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J.M.H1GH CQiSMNY.
Report I hursday Will Show How
Greatest I rouble Maker in History’
Stirred Social Unrest end Helped
t Heathen Nations to Better Things.
o
ON THE ROAD!
Copyright, 1913. by International News Service.
By REV. CHARLES STEI.ZLE.
The foreign mission board of the Northern Presbyterian As
sembly will report on Thursday morning that the total appropria
tions and disbursements last year amounted to nearly $2,000,000.
The tine thing about the se- tients treated. 456,658.
There are nine presses in the mis
sions. under the care of the board, one
In China, one in Mexico, two in Per
sia. one in the Philippne Islands, one
in Siam, one in Laos, one in Guate
mala, and one in Syria. These presses
printed 155,773,673 pages last yea-.
From the beginning the number of
pages printed has been 1,232,855,985.
Under the care of the board, in
non-Christian lands there are about
1.800 educational institutions, from
the village school in Africa and the
kindergarten in Japan to great in
stitutions like the Shantung Univer
sity at Weihsien, China, or the Si 1 -
liman Institute at Dumaguete, P. I.,
or the Forman Christian College at
Lahore. India, one of the leading edu
cational institutions in the Punjab.
More than 100,000 pupils, boarding
the babies comfortably tucked away and day, receive instruction in those
on one of the church pews, in ordcc• various schools of learning.
supply the "heathen” with c«-J¥Mh*
fortable garments, to the great for- | Empire and the changes growing iui
curing and spending of this vast
sum is that it stands for the
democracy of the human race.
It means that the ties of human
love and sympathy have bound to
gether the peoples of every race. In
spite of inequalities in mental and
physical endowment, this work means
that the spirit of real brotherhood has
girdled the earth.
It is a far cry from that little sew
ing circle back in the country church,
made up of sincere, tender-hearted
women who worked diligently or.
Friday afternoons, sometimes with!
eign mission boards which annually
spend millions of dollars for wort
among the backward races.
Close Relation Between Them.
But there is a mighty close rela
tion between the two—more than
either of them sometimes suspect.
For here the women learned of the
great human problems of the people
for whom they worked and often sac
rificed. It was here that the “mis
sionary talks” gave them a glimpse of
the needs of men and women and
children, the picture being hung in
' • the halls of their memory, to be
viewed anew as each fresh reminder
told them of the sufferings of a be
nighted people. And when wealth in
creased they gave more generously to
help in the’great task of “evangeliz
ing'' the folks who had become to
them real human beings, instead of
mere myths.
These great sums spent for mission
work come mostly from comparative
ly poor people. Sometimes a gener
ous man or woman of wealth con
tributes a large sum. but in the main
the money is secured from those who
have learned from the pinch of pov
erty what it means to g*> without
the necessities of life, to say nothing
about its luxuries.
Mission Boards Roused China.
When China aw'oke the mission
board became busy. Indeed, it w r as
because the mission boards of the
world had been busy that China
The church is the greatest trouble
maker in history. It is not organized
to keep down social unrest. The chief
business of the church is to create
social unrest. Its missionaries go to
a country where the people have long
been satisfied with low physical, men
tal and moral ideals.
The missionaries point out these
low ideals and then show them~the
possibilities of a life lived with the
Christian ideal constantly before it.
As they catch something of a vision
of what this way means to them,
there comes to them a spirit of social
unrest which will not be satisfied un
til it breaks the bands which bound
them through many a century.
Turns World Upside Down.
This has been the history of the
church in every generation. Even the
earliest disciples of the Nazarene
were accused of preaching a gospel
which was “turning the world upside
down.”
lust thio has happened in China.
With a view to meeting this new sit
uation. the last General Assembly
voted to send out 100 extra mission
aries. and the foreign board was au
thorized to raise an emergency fund
for this purpose. Three hundred thou
sand dollars* has been raised for this
purpose during the year. It was esti
mated at the beginning of the year
that the receipts from churches, wom
en's societies, Sunday schools and
young people’s societies would amount
to $1,300,000. There was received from
these sources $1,234,698.42, showing
a deficit of $65,301.58. The increased
■ appropriations were made necessary
by the expansion of the work.
Gifts Set New Record.
The total amount received from the
churches during the year, which is the
stable source of income, was $706,-
251.16. This is $12,695.83 more than
has ever been received from this
source in its 76 years of history. In
1903 the board received from the
churches only $349,185.78. in 1913
$706,251.16; thus the receipts from
this source alone have more than
doublet] in the ten years. Receipts
from women’s societies were $410,-
103.82. being an increase of $11,165.81
ever the* previous year.
To the above amounts should be
added the receipts on the field from
native sources, such as educational,
medical and evangelistic work, the
sum of $501,192.
The investment securities of the
board purc hased and acquired during
the past year amounted to nearly
$500,000, making the total net amount
of securities owned by the board at
the present time $2,950,909.40.
