass tacks." guilty of malfeasance." wrong in the teaching of the Previously, he commented "only Gusweller received a threat- church schools and the com- pious motions h a v e been ening letter on December 8th mnunication of faith in homes passed." advising him to "lay off" or and in church sermons if the have his church blown up, and people can grow to maturity and CLERGYMAN SPURS "you will be cut down to size." still hold such gravely heretical NEW YORK PROBE He turned the note over to views. the police but rejected the offer * A crusading minister has "Anyone who has such a of protection for his home, spurred a probe into the records church or person. temporal and irreligious view of of the New York building, fire the Church's function a n d publication. and police departments after CARL BRADEN AGAIN responsibility has not begun to presenting evidence of alleged

and INDICTED understand the element of bribe-taking to the city's inves- eternity in our most holy faith tigation commissioner. * Carl Braden, Episcopalian reuse and sails uncomfortably close to of Louisville, Kentucky, and a The Rev. James A. Gusweller, for field secretary for the Southern blasphemy." rector of St. Matthew and St. Conference Educational Fund, Part of de Blank's talk was Timothy, said he told Comnis- devoted to what he described as has been indicted by a federal required sioner Louis Kaplan about grand jury in Atlanta, Georgia, the "desperate shortage" of "several building inspectors, at on a charge of contempt Anglican clergy in the Union of least one fire inspector and a of Con- gress. It grew out of South Africa. He said the number of police" reported to Braden's refusal last summer to answer Permission problem was made doubly him as having taken bribes questions serious because of growing from West Side landlords in of the Committee on Un-American MVoslem influence in the coun- order to cover up slum condi- Activities. DFMS. Braden challenged the / try. tions. right "We are faced," he said, "As a result of this informa- of the committee to inquire in- "with an active and resurgent tion," a city hall announcement to his activities in the integra- Church Islam throughout Africa and said, "We will go into these tion movement. He told the our own mission to Moslems has various departments, c h e c k committee that they "should be all too often to report losses of their records and call in every- investigating atrocities against Episcopal Christians to the Moslem faith, one involved." Jews and Negroes in the South the instead of harassing integra- usually through marriage." Among the evidence fur- of tionists." "However," the Archbishop nished by the rector were added, "the truth of the matter It was Braden's fourth indict- photostats of documents pur- ment is that Islam not only preaches in four years. The first

Archives li st dates and porting to was in 1954 after he and his brotherhood but lives it. It amounts of graft payments knowns no color barrier and wife, Anne, helped a Negro buy 2020. totaling about $200 made in therefore at times it can justly a house in a so-called white June and July, 1956, by the neighborhood in Louisville. accuse a Church preaching landlord of one four-story room- Attorneys for Braden said he brotherhood, but at the same ing house. Copyright will surrender to the court in time denying it in practice. Gusweller said there are wit- Nothing is more inimical to the Atlanta and post bond pending nesses, including a half-dozen a hearing. spread of the Christian faith building superintendents, who than this inconsistency. And have told him they will testify EPISCOPAL CHAPEL the remedy is in our hands." to having seen pay-offs. AT MIAMI The s y n o d unanimously The rector has been con- * An Episcopal chapel was passed a resolution calling on ducting a housing clinic since started the first week in all parishes to eliminate dis- September, 1956, with his December at the University of crimination. It also adopted a curate, the Rev. John Purnell. Miami. It will be an addition resolution calling for the estab- More than 2,000 complaints to Canterbury House, completed lishment of a Church school have been registered with the in 1952, and will cost about which would be integrated from clinic, he said. $75,000.

DECEMBER 18, 1958 only woman elected president of Moral Force Will Outlaw War the UN World Health Organiza- tion. Says Disciple of Gandhi Rajkumari Mme, Kaur left this country Dec. 3 after a six- * India's first woman mem- the sick and suffering and to week program in which she had ber of Parliament noted the teach in its schools. talks with leading American tremendous change in the last "If war which now darkens women. This is her third visit five years in the attitude of our skies is to be banished," to the United States during the American people toward aid she said, "it must be by this which she was received by to her country and urged them kind of service to mankind." President Eisenhower, M r s. to use moral force to outlaw Stating that the message to Eleanor Roosevelt and other war. Rajkumari Amrit Kaur the churches of the World Order prominent Americans. At this was guest speaker at a luncheon Study Conference recently held luncheon, Mrs. Oswald P. Lord, in her honor in New York. in Cleveland, was a "magnifi- U.S. delegate to the United She also outlined Mohandas cent document," Mme. Kaur Nations Human Rights Com- Gandhi's philosophy of non- urged Church people to follow it mission, her personal friend, publication. violence and said the world by action. The conference, paid tribute to the guest from and could learn from it how to at- ca'led earlier this month by the India as "a Christian states- tain peace. For 15 years, Mme. National Council of Churches, woman with a tolerant Chris- reuse Kaur served as secretary to spoke out strongly for controll- tian approach to world affairs." for ing armaments and nuclear Gandhi and was active in She is a communicant of the weapons and recommended re- India's struggle for independ- Church of India, Pakistan, visions in American foreign ence. Burma and Ceylon, and as an required policy. Mme. Kaur was the guest of Anglican gave her favorable United Church Women, a gen- The greatest truths were views on the Church of South eral department of the National those she learned at the feet of India to the team of Episco- Council of Churches, and its Gandhi, Mine. Kaur told the Permission palians, headed by the present division of foreign missions 400 guests. "Gandhi said that Presiding Bishop, when they at the luncheon attended by God is truth," she said, "but visited her country.

DFMS. representative leaders in the now I believe it's better to say / United Nations, the medical that truth is God." The search ST. LOUIS CATHEDRAL profession and Christian nations for truth crosses all barriers of SERVICES

Church of t h e Philippines, Japan, race, caste, creed and clime, Ghana and Burma. she said, adding "perfect free- * Christ Church Cathedral, St. Louis, held noonday Advent "The world cannot be saved dom is freedom from fear." Mme. Kaur reported that on services f r o m December 1 Episcopal from communism by building up a recent visit to Eastern Europe through the 19th. Dean Charles

the armaments," Mme. Kaur de- H. Buck Jr. of the Boston of clared. "With truth and love and Russia she met doctors and Cathedral, was the preacher we needn't spend millions for other professional people who the first week, followed by the arms." She also stated that expressed their pleasure that it Rev. W. Sherman Skinner, Pres- Archives laws alone do not banish evils is now easier to exchange ideas such as untouchability in her and pool experiences with the byterian of St. Louis.

2020. country or segregation in this West. "I found hope even The preacher this week is the country. "These things must under the oppression in Hun- Rev. C. Kilmer Myers, vicar of first be banished from the gary," she reported. "All said St. Augustine's, Trinity Parish, that they want peace and, if all New York. He is also taking

Copyright heart," she said. In a tribute to the Christian want peace, how can there be on other speaking engagements missionaries who have built war ?" while in St. Louis: a dinner schools, colleges and hospitals in Long active in India's fight meeting of the social relations India, Mme. Kaur noted that for independence, Mme. Kaur department of the diocese; the their "great impact was in was imprisoned by the British guild of the cathedral; the bringing ideas for social reform authorities. The new govern- men's club of the cathedral; a which the Indian people badly ment sent her as a delegate to dinner at Grace Church, Jeffer- need." She declared that while UNESCO in London and Paris. son City; a dinner at the Ascen- she felt that evangelization She served in Nehru's cabinet sion. should be left to the Indian as minister of health between The preacher the three days Church, India welcomes those 1947-57 and is now a member of before will be Dean who come to help minister to Parliament. She also is the Ned Cole of the cathedral. THE WITNESs Christmas at The Wombats By Hugh McCandless Rector Of The , New York

nosed Reindeer" was a very good carol, but O'Toole's mother and father SQUADRONliked to do everything together, and last Uncle Sonny said that was impossible, because it Christmas they both went to the hospital to have had sold 1,000,000 copies. their appendixes out, or should I say appendices? That night, after dinner, Uncle Sonny had a It was the first time a case like that had hap- man to man talk with Squadron. Uncle Sonny had pened at the hospital in 108 years, and Squadron heard that there was a lot of socialistic un-Ame- and his sister Flotilla were the envy of all their rican stuff in the schools and colleges, and he friends. Well, the minute the Wombats heard wanted to make sure. Squadron said he though about it, they telephoned and just begged for America was a very fine country. Uncle Sonny Squadron and Flotilla to come to them, and the got him a glass of coca-cola as big as a goldfish children were very pleased, for the Wombats had bowl, and pointed out that lots of backward publication. no children and so could be counted on to give countries didn't even have coca-cola yet, and and them excellent service and practically no advice. Squadron said that America was certainly the Mr. Wombat was the sales manager of Mr. best country in the world. Uncle Sonny was reuse O'Toole's company, and that is the last time I very pleased to find that he believed so strongly for must call him Mr. Wombat, because Mr. and Mrs. in American know-how, and the American way of Wombat don't like to be called Mr. and Mrs. life.

