^OGTCfoER 9, 1924 WALKING ABOUT Bishop J. S. Caldwell, D. D. Mr Editor: I am sending .you-a few lines for publication frolfi the old historic' city of New Bern, N. C., resting as it does upon the banks of the Neuse River. Sunday, September 21st, found us doing business for the King rat the old St. Peter’s at 11 A. j|.. aid1 at 3 P. M., six miles away at Ply mouth chattel, and $Ut 8 P. M., we held forth at James chapel, James City, N. C. ' Tuesday, the 23rd, we met the dis trict conference, presided over by Rev. H. Bell, P. E., at Oriental, N. C. We found the brethren here ail happy In their work, and sweeping on with great "success and anticipa tion of gobd reports at the forthcom ing annual conference. Rev. Bell seems to havd ’liae love and respect of the men Whom he is leading. Wednesday, the !24th, we visited Trenton, N. C.. where Dr. W. M. Sutton had converted hfe -men in dis trict conference". This was another great gathering of Zionites. Dr. W. M. Sutfon, preSiding elder, was in the saddle.' Rep&ts of pastors were all very encouraging. Every department 0? ,'^he Phurch work re ceived encouriil&ient from this safe and sane presiding elder. ; I was not .able to reach the dis trict conferee pres|de:d over at Hookerton, N. C., by Dr. J. H. Love, presiding elder*; but wag. In formed that it was One of the best ever tot&jjjmk, him OH the district. Dr;' Love astd^pB men c4n be depended upon when it comes to bringing *1- %4 tjlev..- j.. S. Shaw at Greenville*’ N. C.,. Is in the midst of the building of a new chuich; The basement is cow being occupied by his Urge and enthusiastic congregation- The annu al conference is to meet there De cember 3rd. On account of the. historic signifi cance surrounding St. Pdter’s at Net? Bern, N. C., the whole denomination is very anxious about the outcome of its rebuilding. No church of the proportion of this one in our com munion is simlarly situated - You will remember that two-thirds of its mem bership lost all -their belongings at the time the church was burned. For eix months after the fire the city of New Bern cared for the fire stricken sufferers by a fund provided for that purpose. The people are attempting to rise from their bed of ashes and rebuild their homes, and at the same time as Pastor Holt aptly putj it: “We are with one hand laying a brick or tacking a board on our own, homes, and with the other hand lay ing a brick on the church building.” This necessarily makes slow work in both directions. Notwithstanding this handicap, the loyalty and mdus tiy of this people cannot be question ed. I stood on the old foundation vails of St. Peter’s andi could scarce ly refrain from, tears as I thought of the blood and tears of the fathers who laid the foundation and, built the walls of that once beautififl and well appointed-edifice that now lies in a bed of'aches.' I thought off the late J. C. Price who ns a boy, got his first training in the Sunday School of this old church, and the late John C. Dancy In his young manhood days who spoke from the platform of this old church with such effect and power. Likewise, the late Bishop Rush was connected with this church in his early days. I went the parsonage under the spell and *aid to Pastor Holt, a» did Jeremiah of old to his peoples “Let us rise and, build.” .The people here must he helped. My plans to this end are in Ike making and will be, made known a little later. Rev. W. W. Howard; D. D., re cently of California, now stationed^ at Salisbury, Md. lahd with whom I spent Sunday, Sept, the 28th, is starting off splendidly. A new parsonage', cost of will high day at Zion at this point.* Tb^re were three services. Presiding EWer M. "W: 43tovi#^ 0. D., at the Salisbury district, preached the missionary ser mon at 11 A. M. I preached at 3 P. M. The St. James congregation of this city and' Rev''. 2. B. De shields and several of hiB members came pp.frbm Princess Anne, Md., and joined in with St. Paul at this service: At S P. M., the missionary ladies observed Woman's day wfth • an ^rojM^ate Sidney Wilson, the local president presided Raised all day by the trustees, $349.$2. /. J ; A FLATS WORD FOR A * GRITICAL HOUR. More anon. •Vi E. Stanley Jones. Missidrtary In India. i am writing tms entirely on my own initiative and responsibility. The reaspne that impel me to write will or ought to- be. plain as 1 share my anxiety. ■ ,'.-./'i, I am told that the understanding has }j>een passed down the line that tfeeire are to be no more scares pre cipitated bn the Church. With this l have a good deal of sympathy.., The Church and ite benevolent work must not be run on periodic 'alarms. It Is unhealthy a^id becomes as finally af fective as tho chytsic cry of: *‘Wolf. Wotf}*’ Not by peddle alarms but. by consistent consecration tp the je8UB In spite of the above I confers my self aiarmed-^^horoiighly' ’alarmedV 1 There is no necessity to Spring -a ■ scare on the Church- this time. Mere- j ly state the facts and face them. The factg themselves are the alarmi b\ When I returned from India - in April Bishop Wame took me aside into a little room at the Foreign Board offices tin New York and, with trembling lip> said: ' ?'