قراءة كتاب The American Missionary — Volume 54, No. 3, October, 1900
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The American Missionary — Volume 54, No. 3, October, 1900

PUBLISHED QUARTERLY BY THE AMERICAN MISSIONARY ASSOCIATION,
THE CONGREGATIONAL ROOMS,
FOURTH AVENUE AND TWENTY-SECOND STREET, NEW YORK.
Entered at the Post Office at New York, N. Y., as Second-Class mail matter.
CONTENTS.
Page
Financial145
Annual Meeting145
Editorial Notes 147
Le Moyne Normal Institute 149
Reinforcements from Avery Institute155
What Our Graduates Do156
School Life in Porto Rico 157
Among the Indians 164
The Present Crisis in China, From the Standpoint of a Christian Chinese 169
Christian Endeavorers in the A. M. A. Churches and Schools 175
Obituary—Pres. E. M. Cravath, D.D. 177
Memorial Service at Fisk University 178
RECEIPTS 179
Woman's State Organizations 190
Secretaries of Young People's and Children's Work 192
OF THE
American Missionary Association
WILL BE HELD IN
SPRINGFIELD, MASS.
October 23-25, 1900.
The AMERICAN MISSIONARY presents new form, fresh material and generous illustrations for 1900. This magazine is published by the American Missionary Association quarterly. Subscription rate fifty cents per year.
Many wonderful missionary developments in our own country during this stirring period of national enlargement are recorded in the columns of this magazine.
THE
American Missionary
Vol. LIV. | OCTOBER, 1900. | No. 4. |
The Association closed the year without debt and has a balance in the treasury of $1,601.90 for current work, not including the balance in Reserve Legacy Account for the periods when the receipts from legacies fall below the average on which the Committee makes its estimate of available receipts from this source for current work of the year.
We go to our Annual Meeting in Springfield, October 23d, with faith in the ability and devotion of those who sustain the work and with full courage and hopefulness for still greater results in the new year.
ANNUAL MEETING.
Springfield, Mass., is not only one of the most beautiful cities in New England, but is especially adapted for a great convention like the Fifty-fourth Annual gathering of the American Missionary Association. With cordial hospitality the members of the churches and citizens of Springfield have opened their homes and hearts to welcome the delegates, life members, officers and missionaries who gather for this meeting October 23-25th. State associations, local conferences and contributing churches are all entitled to delegate representation at this meeting. Each church should early select its delegates and send their names to the Chairman of the Entertainment Committee. The committee cannot promise to furnish entertainment for those whose applications are received after October 20th.
It seemed probable to the friends in Springfield that no church was large enough to hold the audiences which would gather for this meeting. The Court Square Theatre, which has the largest auditorium of any public building in the city, was therefore secured. Springfield is the centre of a large population gathered in other towns and villages as well as within its own municipal borders and easy connection is made through trolley lines or railroads.
Rev. Philip S. Moxom, D.D., is Chairman