required Wombat. They think it sounds unfriendly. He Upstairs, Aunt Toots and Flotilla were folding always signs his letters to the sales force, "Yours handkerchiefs or something, and Aunt Toots in the Name of Bigger Sales, Ted (Sonny) Wom- asked if the children would mind very much if bat, Jr." and everybody calls them Toots and they didn't go to church Christmas morning? Permission Sonny. That is, everybody but Squadron and They had to take Bridget (you know how they Flotilla, who call them Aunt Toots and Uncle are), but Christmas morning was always Uncle DFMS.

/ Sonny, and both couples think each other rather Sonny's favorite time. "But don't you believe in quaint. ?" said Flotilla. "Why, of course, darling," Mrs. O'Toole didn't have much time to give said Aunt Toots, "but we don't believe in creeds Church them the usual briefing on what to do at some- or dogmas or anything like that. If everybody one else's house, but their manners were pretty would do what Jesus asked us to do: be just a good. Squadron said, "We are glad to be here, little nicer and kinder and more thoughtful, we Episcopal and we won't put our feet on the furniture." And wouldn't have any wars and things like that. the Flotilla said, "And we brought our own collection And I'm sure Jesus would want Uncle Sonny to of money for church, and our own toothpaste." have a good time on Christmas Day." Uncle Sonny said, "Having you here is the nicest Flotilla went downstairs and had a private con-

Archives Christmas present of all, and our Christmas is ference with Squadron behind the biggest tele- really made now." Then he went and turned on vision set. There was plenty of room there, for 2020. every light upstairs, so Flotilla wouldn't feel this television was so big you could practically nervous. feel the bullets and arrows whizzing past your head. Squadron decided that charity was more Copyright Night Before Christmas important than church observance, and that being nice to Uncle Sonny was a kind of charity, some carolers THE night before Christmas, and besides there was such an enormous pile of around singing, and the children came presents in the dining room it would easily take would have loved to join them. Uncle Sonny, to all day just to open them. Flotilla felt that that make them welcome, turned on his forty-two was a sensible decision. tube hi-fi player, which had loud speakers all over and the front lawn, and played the garden Christmas Morning "Rudolph, the Red-nosed Reindeer" for them. But they were either shy or not very friendly, HE next morning Uncle Sonny and Aunt because they went away. Squadron said per- Toots woke the children up, which was a haps they didn't think "Rudolph, the Red- new experience for Christmas morning. Every-

DECEMBER 18, 1958 Seve body had new red bathrobes, which were as soft Uncle Sonny had gone through the ceremony of as peach fuzz. Uncle Sonny explained that they what places needed six drops of oil three times were 40% long Egyptian combed cotton, 55% baby a month, Squadron was exhausted. Uncle Sonny llama hair, and 5% dacron. Squadron's was 3% became a little impatient and told Squadron that strawberry jam when he finished racing through he was just like his father; he had no respect for breakfast, but it hardly showed. his things and didn't take care of them. Aunt Different families certainly have different Toots tactfully broke in by saying that she had customs. Squadron and Flotilla, when they a present for Sonny and Squadron, and out came opened their presents, usually put them on the an electric train, and down went everybody to floor and then burrowed in, like a mole heading put the tracks together. It had real bells, and for China. All their mother said was "Please a real whistle, and puffed real smoke, and had don't lose the card! You'll forget to write to the a real wreck the first time around the track. person who sent it to you!" But Aunt Toots kept saying, "Don't spoil the package, darling! The Big Present That bracelet came from Smartier's" Or, HEN they were tired of the train, there publication. "Squadron, look out for the box! That's a seemed to be a sort of hush. Suddenly, Snooks Brothers tie!" Uncle Sonny opened Uncle Sonny went over to Aunt Toots and led and everything very carefully, and looked at the her tenderly over to the window. She looked out.

reuse label. Squadron and Flotilla had always been "Why, Sonny," she gasped, "It's a Biarritz-

for told not to do this, as it might appear that they Deauville-Capri Sixty-six Eighty-eight!" And were looking for the price tag. so it was, and you know what that is. Wow. Grown-ups are quite interesting to watch as "Yup," chuckled Uncle Sonny, "And it has required they open their presents, unless they get dis- custom-designed hand-fitted genuine leather ap- tracted and hold up the proceedings by telling pointments, in the correct shade to complement anecdotes, and Uncle Sonny was in very good the coloring of an ash-blonde."

Permission form. "I'ts a Guardsman, by Garfinkle! Wow, They all rushed upstairs to get dressed, and look at this! - an O'Houlihan Original!" Some- were so excited they could hardly get dressed; times he would bellow with joy, and sometimes in fact, Squadron got everything inside

DFMS. out. / his voice was hushed with reverence: "Gee, look! You know how absent minded boys are. The car A Countess Moran Creation!" Squadron was had four sets of headlights, and the stern was

Church rather worried about the label on his present, even more lit up than the prow. It had running but Uncle Sonny said very seriously, "You shore lights, parking lights, brake lights, turning know it's good value if it comes from Wool- lights, and one other set they couldn't figure out.

Episcopal worth's" And every time he opened a present, he Uncle Sonny said maybe they were warning the would gallop over and kiss Aunt Toots. lights, to be used when a woman was driving; and of Older people never seem to remember how old Squadron roared and Aunt Toots and Flotilla you are at Christmas. The children received tossed their heads and everybody had a wonder- three copies of "Moo-moo the Cow" and five ful time. They tried out the push button ash Archives tickets to the Junior Dance at the Country Club. trays, and Squadron invented a game he could

2020. If anything made them sicker than baby books, beat Flotilla at, until they made one of the ash it was the idea of dancing when you didn't have trays stop working. to. But the presents from their hosts made up Well, I can't tell you all the fun they had that

Copyright for everything. Flotilla got a doll as big as she day. That night they all watched television, and was, a doll that really did all the nuisance things everybody had a glass of Bromo-Seltzer. They that a baby did with some teen age features saw " at Dead Man's Gulch," "The thrown in. It had to have its hair curled, it wept Great Christmas Jewel Robbery," and a District real tears all over your dress, and it had a power- Attorney Drama called "Where Were You Last ful inner mechanism to make it cry for over an Christmas?" Aunt Toots said that there was a hour unless you popped a bottle in its mouth. It lesson in that one for everybody, and Squadron made Squadron tired just to hear about it all, said that it reminded him of something the Rec- and he was glad he was spared a present like tor had said last Easter, and then they all went that. But Uncle Sonny had given him a fishing to bed. rod and a Neptune City adjustable reel, for any- I can't tell you all the fun they had that week, thing from a porgie to a tuna, and by the time either. One of the high spots was a visit to

THE WITNESS Romeo's Chinese-American Rathskeller, where he was very sweet and protective, but Uncle they ate and tortillas and discussed the Sonny said he was doing it for security. As they American way of life. The week simply whizzed settled down in the seats, Flotilla sighted, by. "Aren't they sweet old people? And isn't it too They went home on the train by themselves, bad; they don't really believe in Jesus." "Yes," which was another thrill. Squadron held Flotilla said Squadron, "and isn't it funny: they really very tightly by the hand, and Aunt Toots thought do believe in just about everything else."