The board has sent out during the.
year to the foreign field 89 new mis
sionaries. The total number of mis
sionaries now engaged in the work of
the board pn the foreign field is 1.157;
to this must be added 315 native
preachers and 4.970 other native help
ers. The communicant membership
of the native church is 122.000. To
this uia be added- 69.770 who have
confessed Christ and are under in
struction preparatory to being re
ceived into full communion in the
^church.
Aids Thousands to Health.
The board has under its care 73
hospitals and 118 dispensaries. Pa-
of the relations of Russia and Grea
Britain in Persia have interfered
somewhat with the work in these
lands. The arrest, trial and convic
tion of more than 100 Korean Chris
tian leaders, most of whom were
members of the Presbyterian
Churches, caused n6 little anxiety ro
the board and interfered somewhat
with mission activities in Korea.
However, 99 of the 105 convicted
Koreans have now been acquitted, to
the great Joy of thousands of Korean
Christians.
Arrests Fail to Hinder.
Notwithstanding the anxiety ana
unrest caused by these trials of the
Korean Christians, there were added
to the churches in Korea under care
of the board 6,400 communicants, an i
at the present time there are 22,503
catechumens under instruction, ready
to be received Into full membership
after due examination.
The first General Assembly of the
Presbyterian Church in Korea was
organized in September. 1912, the As
sembly consisting of Australian.
Canadian, Southern and Northern
Presbyteries. One of the last acts
of this Assembly was to pass a reso
lution authorizing the raising of
$1,000 to send two missionaries to
the Province of Shantung. China, to
help evangelize the Chinese.
The great political changes which
took place In China during the year
gave a new Impetus to mission work.
It is suggestive that there were add ?d
to the membership, in connection with
the seven missions in China under
care of the board 2,400 members
The schools and churches have been
crowded with pupils, and many thou
sands have listened eagerly to the
Gospe.l message.
Recognized in Japan.
One of the striking events was the
calling of a conference by the Vice
Minister of Education of Japan. He
invited all the Christian leaders to
meet with the leading Shintolsts and
Buddhists to confer how best to con
serve the morals of the Japanese peo
ple. This was the first official recog
nition on the pprt of the government
of Japan of Christianity as one of the
religions of the state.
In connection with the Church of
Christ in Japan, with which our
Presbyterian Churches are a filiated,
there are now 66 independent self-
supporting congregations, with 127
mission churches, and 55 additional
preaching places conducted by those
whef are recognized as affiliated with
the Church of Christ. The number of
church members is 22,000, and there
are nearly 14,000 Sunday school pupils
in the various schools.
It is worthy of note that the Jap
anese Christians connected with the
churches in the United States under
care of the board contributed during
the last year some $11,000, this being
double the amount spent by the board
in connection with the work for the
Japanese in the United States.
Fleeing Princess
Hopes Yet to Wed
Special Cable to The Atlanta Georgian.
MARSEILLES, May 21.—Princess
Indira, the beautiful daughter of the
reigning Gaekwar of Baroda. made
the surprising announcement, upon
her arrival here, that she did not Jilt
her fiance, Prince Jitendra of Cooch
Behra, virtually on their wedding eve
and flee tq Europe.
She declared the marriage was
stopped at the eleventh hour by her j
parents. She explained that her par- —
ent9 had arranged to leave for
Europe May 3. leaving the daughte j ZZZ
to be married May 5, but at the last
moment refused to sanction the mar- —-■
riage and brought her to Europe. ]j==:
Continuing, the princess said: j —■
•It is supposed to be a question of “
taste, but there are other reasons why
mv parents withdrew their approval
of my marriage, all of which I don’t
think strong enough to put a barrier t
between us. ' —
“The prince and I are still engaged
and hope to marry some day.” =
White City Park Now Open =
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HUFF CASE TO BE
j TRIEDMERITS
|
Judge Grubb Overrules Demur
rer and Gives Construction on
Contempt Question.
MACON. HA., May 21. The trial of
Colonel \V. A. Huff for contempt will
begin strictly on Its merits lute this
afternoon. It is expected that Judge
Emory Speer, against whom the con
tempt is alleged to have been com
mitted. will be the first witness for the
Government.
Judge W. 1. Grubb overruled the
demurrer of the defense this morning
and ordered the trial to proceed. In
making this decision, Judge Grubb
said:
“A Judge after he leaves the court
house is as an individual, no more
than any other man.
“A Judge is not exempt from per
sonal criticism if that criticism Is not
intended, and does not possess a ten
dency to influence a decision of the
court or otherwise obstruct or defeat
The ends of Justice, if the criticism
is directed to the judge as a man.
and affects him only as a man, no
matter how severe or abusive the
criticism, it is not contempt of court.”