§tapley, the Missionary Society 4® two millions in; debt, two millions in deficit over last year, so that an actual < hortage of four millions faces us. Lnlesg there some miracle of giving before the Fall Conference® an£ the Fall Meet ing of the Board ( we will have to re call-missioitaries, keep some from re turning who :>„re now on f vrlough, and will have to order, a twenty*five per cent retrenchment of all our work.” I could scarcely believe, it. I had just come out of the greatest missionary situation that the world has: ever seen. ,1 had seen whole, nations turn-/ Ing in thoughVTdwara Jesus Christ;' lines that we had sapped for decades actually giving way in the .greatest spiritual movement toward Christ of the centuries. I .speak sober truth when I say it. In India from national leader to outcaste there , is a taping toward Christ all along the line. And yet we are- being compelled to face retrenchment at an hour Jike this. And at our moment of greatest ma terial wealth. Please do not speak to me of hard times and poverty. I am not impressed.. I have seen them both—stalking before me with gaunt figure® . No, we are blessed with ma terial -resources as no other people of any age has been blessed. During this time of our falling income, that •a during 1923( the saving® banks de posits increased $140,000,000, ,or at the rate of $3,000,000 a day; one of the great, banks of the country esti mated that duffing 1923 the total gain in the invested wealth of the coun try was approximately $12,000,000, 000. Thig is no mere scare about para lysing the foreign work—it has act ualy begun. Word from the field this week tells me that the Finance CSpm mlttee of one of the Conferences, see* ing impending diiaster and in order to soften the coming blow, ha® al ready voted reduction. The Distri Superintendent w •found tradition Is more fro* prison than an 1* again knock s Who," for to that roster we is a good step That old and that the minister’s quently an inmate occupant of the pul] in the head by “ the current issue o: learn that the man ping stone to fame.|In order t<^ se cure information concerning the coin par atiy®, success ot the Editors of'"Wr v • * .vf-<r£fr: a questionnaire to names appealed i 1922-1923, asking tion of their fat the returns race pears that 2,895 per cent., inJhO , were the cdd^reh addition^ a coi the replies •farmer and preac' preacher,” etc.'it is a brief study of sent our tose whose edition of the occopa thfc bas^of •1 pefe 2-1923 In ot American notables latest volume of further-in ktherhood of ared for, the s Who'* by of Indiana Prof. Stephen S. Imiversityf that “At the 1870 est the birth of tb were about 40,109 men in America 0; time clergymen) 0-4 per cent. of all it follows that in proportion to pop ulation, clergymen [.fathered fully (the one pear notables) there plergy thapart about Thus BISHOP J. W. WOOD, D. D. Sixth Episcopal District. twenty-eight times the average num ber of notables. About the year 1870. one Protectant clergyman in each fifteen had a child who later won a place in ‘Whip’s Who in America.’ Hence Protestant clergymen about' 1870 contributed in proportion to thein numbers about 2,400 times as many eminent persons as aid unskill, ed laborers, thirty-five times as many as did farmers, four times as many as business men, and over twice as many as the average of other profes sional men.” , Twd radically -different interpreta tions, we are told by this investigat, or, have been offered concerning the comparative value of the several el ements of the population in the pro duction of notable men: (Contirtiled to page 5) ETHICS OF JAPANESE EXCLUSION. Speaking from the radio station WH^T in New York Milton W.. Sut ton discussed ethical aspects of Jap anese exclusion. The fact that hie address was made under, the auspic es of the National Security League, which yields to none in emphasis upon loyalty and 100 per .cent American ism, adds significance to what he said, in part as follows: -“Jutet ^hv our Constitution, draWn up by men who thought they were penning a bill of human rights, should, be in terpreted as the exclusive property through all the ages of three color groups, red, white and black, and only these three, is more " great Christian College in Tokio. should take up residence in this country and desire to become a cit izen he could not do so. Should he be introduced as a Doctor of Philoso phy from John Hopkins University —as a Christian gentleman of forty years standing—asjthe administrative chief of every American missionary who is appointed to work as a teachr ei, in that great institution,, he would, without more than a glance at his passport, be ruled out as in eligible. Dr. Nitobe may be invited to come^khd "deliver i^lttfes^n po litical and national ideals to the stu dents of Harvard and Yale Universi ties as ‘exchange’ professor, but he can never qualify as a citizen of this Republic. Why? Because he is net ther an American Indian, a . Cau casian, of a Negro. He was born unassimilable to our Social and po litical life, dont you see? It makes no difference that for many years he has been happily married to a charming American lady—tha*. their home in Tokio is a center of culture and refinement, as well as Christian patronage of every good cause. No qualitative test is permitted and he is debarred, together with Wellington Koo, C. T. Wang,. Rabindranath Tagore, Gandhi and more than 800, 000,000 other of the children of men who live East, of Suez. ” Japan “has looked to. America as an ‘Outet’ for her people for years, as She ever did. However, it means everything to have them treated—either excluded or admitted—on exactly the same - * - - 