Challenge of The Non-Christian World By D. Howard Smith Lecturer in Comparative Religion in Manchester University, England publication.

and writes: "We stand at the beginning N OUR conception of the missionary task, we McGavran must think again into the meaning of incar- of a new era. Our problem is not how to carry reuse national religion. Christ incarnates himself in out better the missions on which we have been for his Church, his body in the world; but it must engaged, but how to conduct the new kind re- always be recognized that that body is but a poor, quired." weak and imperfect medium for the expression of It is a sign of hope that there are a few within required his eternal Spirit. It must ever be dying afresh, our missionary societies who are alive to the being crucified afresh, that he himself may come need for new approaches and for a new mission- again to meet the challenge of a new age and ary strategy. Unfortunately they have not been Permission new opportunities. allowed to carry their Churches very far along If the missionary task of Christianity is con- with them. Even yet the bulk of our Church

DFMS. ceived of not only as preaching the gospel but members, even those interested, base their under- / as planting and extending the Church, and I can- standing of foreign missions on the stirring bio- not conceive of its being otherwise, the inflexibili- graphies of missionary pioneers and heroes of Church ties of almost all branches of the Church in re- the last century. gard to their doctrines of the Church and of its ministries will need to be discarded. Lines for Working

Episcopal Forms of church organization and govern- HERE are a few lines along which I respect- the ment familiar to us may need to be radically fully suggest that much fruitful work of modified to meet the needs of Christians with might be done. a cultural background different from our own. 0 As to the training and preparation of mis- Even the faith itself may need to be restated in back to my own Archives sionaries. I am appalled, as I look thought-forms widely different from those of early beginnings as a missionary, to think how

2020. the Graeco-Roman world in which the historic inadequately I had been prepared to represent creeds of the Church were first formulated. Christ and preach his gospel to the Chinese. Turning to the methods of missionary service, To take just one point in illustration. K. Reis-

Copyright it is a natural human failing that we cling so chauer writes: "That a knowledge of non-Chris- tenaciously to old and tried methods which have tian religions is important for all -Christian proved successful in the past, and are timorous workers who would win men of other faiths for of venturing into untried ways. But the situa- Christ should go without saying. In fact, how- tion in the world today is radically different ever, few Christian missionaries have any under- from what it was even a generation ago. standing of the spiritual and cultural heritage of It is high time that those who direct and the non-Christian world. Mission boards, in guide the missionary policies of the Church today selecting their candidates for foreign service, realized that the methods and attitudes of our insist on no such requirements. A knowledge of predecessors are now totally inadequate. As D. the spiritual heritage of the hearer comes, in- deed, only second in importance to an under- (Continued From Last Week) standing of the Christian message itself." Nine DECEMBER 18, 1958 The same point is brought out by U Kyaw who go for service abroad so that they may be Than, a prominent Christian leader of Burma able to give some account of the faith that is who was formerly an associate general secretary in them? of the World's Student Federation in regard to We know of the scheme, under the Swiss mis- "the institutes for the study of the living faiths sionary council, for the training of laymen for of man in Asia. In one Asian country I know the Christian service abroad in non-missionary posts. whole purpose of the work' seemed to mean just There are 65,000 Swiss abroad in secular occupa- teaching the foreign missionaries in a foreign tions as against 300 missionaries. Surely more language the elementary content of the religion and more of the resources of the Church should concerned." be used on this important work.

0 As to the type of missidnary. The Church Helping non-Christians must not think that by sending out young and and encouragement should be of- comparatively untried men and women it is ful- VERY help filling its missionary obligation. If Christianity fered to those Christians who meet in daily is to make any serious impact on Buddhism and discussion and cooperation with leaders from publication. Hinduism, it must offer to the leaders of those non-Christian lands in various world organiza- tions. "It often seems that, for the Buddhist," and faiths the intimate intercourse and friendship of its theologians and saints. Nothing but the best, writes U Kyaw Than, "Christianity implies the reuse intellectually and spiritually, is worthy to meet social and cultural categories of the West, and for on common ground the best in Asian religions. not always at their fundamental best." Another Burmese, Dr. U Hla Bu, professor of No Encounter philosophy and psychology in the University of required Rangoon and chairman of the Burma Christian AS U Kyaw Than remarks: "The missionary Council, writes: "It would seem that cultural from non-Asian lands often moves among infiltration is more effective than direct mis- certain groups, such as the ignorant and the Permission sionary effort in winning adherents to a reli- handicapped .... It is, I suppose, true that often gion." there is no real encounter between persons. Gote Hendinquist, writing of the Jews, notes DFMS. / There is no meeting of mind with mind .... The that "in Europe during the last century more sustained encounter between Christian and Bud- than 100,000 Jews became Christian because of dhist is seldom developed. The gospel is either Church inter-marriage and other cultural and social irrelevant or a folly to the Buddhist, not because motives, whilst in the same period less than the Buddhist has understood the Biblical mean- 5,000 Jews are said to have been converted to ing of the 'scandal' of the Cross, but because the Episcopal the Christian faith by missionary effort." proclamation of the gospel has, for him, not really the The failure of the Church to substantiate the

of happened. The fundamenta! task of the Chris- c'aim that Christianity is the faith for the world tian mission in Asia is a theological one." is due, more than anything else, to the fact that SI pass over all the vexed problems of the the multitudes of Asia and Africa have failed to Archives relation of the missionary and the mission boards see in the lives of those who have come to them

2020. to the so-called Younger Churches; the frustra- from the Christian West any compelling reason tions caused by the missionary's divided loyal- why they should forsake their own spiritual and ties; the fact that missionaries are all too often moral values for those of Christianity.

Copyright guests or consultants rather than committed Finally, I come to the relation of Christianity to members sharing the same discipline; the dis- non-Christian faiths. This is a vast question astrous mistakes made by missionaries and mis- with which it is impossible to deal adequately sion boards because they failed to understand the here. There are, however a few observations it different idiom and thought-forms of those to is necessary to make. whom they wished to communicate the gospel: and come to what I believe to be of crucial im- Modern Change portance in our time, the pace and function of IT IS often assumed that the Christian attitude laymen in secular service abroad in commending has changed in modern times. According to the gospel. this view the earliest attitude was that repre- What has the Church done, what is the Church sented by William Rubruck when he said to Batu doing, to equip the tens of thousands of laymen Khan: "Be it known to you, of a certainty, that

THE WITNESS you shall not obtain the joys of heaven unless you that God is no respecter of persons, but, in every become a Christian, for God saith, 'Who soever nation, he that feareth him and worketh believeth and is baptized shall be saved, but he righeousness is acceptable to him." that believeth not shall be condemned.'" Or by In his apology Justin Martyr writes: "They Henry Martyn in 1806 after a visit to a temple who lived with the Logos are Christians, even in Serampore, "I shivered at being in the neigh- if they are called theists like Socrates, Heracletus bourhood of hell, my heart was ready to burst and others with them-we have shown that at the dreadful state to which the devil had Christ is the Logos of whom the whole race are brought my fellow-creatures"; or by the mission- partakers, and those who lived according to the aries pilloried by Lord Minto who threatened Logos are Christians, even though accounted "with hell fire and with still hotter fire . . . a atheists." whole race of men for believing in the religion Clement of Alexander and Origen followed the which they were taught by their fathers and same tradition. It was said of Thomas Aquinas mothers, and the truth of which it is simply im- that he baptized Aristotle into the Christian possible it should ever have entered into their faith. The Early Jesuit fathers in China went heads to doubt." further than the majority of the Church thought publication. This attitude gave place towards the end of wise in their appreciation of, and accommodation and the nineteenth century to that represented by of Christianity too, a non-Christian way of life. Farquhar in his "Crown of Hinduism." Good is What one might call the "hell-fire" attitude to reuse to be found in all religions, but Christianity is non-Christians is as rampant in many present- for the crown and perfection of them all. day missionary sects, as it was in the early days Then followed Liberal Christianity, resulting of the Protestant missionary enterprise. required in a willingness to believe that all great religions A deeper understanding of non-Christian faiths have something to offer towards a coming world- is imperative. Towards this the Church should religion, that God's revelation is not confined to not shrink from her responsibility in encouraging the most penetrating and scholarly study of Permission Christianity, and that some spiritual insights and truths have been revealed in other religions other faiths. Some of the interpretations of even more perfectly than in Christianity. Buddhism, Hinduism and Islam still current are DFMS.