The point wa« as N> whether an
abusive letter sent to the judge at his
residence was a contempt committed
“in presence of the court or so near
thereto as to obstruct the administra
tion of justice.”
When court convened this morning
at 9:30 o’clock, with hundreds of per
sons in attendance, arguments were
renewed on the point of law as to
whether the sending of the letter to
the Judge at his residence constitutes
contempt of court, granting that the
letter ordinarily is contempt .matter.
Attorney T. S. Felder, representing
the aged defendant, had already ar
gued that a contempt was not com
mitted by sending the communication
to Judge Speer at his* home, and the
special prosecuting attorney. O. D.
Street, of Birmingham, replied.
Judge Grubb had previously held
that a judge at home and the
judge at court are distinct entities,
hut it is argued by the Government
that the letter deals rtot only with the
judge as a man. but as a judge, and
also threatens him and abuses the of
ficers of the court.
It is probable that to-day the other
letter sent Judge Speer by Colonel
Huff last year, and which was so
vitriolic and personal jhat the Judge
did not introduce it In court, will no>.
be put in the records. In that event
tt will be open to publication. Till-
letter is addressed “To whom it mav
concern.”
Diaphanous Waists
The Rage in Paris
Special Cable to The Atlanta Georgian.
PARIS, May 21.—After the brilliant
colors in vogue till flow, the reap
pearance of numerous gowns of soft
shades, such as Nattier blue and pale
lemon, which enjoyed popularity last
season, are proving a welcome feature
of the fashion display at Uongchamps.
A distinct characteristic of the
summer mode appears in trans
parent bodices, generally made of the
thinnest mousseline de sole, the only
opaque material used being a silk
sash around the waist. The rest, the
sleeves included, is absolutely trans
parent in some cases so much so as
to indicate a wish on the part of the
wearer to outdo the most daring
fashion of the directoire period. Rose-
tinted tulle bodices with very short
sleeves are exceedingly popular.
Fashion experts predict that their
vogue will increase as the season ad
vances.
The mania for the new silhouette is
showing no sign of abating. The I
draping of skirts is more confined, '
bringing the fullness from the hips to i
the front, so as to emphasize the 1
straight line and give the “1913 1
stylish droop.” The lower part of the
skirt is now left quite plain, clinging
closely to the figure.
The movement in favor to lower
heels seems to be making headway.
Very few of the fancy Louis XVI.
jeweled or lacquered heels, which
caused a sensation by their extraordi- I
nary height early in the season, were
seen. At the same time the classic
cothurni or buskins, laced high on the
leg, are more fashionable now.
Lodge and Union to"™
Hear Elliot Speak
When Dr John Love Joy Elliot,
noted social worker and head of the
Hudson Guild of New' York City,
comes here to close a series of lec
tures under the auspices of the At
lanta Ethical Lecture Committee, .t
number of organizations will attend
in a body.
The 300 members of Yaarah Tem
ple. Order of the Mystic Shrine, have'
accepted an invitation, as have mem
bers of the Parent Teachers’ Asso
ciation and the Atlanta Typographi
cal Union. More than 1,000 special
Invitations have been sent out.
BONDS BRING PAR AT HOME.
CHATTANOOGA. TENN., May 21.—
The local clearing house association has
purchased Chattanooga’s $160,000 issue
of improvement bonds at par. In view'
of the market considerable gratification
was expressed by Mayor Thompson.
MISSIONARIES HIT
BY COST OF LIVING
United Assembly Committee Asks
Higher Salaries for Workers
in Foreign Fields.
That the missionaries in India and
in other foreign countries are affected
by the high cost of living as much as
are their stay-at-home brothers and
sisters. was the statement made in
the report on foreign missions, pre
sented to the United Presbyterian As
sembly, at the fentral Presbyterian
Church on Wednesday.
The report declares that “inasmuch
as the high cost of living is keenly
felt by the missionaries, it is recom
mended that the increase in the scale
of salaries, approved by the Woman's
Board and the Board of Foreign Mis
sions, be granted.”
The following are the recommenda
tions which provide for increased sal
aries;
1. That the salary of each Unmar
ried woman missionary in India (doc
tors excepted) be advanced from $500
to $550 a year, and of unjnarried
women doctors from $700 to $750, to
become effective November 1, 1913;
that the furlough salary for unmar
ried women missionaries be $40 per
month.
2. That children’s allowances he
continued throughout the furlough
period; that the annual allowance be
fixed at $100 for the first ten years of
each child’s life, and at $200 for the
next ten years.
3. That the salary of a married
couple be $90 per month, and that the
salary of an unmarried man be $50
per month.
4. That the salary during the second
term of service in the Sudan and
Egypt be fixed at $1,500 a year for a
married coufde, and $850 for an un
married man; that the salary during
the second term of service in India be
fixed at $1,320 a year for a married
couple, and $780 for an unmarried
professional ntan.
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J.MJIigh Cgmmny.