Abbott, Edward, The Burial of a Suicide, 730. Adams, J. L., Clerical Training, 97. Adams, J. L., Theological Education. Adams, R. M. D., "The Observance of Fri- Anstice, Henry, "The New Canons," 16. Aves, H. D., A Communion Service for the Baker, L. C., Religion in Japan, 172, 185. Barnwell, R. W., 'A matter of Higher Criti- Bartlett, M. C., "By invitation only," 853. Bates, Le Roy S., "Use of Lord's Prayer," 416. Binney, John, The Burden of Hebrew, 328. Bell, Clara L., Spiritual Care of the Deaf, 908. Bradner, L., Jr., A Warning, 602. Bragg, G. F., Jr., Councils for Negro Church- Brewer, L. R., Apportionment_Plan, 768. Buck, George, Use of Lord's Prayer, 187. Canover, J. P., "Education for Character," 730. Caswall, R. C., "Use of Lord's Prayer," 569. Cole, Th. L., Use of Lord's Prayer, 486. Collins, E. C., "A Christlike Set," 379. Cook, Wm. M., "Good Friday Services,' 568. Courtney, Frederick, "Another Point of View," Dike, S. W., National League for the Protection Evans, B., Board of Inquiry in Talbot Case, 259. Gowen, H. H., The proper lessons for lent, 730. Hall, Bp. A. C. A., The Observance of Friday, Harris, T. R., Deputies, Alternates, and Others, Harrington, F. P., The sentences at Morning and Haughwont, L. M. A., Our French Citizens, 853. Hayward, W. S., Sentences at Morning and Heal, John W., A correction, 567. Hoskins, F. D., Assisted Education, 60. Hunter, A. B., Good Friday Offerings, 568. Johnston, Bp. J. S., Religion in the Public Jones, J., Liturgical Use of the Lord's Prayer, Keese, G. P., Jubilee Thank Offering for Mis- Lay, George W., When do new canons take Linderman, H. R., Developments in other Com- Lloyd, A. S., Bp. Brewer's plan, 534. Lloyd, W. K., Use of the Lord's Prayer, 602. McKnight, G. H., An Adequate income for the Macmahon, E. L., The Burden of Hebrew, 328. Spiritual care of thel Deaf, 908. Murdoch, F. J., A new phase of the divorce Murphy, R. H., Use of the Lord's Prayer, 329. Packard, C. J., The Burden of the Bible, 569. Paddock, E. M., The Ruined Abbeys of Great Paine, G. L., The Harvard summer school of Peabody, Endicott, C. L. Slattery and J. P. Peters, J. P., A matter of the Higher Criticism, Pope, Julius, Theological Education, 97. Powers, W. D., New Canon on Divorce, 416; Reade, S. F., True Function of the Public Rich, E. R., Church League of the Baptized, 97. Roberts, C. E., Liturgical use of Lord's Prayer, Roberts, D. C., Observance of Friday, 186. Schieffelin, W. J., A United Church, 328. Schratchley, H. P., Practical efficiency in the Shinn, G. W., Summer School at Oxford Uni- Slattery, C. L., Need of more ministers, 730. Smiley, J. L., Liturgical use of the Lord's Smith, E. P., Education in Missions, 852; The Smith, G. H., The Profit of Hebrew, 380. Sowden, A. J. C., The Bishop of Cuba, 259. Spalding, S. G., Why we do not give more to Werlein, L. E., Revivals, 568. Weld, G. F., Burial of a Suicide, 815. Williams, G. M., The Burden of Hebrew, 416; Williams, John, Deputies, Alternate and Others, 291: Did Dr. Dix Decline?, 416 Is it Wilmer, J., A suggestion, 328. Whitehead, Bp. C., Spiritual needs of Blind, Wood, J. W., An Opportunity, 172; Reinforce- American Missionaries in the East, Sir Morti- Athabasca, The church in, Bp. Reeve, 487. Catholicity and Democracy of the Episcopate, Christian Education the Church's Duty, Bp. Christian Marriage, Dr. L. Parks, 450. Clergy Relief, The church and Henry Anstice, Common Prayer, W. Lowrie, 499. of Jesus of Nazareth, Bp. Ingram, 534; Personality and Liturgy, J. E. Freeman, 63; Reign of Christ, The, Canon Holland, 424; Risen Christ, The, W. R. Inge, 613; Ritual and other Means of Grace, 259; Sav- Dr. Wace's Appeal to the First Six Centuries, Education of Church People, The, E. T. Slater, England, Letters on Church Matters in, D. C. Epiphany, The, of E. Daingerfield, 26. Gankin, Healing the Sick in, 422. Gold Hunter's Farthest North, To the, H. Hebrew, The Burden