/ a travesty of those faiths and misunderstand and Religions, they teach, must fraternize and falsify some of their profoundest teachings. close their ranks against the common enemies of Finally, the Christian Church, in its mission- Church materialism, secularism and humanism. ary service has a God-given opportunity right on Finally there is the attituude represented by its own doorstep of caring for the thousands of Kraemer that all religions, including empirical people from other lands who have come to west- Episcopal Christianity, in so far as they are the results of ern countries since the war. Many of these people the man's spiritual strivings, are under judgment, leaders in their own countries, of go back to become and that the bar of judgment is the categorical and the impression they gain while in western Biblical Word of God revealed in Christ. countries will remain with them through life.

Archives On the whole, the Christian Churches have Fruitful Concept remained strangely indifferent to the spiritual

2020. Chris- THE truth, however, is that whenever needs of these "strangers within our gates," tianity has come into close contact with and this missionary work is only in its beginnings faiths from the time of the Early Chris- other and is done by all too few people. It needs to

Copyright down to the present, besides those tian Fathers be done lovingly, patiently, even sacrificially, and who have been uncompromisingly hostile and con- with deep measure of understanding. demnatory there have been others eager to attribute to the working of God's Spirit all that was best and nob'est in non-Christian cults and AN INVITATION TO ROMAN CATHOLICS philosophies. The idea of the "logos sper- matikos" was a fruitful concept in early days By Robert S. Trenbath to justify the acceptances of noble pagans into Late Rector of St. Alban's, Washington, D. C. the Kingdom of God. 1Uc a copy $4 a hundred The author of Acts puts into the mouth of THE WITNESS Tunkhannock. Pa. Peter, confronted by a noble representative of Ruman culture, the words "of a truth I preceive

DECEMaER 18, 1958 Eleven them that you don't look on Herod-yes, the Winter-Night Thoughts Great-with pity. This place is as cold as a tomb. Why that fire In A Throne Room in the brazier isn't even as hot-looking as that star over there towards ! I'll tell the By William B. Spofford Jr. major-domo to get the fuel from a different T IS not for nothing that they call me "the caravan-master. Great". We've built and re-built so that, centuries hence, our Idumean name will still re- sound. Who would have thought it? "Herod the Classified Christmas Great"! Well, it just shows what astuteness will do . . . and a sharp eye and a keen ear. For many centuries Jews and Christians have had spelled out It's cold in here. Despite the aqueducts and In their histories fine public buildings I've built, this palace is That God is a Person never anything but cold. It must be that soggy And that persons are created in his image. publication. fuel they're bringing up the trail from Egypt. Therefore, Jews and Christians say, If you would find God and Or else, as usual, my major-domo is buying in- The most direct route is to seek him ferior stuff and pocketing the difference. Well, On the horizontal level reuse he serves me well and, by and large, I can trust Where people, for him. Which is saying no small thing. Like you and me, I'm not loved, that is true. Even my sons, Are. required cursed be they, are plotting against me. But Our trouble is that somehow they are watched and they are, after all, We prefer to think of God place-"heaven"- amateurs at this game. Dwelling in a far-away We'll let them run a Way, way, way up there- while longer and then ....

Permission Beyond the jets, in interstellar space. But, what fools! Oh, I must admit that I was This way, you see, a little thrown off tonight. That should teach We can lose our selves

DFMS. In busyness. / me not to drink so much wine without food. It We can be "religious" at our convenience. is not a good thing to seem dull-witted in the Relating to our Father in such a way

Church banquet-hall. Not with ambitious souls seeking Defies the Jewish-Christian Scriptures thrones to sit upon. And our worship becomes blasphemy. Bah, amateurs! And they must have thought It ensnares us in vain repetitions And Episcopal they were so clever. It had merit, the idea, I we deceive our own selves even when we pray. the admit that. A lesser man than I might not have Christians believe of handled it so well. Imagine, three philosophers That on a cold winter night from three races all asking where a king was to Years ago, God be born. A clear warning that a world-wide plot met our need for Archives A "down-to-earth" religion: against me is in the making. I don't know which He laid on the floor of a stable!

2020. son sent them but we'll watch them all and, then, Right from the start he was an outsider: one by one, we'll ...... There was no room for him in the inn. It's sure hard to separate the wheat from the At the end, he was still an outsider: We hung him on his Cross outside a city's walls.

Copyright chaff in these plots. What quaint, but fitting, sayings these Jews do have. But this one .. . His first need as a Person? Hah! Probably nothing but some more of that Like any infant's born today: messianic dream-rot of these people. But it Not for a halo but for housing! won't hurt to keep alert to the whole business. "No dogs or children." What queer fellows those three were . . . and "Adults only." "Near churches." arrogant. All three seemed to look straight "Christians only." through, and beyond, me. And the worst of all "Restricted neighborhood." was that dark one carrying the jar of embalm- ing fluid. Once I think he actually looked on me Lord, have mercy upon us, And incline our hearts with pity. So help me, if they come back this To keep thy law. way, we'll not treat them so gently. We'll show -Pennington Frinck Twelve THE WrrNEss crosses every gulf, including at the last, even Pontificating that dread valley of the shadow of death. "And By Corwin C. Roach I if I be lifted up will draw all men unto me". Emboldened by the work of Christ, this is our of the characteristics of our modern supreme task. We are to build life's bridges in ONEAmerican culture is our urge to build education, industry, social relations, politics, bridges with each one larger and more spectacu- supremely in religion. And yet, how often we lar than the last. Our great ocean ports like fail to do the task and our imperfect structures collapse before our eyes. The very word "ponti- New York and San Francisco are encircled by ficate" has received a popular connotation which bridges which funnel into and out of the city belies its real meaning. We think of a pompous great hordes of people. The most recent marvel person who speaks dogmatically and whose very of engineering science as well as the largest assurance is often a cover-up for an inner in- suspension bridge in the world is the new security. The bridges which such pontificators Mackinac Straits Bridge. Its five mile stretch erect are very flimsy structures indeed. They publication. crosses the confluence of Lake Michigan and Lake lack firm underpinnings. and Huron and for the first time, connects the two The great bridges of the world, like the Mackinac Straits Bridge, have been designed to parts of the state with a four lane highway. In reuse stand for years and to carry millions of people for a short time, I am sure, most of those who hurry safely to the other side. across this bridge will take it for granted even What about the bridges we are erecting? Are as the busy commuters of our great cities.

required we really bridge builders or mere pontificators? Yet building bridges involves heroism and sacrifice as well as knowledge and hard work. The engineer must plan his structure with care,

Permission taking into account the nature of his foundations, the action of wind and wave. He must figure the Don Large strain and stress and allow for extremes of cold DFMS. / and heat. Even after the bridge is completed there must be continual inspection and mainten- Unheralded Andrews

Church ance. On these great metropolitan bridges a permanent painting crew will be on the job. With the breakdown of the civil authorities in death of Pius XII and the subsequent THEelection of John XXIII serves to remind us Episcopal ancient Rome, one of the duties developing upon of Rome's conviction that the Pope is literally the the bishop of the imperial city was to provide for

of the Vicar of Christ on earth in direct succession the care of the bridges. Hence the title of the Peter himself. And our Roman Catholic early popes, "pontifex maximus", which can be to St. brethren raise quite a tidy head of steam over translated freely as "Bridge builder in Chief". Archives this alleged primacy of Peter. Yet in a:very real sense this is a title which must But in all the hullabaloo of pomp and circum- 2020. be claimed by every clergyman, indeed by every Christian. The Christian faith is concerned with stance, who recalls the man who introduced Peter building bridges and all the wisdom, daring, to Jesus in the first place? Who remembers Andrew? Copyright patience and self-sacrifice of the construction Yet if it hadn't been for Andrew, engineer is needed here. working with quiet dedication behind the scenes, The Bible is supremely a book about bridges, his more prominent brother might never have the means of communication between God and become known as a prince of the apostles. man and therefore, man and man. From Genesis Which, incidentally, may be why the Christ- to Revelation the Bible bridges across the chasms serving Brotherhood of St. Andrew is named of ignorance and fear, greed and hatred. Some exactly that, rather than the Brotherhood of St. of these, especially in the Old Testament, are Peter. Not that I have anything against the imperfect, temporary structures, pontoons if you rugged old fisherman. It's just that I sometimes will, which will later on be superseded by a more get tired of the spotlight which floods the stage, secure and permanent building, supremely by to the exclusion of the candle which illumines Jesus Christ, who is himself the way which the dark corners behind the stage.