'Mi. - - -■ - basis/ai the people of other races, When Ittis proposal was pressed at one of the sessions of. the Senate Com. mittee, the< unanswerable reply was that the application of the quota to would . recognize thW racial equal Es^opea^ .that Intolerable. If W9 hav« a desperate time granting free- > and equality of opportunity to Japanese who are at this parties uiar junction the most educated, pro. gicssiVe and Amei^canlike of all the people of the East, what is to becon .e qf us when the millions of Chinas India and Africa, tomorrow and the ' day after, struggle, to their knees and then to their feet- and finally stand facing us eye to eye, claiming a place with us as ©«r peers*- If we cannot make this adjustment, \thore is nothing ahead, but disaster5; It is not Japan, but America that is on trial in this present situation.’? ROOSEVELT DE NOUNCES KLAN. New York N. Y., Oct . (By The As sociated Negro Press:) One of . the outstanding parts of the speech of Theodore I^oosevelt, Republican can didate for governor,, in his speech for nomination acceptance were the paragraphs directed. against the Ku klux Klan. He also praises the ad ministration -.of President Coolidge pnd denounced. the evils of Al Smith's-regime in the state- The paragraphs against the klan read' “it there is one tenet of our Amer ican beliefs' which stands out over everyjjther, it is that men should b a judged as>men and on no Other ba sis. We maintain that racial; and re ligious matters , should never find their place in our politics. I deplore their introduction into this campaign. I stand as I stood eighteen months rgo, firmly and unalterably opposed td any organization whatsoever, whether it be the Ku Klux Klan or some other group, ^hen it endeavors to violate this fundamental princi ple of the United States by the cre ation in politics of false distinctions between. American and American. “If we are to exist as a nation, we must be law-abiding. On the law de pends our society. Destroy law, and the country reverts to. barbarism overnight. Civilization ceases. De stroy law, and wo Will be back in the days of slavery, rapine and pillage, when the strong oppress the. weak md when interest triumphs over It is said that an *|Mj|^kvage summoned to launch a boat-SMdd save a man drowning injuidstream, calm ly refused with the'w&bdi^ ‘He is not of my village.” Bfow 'inhuman and shocking, we th&lt! YetlSaii(Sh atti tudes are being taken and expressed by thousands of men and Women— many of them the' life of the various nation*—who would scorn to be classed with1 the African’ sav age. Holding That the barriers of language, of culture, of race, insu perably divide'The human speciesv they deny that * God hath hxalie of one blood all nations, of men,” and groups, superior—in their own thought—to all other groups,“and having thereby-t&O right of mastery over all other. It is of tMft, spirit— and some other, el^ldjfentp-^tot, race prejudice i8 engepdere%* V Almost within this generation the clash of color a&' widespread and ' tralia has set Japanese. The ’ Armenian and C Africa the native the suppressive measures of the in vading whites; while oh the east coast native born Indiana are depriyed of rights and respect by white men who brought their fathers there to labor. Japanese look wit! reans. in' Europe^ prejudice between smoulders and flax again. | In 'our^pwii Tlnib .but ■ to esa,” “Negro s -out the anf GeatHe res and smoulders . V to run over the epithets vulgarly Wp plied to the various' foreign-born fplkr-^and even to their natiVe-boTn children to become consbibui of the a,cute racial antipathies here. The Missionary Education Movement and' the Council of Women for Home Mis sions have been; most timely la fix lag as the subject for the year, “The Way of Christ in Race Relations. ” Surely here the way of Christ is needed. It is needed to huipble racial pride, to soften bitterness, to make our approach to difficult problems, patient and. un^uish,. to suppress the hatreds that seem so easilyl^|^ak out. But the way of Christ ij|-<meant tov he more than a fife extinguisher. It will not only suppress .;the 4vtt, but by uncovering to us all-r-bleck, white, yellow and brown .pnd red, the wonderful qualities at each,. it-^Will build a great' and marvelonsisp en riched humanity—thp- kingdom of. God on earth.. (Continued from, .page-1) - WHEN When Columbus andvWs-.,smAU, fleet landed in Santo Domingo,in Decepif ber 1492, in the hopetbatihey had reached Japan, they-found- an island of great natural beauty andirichBS. inhabited by •'friendly Indians. En chanted with the - surroundings, Co lumbus immediacy -started the or ganization of , a colonial go vern me nt on the island; built a fort from the wreckage of one of hie ships, and later founded ;a cathedral. • It was evidently his '^sirs td^ settle there and be a of the colony. But tbeVMiboljihdffir■ of San to Domingo seei^; to-jbreedc conspira cies . The explqrer wef* soon the ob ject of a half doizen^i^StM nrhlch kept him busy crossing and recross ing the Atlantic in ordeb to explain his motives tavtjra suspicious King Ferdinand, andji a^3pgth; dttscoura& ed and sick nt heartv he.’ docided to lumbus each att^I»tedL>tu settle on the ance3tral *Sf4-tO,ih\w|life. Domin go, but were equally nftSdjfcfcwsful as the result of political Intrigues. Meantime - the.cp^ciiB^^SpWteh

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