of, Dean Hodges, 220. Ideadls of Worship and Ritual, Bp. Morrison, Illusions about Christian Missions, R. F. Speer, Injunctions of Silence in the Gospels, W. San- Liddon, Henry Parry, by P. D. Waggett, 902. Medical Mission Work, Basis of, Bp. Graves, Need of More Ministers, Rev. E. Peabody, 730. Pacific Coast Equation of the Race Problem, Philippines: An Ingot Cemetery, Bp. Brent, 754. President Roosevelt's Inaugural and the Study Prophet Indeed, A, J. H. Stiness, 327. Religious and Moral Progress in 1904, W. H. Revelation of the East, The, A. M. Stewart, 96. Royal Commission on Ecclesiastical Discipline, Ruined Abbeys of Great Britain, by R. A. Safeguarding the Public Schools, Bp. Potter, Schools of Religious Painting in Italy, R. A. Self Indulgence or Self Sacrifice, Mrs. G. J. Some Thoughts on Progress, John Morley, 187. Theology, The Teaching of, Charles Cuthbert Tuskegee, Religious influence at, R. E. Park, Vital Spark in Christianity, The, 95. Another Point of View (contrast to Canon Hol- Barriers and Obstacles of Division, 517. Bishop Greer's Idea of the Church's Business, Rosses and the People, The, 271. Canadian Church forbids marriage of divorced Captain Mahan's Question, 339. Christianity's Final Test, 945. Church and Educational Trusts. The, 87. Church, The State of the. 1069. Church Conventions and Public Morals, 945. Church in New York, The, 1033. "Cleavage between Clergy and Laity," 693. Conference and Unity, The, 787. Congregationalists and Unitarians, 692. Diocesan Conventions and Morals, 837. Divorce, Cardinal Gibbons on, 188. Insurance Investigation, Pres. Butler on, 518. Interchurch Conference, The, 890. Laity, Lord Hugh Cecil on the Rights of the, "Men Live only while they Serve," 371. "Moral Obligation" in Politics and Religion, Moral Supremacy of Christendom, 651. Moral Value of Hell, The, 239. Mystery of the Universe, The, 55. Only universal unity is Christian, 787. Parable, A, 239. Personality and the Law of Love, 239. President Roosevelt on the Revelations of Re- cent Years, 652. Public Service and Private Profit, 119. Religion in Compartments, 119. Responsibility of Trustees, 87. Scott Holland's New Book, 747. Shall Nations make Peace and Christianity con- Two Instances of an awakening Social Con- Ultimate Foundation, The, 7. Unchanging Creed in a changing World, The, Unifying Mission of the Church, 447. Unity, Should the Ministry be given up το Unity, "Giving up" will not produce, 411. Agricultural Department, Abuses in, 120, 189; American Church Missionary Society, Meetings Amundsen, Capt., Discovery of, of northwest Anglo-Japanese Alliance, 412, 519. Annapolis, Court martial at, 946, 1034. Apocrypha, International Society of the, 451. peace conference, 480. Archeology: Assyria, 57. Palestine; explorations in, 155; at Jerusa- Egypt; Dr. Sayce on Tel el-Amarna tab- Arkansas, Church buildings in, 58. Athanasian Creed; Discussion of, in the "Llber- al Churchman," 60; Deans' Memorial con- cerning, 276, 344; Dr. Carr Glynn on, 382; The "Latitudinarians" and, 576; Dean of Windsor on, 895; Bishop Chevasse on, 1000; Australia; Protestant Union in, 193; the Moor- Austria; Hungarian nationalists oppose minis- try, 9; suffrage in, 790. Ballot Reform, Necessity for, 788. Baptists; Union of, 894; episcopate and, 752; Barnado, Dr. Thomas John, work and death of, Bennington Affair; Account of Explosion, 152: enquiry into, 340; court martial of Captain Berkeley Divinity School, 52nd year of, 521. Biddle, E. J., On catholicity of church, 697. Bible; Anglo Catholicism and, the, 313; Japan- Bible Societies: British --Thanksgiving meet- 244. Bible Teachers' Training School, Opening of the, Boston Fenway Scandal, 695. Boston Cathedral, London Times on, 791. Brazza, Count de, Death of, 448. Brent, C. H.; To young men, 10; On American Briggs, C. A.; On Roman reform, 90; on ques- tion of orders, 191. Broad Church in England, Rev. H. Handley and