DECEMBER 18, 1958 Thirteen By the same token, it's fair enough that St. John the Divine should be dubbed the Beloved Disciple, but it might be surprisingly heart- warming to be able to know more about a man Pointers for Parsons named St. James the Less. By Robert Miller When temperamental Maria Callas goes storming off the stage of the Met, you girls may dropping in to still go "oh" and "ah" over the splendor of her Francis first started WHENtalk he was twenty and just back from the svelte gown. But I'd like to see a bouquet of Korean war. He was very suspicious of my red roses passed over the footlights to the un- being "a religious guy" and very much afraid heralded seamstress who stitched the material that I wanted him to be one. together. "Last time I stopped by," he said, "you seemed And speaking of hemstitching, Mark Starr- to want me to be a religious guy."

publication. educational director of the International Ladies' "I did." Garment Workers Union-asks some and relevant "Well, I ain't and I ain't gonna be." questions about the world's hewers of wood and "Will you decide that, or God?" reuse drawers of water. We know, for example, who for "God? What's God got to do with it?" constructed the Iron Curtain, but who was it that built the Great Wall of China? Confucious "Everything."

required doesn't say . . .. We also know that the Hanging Francis looked puzzled. Gardens of Babylon were one of the seven "If I was ever crazy enough, I'd decide it." wonders of the ancient world. But who had the thankless and dangerous job of watering them? That's how I felt myself at twenty. Now I Permission think God decides it. And when the trumpets blew and the walls of Jerusalem crumbled, who rebuilt the bastions "Did you learn anything about God in the DFMS.

/ of the Holy City, stone upon painful stone? army, Francis," I asked. And by the way, if you have a taste for Jewish "No. About all I heard was the chaplain say-

Church fare, try never again to enjoy marinated sea- ing you should be pure." food as an appetizer without recalling the story "And don't you want to be?" of the Scottish fishermen who daily brave stormy "Not till I'm forty."

Episcopal seas to catch your favorite herring. Once, after "Why forty ?" a particularly dangerous the stint on the deep, the "I guess at forty you'd be too old to care." of fishermen were loading their catch into barrels. A passing tourist fingered the fish and asked, "Would you like to be pure when you're old?" "How are the herring today?" A brine-soaked "Sure. It would be all right then. But if I Archives old Scot stared at the questioner for a moment, was religious I'd have to be pure now, wouldn't and then said quietly, "Sir, the herring are men's I?" 2020. lives today!" "You'd have to try." Yes, when the captains and the kings depart, "Well, you see." their names are carefully Copyright honored and recorded "See what?" for posterity, whereas the slogging foot-soldier "That it would be no good being religious even is usually forgotten before sunset. But whether if I wanted to." a man is a royal officer in the battle of life, or merely one of the world's unknown apprentices, I thought Francis would blush if he realized how immortal souls are nevertheless equally involved pure he was and how much religion attracted and equally valuable in the eyes of God. him. So, in the midst of all the fanfare, it is indeed "You could try it, Francis." your privilege to vote for Peter as Christ's "Who, me?" Francis laughed heartily. "You special Vicar. But, primacy or no primacy, my religious guys sure have a line," he said. "But own ballot will be gratefully cast for the un- I don't buy it. No, sir." heralded Andrews of the world. And off he went.

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With it you will receive, without obligation, a RELIGIOUS BOOK CLUB W-1218 full year's subscription to the monthly Religious 79 Ninth Avenue, New York 11, N.Y. Copyright Book Club Bulletin. Sent exclusively to members Gentlemen: You may enroll me as a member for one year and send me at once my free copy of of the club, it contains reviews of all new reli- I THE PICTORIAL HISTORY OF PROTESTANTISM gious books of interest-books you may purchase and the monthly RBC BULLETIN. I am not ob- I ligated to purchase any books, and will let you know (often with astonishing savings) -or not as you promptly whenever I do not want the Club Selection. If I decide to purchase Club Selections I am to please. And with every four books purchased t receive an additional free Blonus Book for every four Club Selections I choose. you will receive one free Bonus Book of your own MR. choice. Remember, acceptance of this gift book REVy...... does not obligate you to spend a single penny. But please act now; the supply is limited. I MUSS

CITY ...... ZONE .... STATE... V_ ------DECEMBERs 18, 1958 Fifteen CHAUNCEY LINSLEY Scouts in the diocese of Harris- CELEBRATES burg. To receive the award re- - ARPER * The Rev. Chauncey Linsley, quires a rigorous program of now living in Warren, Conn., study, worship, fellowship and celebrated his 100th birthday on service arranged in t h r e e December 1st. Progress in solving stages, under the guidance of America's race problem He was ordained priest by the rector. Bishop John Williams, the 54th The awards were presented at bishop in the order of succes- a family service on Advent What's sion of the episcopate of the Sunday by the rector, the Rev. Episcopal Church. His entire W. B. Williamson and John G. ministry has been spent in Detwiler, warden of the parish Right Connecticut, his last position and district scouting commis- being that of lecturer on pas- sioner. toral theology at Berkeley With Divinity School from 1927 to publication. ARTHUR J. BROWN 1951. CELEBRATES Race Relations and By Harriet Harmon Dexter BISHOP MINNIS * The Rev. Arthur J. Brown, reuse prominent Presbyterian, cele- HITS BINGO for brated his 102nd birthday on Here is the little known story December of the progress being made * Bishop Minnis of Colorado 4th when 65 Church throughout the nation to heal has forbidden churches in the leaders honored him at a lunch- the rift between the races. The required diocese to participate in any eon. book is based on wide study and form of gambling in their John A. Mackey, president of travel in all sections of America. parish buildings, despite an Princeton Seminary, hailed him Facing prejudice where she found it, recognizing the force Permission amendment of the state consti- as a "pilot of the tides of tution which legalized church- modern missions and one of the of custom, Mrs. Dexter sought sponsored bingo and raffles for out the evidence of good rela- creators of the ecumenical con- tionships. DFMS. What she found / charitable purposes. cept." makes an arresting and hopeful He explained that gambling He has been an ardent worker book. $4.00 had never been allowed in Epis- for achieving peace through the Church copal churches in the diocese Church and is still active as and the ban he issued was "just treasurer of the Church Peace a restatement of policy already Union. Stride Episcopal in effect." the PHILLIPS IN CHARGE Toward of PETER DAWKINS ALSO OF NEGRO CHURCH A STAR IN CHURCH * The Rev. F. L. Phillips is Freedom

Archives the first full-time white priest * Peter Dawkins, star of the By Martin Luther King, Jr. West Point team and the most to be vicar of the Church of 2020. sought after player by the pro Our Saviour, Providence, the only all-Negro congregation in The American Christian leader football teams, is a devout Epis- tells how he led his people to copalian. His parish is St. the diocese of Rhode Island. Although diocesan officials victory in their non-violent Copyright John's, Royal Oak, Michigan, resistance to segregation in a where his father and mother, decline to comment on the fu- book which Bishop James A. and his grandparents before ture of the church, the ap- Pike calls "a Christian clas- them, are members. pointment is regarded as the sic." Ralph McGill, Editor, first step in a possible move to Atlanta Journal - Constitution, CHURCH BOYS GET disband the congregation and says it is "necessary reading for SCOUT HONORS integrate its members with those who would understand other churches in the neighbor- how complex the deep South * Walter Eilers Jr. and David hood. The church is one of problem is." 8 pages of photo- Williamson, communicants of five located in a section that is graphs. $2.95 Trinity Church, Williamsport, slated for slum clearance and it at all bookstores Pa., were the first to receive has not asked the redevelop- the Episcopal Church God and ment agency to reserve space Harper & Brothers, N. Y. 16 country award of the Boy for relocation.

Sixteen THE XITNESS PRESIDING BISHOP Wade said, "but its presentation INSTALLATION in the modern world has to be * Bishop Lichtenberger will remodeled. How can we reach PEOPLE be installed as Presiding Bishop the modern man, who is so con- at Washington Cathedral on fused by scientific discoveries, January 14th. Officiating will frustrated by astronomical CLERGY CHANGES: developments in material LLOYD R. GILEMETT, rector of St. John be Bishop Sherrill who was in- the Evangelist, St. Paul, Minn., becomes stalled as Presiding Bishop just things, perplexed by closeup dean of St. Paul's Cathedral, Los Angeles, twelve years ago to the day. human interracial relationships, n February. h ri s t ia n ROBERT C. RUSACK, formerly of Montana, Taking part in the service will skeptical about C is now rector of St. Augustine's, Santa be Bishop Dun of Washington; values, and so tired with so Monica, Cal. much to think about? WILLIAM B. KEY. formerly director of Canon Theodore Wedel, presi- education in the diocese of Minn., is now dent of the House of Deputies; "Our twentieth century needs rector of St. Thomas, Hollywood, Cal. Dean Francis B. Sayre Jr.; to rediscover faith. Faith im- ROBERT T. STELLAR, formerly vicar of St.Bartholomew's El Sereno, Cal., is now Senator Symington of Missouri plies willingness to take the .h-nlain of the Episcopal Home, Alhambra, and others. risks of faith. We have to Cal. It is expected that two thou- ARTHUR W. RUDOLPH. formerly vicar of publication. find the way to the next Christ Church, Victorville, Cal., is now sand clerical and lay leaders spiritual guide posts." vicar of the Redeemer, Los Angeles. and from all parts of the country JOHN L. BOGARD, formerly vicar of St. Andrew's, Encinitas, Cal., is now rector of will attend the service. CLERGY APPEAL FOR Grace Church, St.,Helena, Cal. reuse At the conclusion of the in- FREDERICK T. GILLETTE, formerly rector McCRACKIN Liverpool, Ohio, is for of St. Stephen's, East stallation Bishop Lichtenberger * A number of clergymen now rector of St. Paul's, Grand Forks, N.D. will deliver h i s inaugural h a v e appealed to President HOMER R. HARRINGTON, rector of St. sermon. to intervene in the Paul's, Grand Forks, N. D. since 1930, the required Eisenhower longest tenure in the history of the district, "persecution" of the Rev. M. F. has retired and is now living in Fargo, N.D. REBIRTH OF FAITH ALLAN REED, formerly curate at Trinity, McCrackin, who is serving a now vicar of St. ASKED BY WADE Toledo, Ohio, is Bamabas, jail sentence for contempt of Chelsea, Michigan. PATRICK N. HURLEY is now in charge of Permission * The Church is losing its court. It grew out of his re- work in Tegucigalpa, Honduras. spiritual initiative as events fusal to pay income taxes be- PHILIP E. WHEATON has resumed his work come to be controlled largely by cause such a large part of the in Ciudad Trujillo, Dominican Republic,

DFMS. following a furlough. / science, communism, western U.S. budget is for war purposes. LAY WORKERS: materialism, social revolution McCrackin is pastor of a GLADYS G. SPENCER has returned to her which is sup- post at Aomori, Japan, following a furlough. Church and redistribution. That was Cincinnati church SARA L. MERRY, newly appointed mission- the opinion expressed recent- ported jointly by the Episcopal ary, is now assistant at the House of ly in a sermon at New and Presbyterian Churches. Mercy, Liberia. York Cathedral by Archdeacon BERNICE K. JANSEN has returned to her

Episcopal post at St. Stephen's Chinese Girls' School, Manila, following a furlough. E. H. Wade of Durban City, FOR SALE: 2 Manual Casavant Organ, the Natal, South Africa. 28 stops; 24 ranks. Good condition. JOHN H. GAY, newly appointed missionary of who just received his doctorate, is now on May be heard. Write St. Paul's "The Christian gospel is, in the faculty of Cuttington College, Roberts- itself, unchanging and eternal," Church, Dedham, Mass. field, Liberia. ORDINATIONS:

Archives RICHARD BAMFORTH, curate at Grace Church, Kirkwood, will be ordained priest by Bishop Lichtenberger on Dec. 20 at

2020. the St. Louis Cathedral. Also ordained "ABISHOP PARSONS' ANTHOLOGY" priests at the same service will be JAMES SCHNIEPP, St. Paul's, Overland; BEN- Selections Made By JAMIN HARRISON, St. Matthew's, Mexico; Massey H. Shepherd Jr. WILLIAM P. ROWLAND, Trinity, St. Copyright James. Professor at the Church Divinity School of the Pacific ALEXANDER STEWART was ordained deacon by Bishop Emrich on Nov. 22 at St. James, Detroit. He is ass't at St. John's Midland, Being used is several theological seminaries and will Mich. GARRET CONKLIN was ordained priest by make excellent material for use in parishes with Bishop Shires on Dec. 17 in the chapel of adult classes and discussion groups. the Church Divinity School of the Pacific. He was formerly a business man in Bradford, There is as much material in this magazine size leaflet Pa., and is now vice-dean of the seminary, as in many books that sell for $2 or more. assisting in administration and public relations. DAVID C. CASTO, RICHARD K. FENN, 250 for single copy $2 for ten copies HUBERT L. FLESHER, RAYMOND R. TICKNER, RICHARD W. WERTZ were ordained priests by Bishop Burroughs on THE WITNESS Dec. 6 at St. Peter's, Lakewood, Ohio. CHARLES M. VOGT was ordained priest by Tunkhannock Pennsylvania Bishop Tucker on Dec. 6 at Trinity Church, Tiffin, Ohio.

DECEMBER 18, 1958 Seve185w "Fumio Nakamura's painful death estant Episcopal Church is pretty (described here in ghastly detail) is wise when it comes to dealing with - typical of thousands since the bomb narrow pressure groups that would -BACKFIRE was dropped. Whether this is typical bind her into a frozen medieval of millions to come depends perhaps system. Thanks for the signs that on whether the death-wish has al- we are beginning to warm up. John F. Davidson ready laid hold of the human race, in which case the means for its Staff, St. George's, New York annihilation are to hand." * ADDRESS CHANGE* It is possible that some of us still Turn back, 0 Man. . need to be jarred out of complacency Angelus Silesius wrote three cen- Please send your old as well regarding the incredibly hideous price turies ago: of atomic war. To call this form of Though Christ a thousand times as the new address racial suicide uncivilized would be In Bethlehem be born, the understatement of the century. If he's not born in thee The WITNESS The fall issue of the bulletin of Thy soul is still forlorn. TUNKHANNOCK - PENNSYLVANIA International Voluntary S e r v i c e May he be born in us this (Cabot, Vermont) includes an article Christmas as we remember these from the British weekly New States- stricken people and our relationship man and Nation (August 2, 1958: to them. The Survivors of the Bombs, by ASSISTANT Edita Morris). It describes the con- Edgar Williams Mid-western City Parish publication. dition of some of the tragic victims Prayer Book, Evangelical of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. "Death Layman of Baltimore, Md. Experienced with youth and from radiation exposure" still pro- Communicants-Colored ceeds apace. The following para- At last Protestantism seems to be graphs (as printed in the bulletin coming to life. Please send twenty Stipend expected. References reuse referred to) may stir compassion in copies of your Dec. 4th issue since Reply Box D The Witness for the hardest heart and help us under- I want to distribute the report of Eaton Road, Tunkhannock, Pa. stand the supreme human folly of it the World Order Study Conference. all : V. L. Livingston required .A large number of abnormal and mentally retarded children at- Rector of St. David's, Portland, Ore. ALTAR GUILDS test to the genetic hazard.. LINENS BY THE YARD Statistics of the Imperial Japanese This may be too late, but I want to Pine Irish mDeere. and Dolo for vesanmts, threads, transfers and Atom-Research Inst. covering births thank you for the fine coverage of supplies. Ask for price lists.

Permission in Hiroshima and Nagasaki since General Convention. The old Prot- FREE SAMPLES 1945 indicate (that) of 32,000 chil- M~ary Fawcett Company dren born in Hiroshima, one in six --. a-- were deformed or still-born. This Box 325 W, MARBLEHEAD, MASS. DFMS. / figure includes 1,100 with skeletal The Parish of Trinity Church deficiencies or muscular weaknesses; =0=0=0z =0=o~ almost 100 with deformed brains or New York without brains altogether; almost Write us for Church 200 without lips; 25 with one or no REv. JOHN HEuss, D.D., RECTOR eyes - four lacking even eye- openings. TRINITY Organ Information "No wonder that the average Broadway & Wall St. Episcopal Rev. Ber,,ardI C. Newman, S.T.D., Vicar AUSTIN ORG.ANS. Inc. Japanese has become almost super- Sun. HC 8, 9, 11, EP 3:30; Daily MP 7:45,

the stitiously afraid of contracting mar- HC 8, 12, Ser. 12:30 Tue. Wed. & Thurs., Hartford. Conn. EP 5:15 ex Sat., Sat. HC 8. C Fri. 4:30 & of riage with survivors, and that there is a tendency to shun them as by appt. =0a011 =0=0= bearers of bad luck. (It should be ST. PAUL'S CHAPEL remembered that keloid scars, from Broadway and Fulton St.

Archives radiation burns, disfigure many of Sun. 1IC 8:30, MP, HC Ser. 10; Weekdays: CASSOCKS these people.) HC 8 (Thurs. also at 7:30 a.m.) 12:05 ex Sat; Int. & Bible Study 1:05 ex Sat., EP 3. EUCHARISTIC VESTflhNrS C Fri. 3:30-5.30 & by appt. SURPLICES - CHOIR VESTAMMY

2020. Organ Recital Wednesdays 12:30. All Embslery Ls Hand Dae ALTAR HANGINGS and LINENI CHAPEL OF THE INTERCESSION !ASHBY CHURCH CALENDARS Materials by the yard. Kits for The only CMs di Calendars published with Days and- Broadway & 155th St. Altar Hangings and Eucharistic Vesms. *Seasos of I.-. Church Year in the proper liturgical Rev. Robert R. Spears Jr., Vicar Copyright *Colors for the Episcopal Church.May be ordered with Sun. HC 8, 9:30 * specdalheadh q for yost Church. & 11, EP 4, Weekdays J. M. HALL, INC. HC daily 7 & 10, PP 9, EP 5:30, Sat. 5 *wrie for -REEEPISCOPAL CIRCULAR or send lInt 11:50; C Sat. 4, 5 & by appt. 14 W. 40th St., New York 18, N. Y. i00 for sample postpaid, TEL. CHI 4-3306 *ASHBY COMPANY * 431 STATE * ERIE, PA. ST. LUKE'S CHAPEL 487 Hudson St. Rev. Paul C. Weed, Jr., Vicar Sun. HC 5, 9.15, 10.15 (Spanish) & 11: Daily HC 7 and 8 C Sat. 5-6, 8-9 and by appt. Christian Healing in the Churchk ST. AUGUSTINE'S CHAPEL 292 Henry St. (at Scamniel) Onily Church magazine devoted to Spiried Rev. C. Kilmer Myers, S.T.D., Vicar Therapy, $1.50 a year. Sample on reqtsu Sun. HC 8:15, 9:30, 11; 12:30 (Spanish) founded by Rev. John Gayner Banks, DIST EP 5, Thurs., Sat. HC, 9:30; EP, 5. This vaper is recommem"d by serr Bishops and Clergy. ST. CHRISTOPHER'S CHAPEL 48 Henry St. Address: Rev. William Wendt, Vicar FELLOWSHIP OF ST. LUKE Sun. 8, 10, 8:30; Weekdays 8, 5:30 224.1 Front St. San Diego 1, Calif. =0=0=0=0= Eighteen Tax Wmram gees and other victims of war and vealed in modern archeological re- pestilence were ministered to. At search. He concludes it with a study the end of world war one he co- of the Christian moral and religious BOOKS... operated with Herbert Hoover in the imperatives as they developed from great task of feeding the hungry in God's continuous revelations in He- Kenneth Ripley Forbes war desolated lands and at the be- brew history. It is one of the great Book Editor ginning of world war two he and two books of today's Christian scholar- other Friends bearded the dread Ges- ship. Friend Of Life; The Biogratphy Of tapo in its Berlin den and secured an agreement (which was kept) to The Catholic Church In Action by Rufus M. Jones by Elizabeth give free hand to the Friends in Michael Williams. P. J. Kenedy. Gray Vining. Lippincott. $6.00 their rescue work with the Jews, in- $5.75 the organizing of emigration. This is a vivid story of a great cluding This is a very valuable reference man's varied and fruitful life. Most Such are some of the many high book, both for Roman Catholics and persons who are notable enough in spots in this long and fascinating Protestants alike. It is not a the- character and accomplishment to biography of the great Quaker leader. ological treatise nor a volume of warrant a full-dress biography like The book will repay reading from Roman apologetics, but a clear, this are specialists in one or another beginning to end, for there's not a factual account of how the Roman field. But Rufus Jones was no dull spot in it. Catholic Church is organized and specialist; he was so versatile in how it carries on its world-wide publication. character and his deeds so varied as Man, Morals And History by Chester business in the various countries. well as heroic, that the general The author was the founder and

and C. McCown. Harper. $5.00 public-outside Quaker circles-was first editor of The Commonweal, the not aware of the greatness of this This is an important book for stu- liberal Roman Catholic magazine reuse man nor of his manifold accomplish- dents of Old Testament history as seen which has exercized a wide and ments, religious and social, in a form criticism com- wholesome influence in American re- for in the light of dozen countries around the world. bined with the results of the latest ligious circles. Michael Williams Mrs. Vining's delightful book should archeological research. It is, how- died in 1950 and the present edition spread the knowledge of him, his in- ever, much more than this, for the of this book was revised and brought required fluence and his activities, more wide- author begins history with a sweeping up to date by Zsolt Aradi. Colleges ly abroad. sketch of the origins of the Hebrew and seminary libraries of every Rufus Jones was born in a little people and of Palestine reaching Church should have this book on Maine village in 1863. His was a back to the dawn of history, as re- their shelves.

Permission Quaker lineage for generations, and he entered into it whole-heartedy from the beginning. His high school days were spent in the Providence DFMS. .Zchoo[s of the church- / Friends School and three years later I he entered Haverford College, then a small institution with 71 students.

Church It was here that he first learned the realities of Christian mysticism VOORHEES THE NATIONAL which eventually became the field of School and JTunior College CATHEDRAL SCHOOL his life work. From the time of his DENTUARK, S. C. (FOR GIRLS) Co-educational Departments: Junior Col- Episcopal his of- graduation on, teaching was lee. High School and Trades. Fully ficial life work, mingled though it Accredited A Grade by the Southern ST. ALBANS SCHOOL the was with social service and the A.ssociation. Under direction of American (FOR BOYS) of Church Institute for Negroes. Beautiful writing of many profoundly influ- location. Reasonuable Terms. For in-. ential hooks. His first book Social formation, write to THE REGISTRAR. TI'wo schools on the 58-acre Close of the Washington Cathedral offering a Law In The Spiritual World was =0=0=0=0=l Christian education in the stimulat- Archives published in 1904 and proved en- THE ANNIE WRIGHT SEMINARY ig environment of the Nation's lightening and nourishing to the Announces Its Seventh-Fifth Anniversary Capital. Students experience many young intellectuals of the time, seek- Year, 1958-59, College Preparatory Studies of the advantages of co-education 2020. ing a solid and fruitful underpinning in A CHRISTIAN SCHOOL yet retain the advantages of sep- Year-Round Sports Program education. - A thorough cur- for their religious faith. In 1909 The Rt. Rev. Stephen F. Bayne, Jr., S.T.D., arate was published his long and scholarly President. riculum of college preparationcm The Rev. W. C. Woodhanms, Chaplain bined with a program of supervised Studies In Mystical Religion which For information write Ruth Jenkins, L.H.D., Copyright athletics and of social. cultural, and proved to be an enduring classic. Headmistress, Tacoma 3, Washington religious activities. From this point on, Rufus Jones was Day: Grades 4-12 Boarding: Grades 8 12 recognized as one of the chief writers Catalongue Sent Upon Request on mysticism and was classed with St. Stephen's Episcopal School Mount St. Alban. Washington 16, D.U. Dean Inge, Von Hugel and Evelyn FOR BOYS AND GIRLS AusrN, TEXAS Underhill. Operated by the Episcopal Diocese of Texas es In the midst of his teaching and a co-educational church school for boys and that produced girls in Grades 8-12. Fully accredited. Expe- OKOLONA COLLEGE the scholarly labors rienced faculty to provide a strong academic OSCOLONA, ]MISSISSIPPI his notable books, he was continually program balanced by activities that develop in- A Unique Adventure in Christian Education active in works of service and mercy dividual interests. Small classes. Limited Co-educational, Private. Episcopal Diocese One of the enrollment. Prepares for any college. Modemn of Mississippi (Protestant Episcopal Church) at home and abroad. buildings. Splendid climate. Program designed Established 1902 founders of the American Friends to give religion its rightful place in general High School and Junior College. Trades Service Committee, he traveled wide- education within the spirit of a Christian and Industries. Music. ly to distant lands to help establish Community. For information, write: ALLEN W. BECKER, Headmaster W. MILAN DAVIS, President their now world-wide chain of bases P.O. Box 818 Austin 64, Texas Today's Training for Tomorrow's Opportunities where the underprivileged, the refu- 11cbools of the Church

;Xr~73ll3cC33 Virginia Episcopal School THE CHURCH LYNCHBURG, VIRGINIA FARM SCHOOL Prepares boys for colleges and university. Splendid environment and excellent corps of GLEN LOCHE, PA. teachers. High standard in scholarship and athletics. Healthy and beautiful location in A School for boys whose mothers are the mountains of Virginia. responsible for support ansd education. For catalogue, apply to FOUNDEDs 1835 COLLEGE PREPARATORY THE REV. ROGER A. WALKE, JR., M.A., The oldest Church School west of the Alle- GRADES: FIVE TO TWELVE Headmaster ghenies integrates all pasts of its program- Wholesome surroundings on a 1,200 acre religious, academic, military, social-to help farm in Chester Valley, Chester County, high school age boys grow "in wisdom and where boys learn to study, work and play. stature and in favor with God and maa." REV. CHARLES W. SHREINER, D.D. Write Headmaster CANON SIDNEY W. GOLDSMITH, JR. ST. ANNE'S SCHOOL Rector and Headmaster Post Office: Box 662, PAOL" PA. One of Church Schools in the Diocese CE 757 Shumway Hall =0=0=0=0=O Virginia. College preparatory. Girls, grades SHATTUCK SCHOOL I'AIK5AULT, MINN. publication. 7-21. Curriculum is well-rounded, emphasis is individual, based on principles of Chris- and tian democracy. Music, Art, Dramatics, Sports, Riding. Suite-plan dorms. Estab- =0Z=0==0=0= lished 1910. ST. AGNES SCHOOL reuse MRS. Tnsom~As JEF1ERsON RANDOLPH V An Episcopal Country Day and Boarding All. Byrn Mawr, M.A. University of Virginia LENOX SCHOOL School for Girls for ST. ANNE'S SCHOOL Berkshire Hills for Charlottesville 2, Va. A Church School in the Excellent College Preparatory record. Exten- boys 12-18 emphasizing Christian ideals and sive sports fields and new gymnasium. character through simplicity of plant and Boarders range from Grade 9 to College equipment, moderate tuition, the co-operative Entrance.

required self-help system and informal, personal rela- =0=00=0=0= tionships among boys and faculty. MISS BLANCHE PITMAN, Principal ALBANY NEw Yoga St. John's Military Academy REV. ROBERT L. CURRY, Headmaster A preparatory school with a "Way of Life" LaNox, MAssAcmsEanrs -to develop the whole boy mentally, =00=0==0=0=- physically and morally. Fully accredited. Permission Grades 7-12. Individualized instruction in small classes. All sports. Modem fire- proof barracks. Established 1884. For CHURCH HOME catalogue write: Director of Admissions, DeVEAUX SCHOOL AND HOSPITAL

DFMS. St. John's Military Academy, Niagara Falls, New / York Box W, Delafield, Wisconsin FousNrD 1853 SCHOOL OF NURSING ==0=0===0=Q0= A Church School for boys in the Diocese of BALTIMORE 31, MARYLAND Western New York. College preparatory. A three year approved course of nursing.

Church Small classes. New Gymnasium and Class enters in September. Scholarships avail- Swimming Pool. Grades 7 through 12. able to well qualified high school graduates. HOLDERNESS For information address Box "A"'. The White Mountain School for boys 13-19. MomsON BmoRiHAe, M.A., Headmaster. Apply: Director of Nursing Thorough college perparation in small classes. The Rt. Rev. LAUmrsTos L. SArva, D.D., Student government emphasizes responsibility. Pres. Board of Trustees. Episcopal Team sports, skiing. Debating. Glee Club. Art. New fireproof building. =0=a0Z=0=0= the DONALD C. HAoaaseAi, Headmaster of Plymouth, New Hampshire MARGARET HALL SCHOOL Under Sisters of St. Helena THE WOODHULL SCHOOLS (Episcopal) Country boarding and day school for girls. Archives SAINT JAMES Nursery to College Primary through high school. Accredited col- MILITARY SCHOOL lege prep. Modem building includes gym- HOLLIS, L. I. nasium and swimming pool. 6-acre campus. FARIBAULT, MINNESOTA 2020. FOUNDarD 1901 Sponsored by Hockey, tennis, riding. ST. 'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH Country Boarding School for Boys For Catalogue and "Ave Crux," Addresss Grades 1 - 8 under the direction CE the rector, SISTER RACHEL, Pr, .. H1. One of te few schools in the Midwest THE REV. ROBERT Y. CONDIT Box W. Versailles, Ky. specializing ins only the elemntary grades. Copyright Small Classes-Individual Attention-Home :=0=Q0===0=0=_ Atmosphere - Through preparation for leading secondary schools - Athletics in- =0=0===0=0= cluding Riflery and Riding. Summer School-Canm, Combin~ation June 21 - July 31 THE SEWANEE MARVIN W. HORSTMAN, Headmaster The Bishop's School MILITARY ACADEMY LA JOLLA CALIFORNIA A division of the University of the South A Resident Day School for Girls. Grades Seven An Episcopal School. A College Prep School. through Twelve. College Preparatory. ST. MARY'S SCHOOL ROTC Honor School. On a College Campus. ART - MUSIC - DRAMATICS SEWANEE, TENN. Denwood Scholarships. On a Mountain Top. Twenty-Acre Campus, Outdoor Heated Pool. Fully accredited. Grades 8-12. Small classes. Tennis, Hockey, Basketball, Riding. Exculsively for high school girls. Honor system stressed. Accredited. All sports; gymnasium, indoor pool 100th Tax RT. Riv. FwRAso Eatso Dim Please address year. For catalog write: Col. Craig Alermans, President of Board of Trustees THE SISTER SUPERIOR, C.S.M. Supt., Box E, The Seuansee Military RosAmsorm E. Lsmseotm, M.A., Academy, Sewansee, Tennessee. Headmistress =000=0=0=