Brotherhood of St. Andrew:-Canada: Report of England: 9th annual conference, 11. U. S.: Official communications, 248, 288; 20th annual convention, 491-498. Buddhism, W. S. Lilly on the message of, 311. American comment on action of, in regard to Canterbury, Archbishop of, see Davidson. Carlisle, Bishop of, On reunion, 415. Chapelle, Archbishop, P. L., death of, 273. Charity Organizations; Abuses in system of "charity by proxy," 154, 190; a clean milk Charities and Corrections, N. Y. State Confer- Chase, Dr. F. H.; nomination of, for bishopric Childrens' Aid Society, Annual report of, 895. ers and anarchists in, 520; etiquette in, Chinese Exclusion and Boycott, 88, 153, 242, Christianity; Samuel McComb on, 389; and citi- Church Association for the Advancement of In- 699. Church Endowments, C. E. Haupt on, 244. Church Students' Missionary Association, 19th Church Unity; Bishop Johnston and, 449; out- Church Workers' Conference; Announcement of, Civil Service, new rule for, 653. Clark, R. W., Appointment of as missionary sec- Clergymen's Retiring Fund Society, 791. Clergy Relief Fund, General, 58. College Churchman, conference of, 381. Colorado (Western), Bishop Spaulding on Congregational Council; report of labor com- mittee, 312; programme of industrial com- mittee, 414; action of, confirmed by Associ- Consular Reforms, 789. Convict Labor, discussion of, 380. Davidson, Archbishop; on disestablishment, Divorce; uniform laws for, 242; Sydney Brooks 10; aiding the smaller colleges, 57; public Edward VII, King, birthday celebration of, in Elections:-municipal campaign: issue of, 58; features and results of, in N. Y., 242, 613, 695, 748, 788, 892; N. Y. churches in, 751; supreme court decision on ballot boxes, 1034. Eliot, Pres., on religion in the university, 449. Ellicott, Charles John, death of, 698. Encyclopaedia of Religions, plan for, 10. England; Precarious position of, 9; defeat of Mr. Balfour, 153; Anglo-French naval dem- ployees, 310; Alien's Act, 341; resignation of Lord Curzon, 341; war office and the volunteers, 380; secret commissions on pur- chases, 412; trades unions and Chamberlain- ism, 413; report of fiscal year, 450; treaty with Japan, 519; India and the Afghan fron- tier, 520; British fleet at Yokohama, 614; new ministry, 996; liberal policies of min- English Church; An eight-hour day for arch- meeting of churchmen's union, 122; question of vestments, 155; problem of evening ser- vice, 313 politics in the pulpit, 343; hat- less women in church, 343, 382; episcopal misrule, 344; bishops as missioners, the "open deor," 382; work of church mis- mony of worshippers, 571; women teachers Europe; General political situation in, Exeter Cathedral, bells of, 385. Fallows, Bp., on the unit of society, 450. Fond du Lac, opening of the convent of the Sisters of the Holy Nativity at, 421. Football; at Manlius, 696; reform of, 947; passed in chamber, 89; bill in Senate, 121 Free and open church association, report of, Gailor, Bp. F. F., on divorce, 655. Gardner, Prof. B., on liberalism of Anglican Germany; theology in universities of, 89; inter- national policies of, 121; part of, in general European situation, 153, 188; cholera in East Prussia, 380; Kaiser's naval pro- Gibbons, Cardinal, on publicity and corruption, Gibson, Bp. R. A.; on war and the ministry, 59; Gill, C. H., consecration of, 699. Gore, Bp.; attitude of, toward divorce, 450; on a diocesan working parliament, coolie labor in South Africa, 1038. Government printing, 412, 612. Greer, Bp. D. H., convention address of, 524. Gregorian chant, congress for, 189. Hadley, Arthur T., baccalaureate sermon of, 57. Halifax, Lord, address of, at meeting of E. C. Harvard, John, memorial to, 245. Harvard University, religious reform at, 999. Henson, Canon H., on lawlessness, 656. Hobart College; commencement at, 10; growth Holmes, E. S., dismissal of, from Agricultural Holy Communion, Church of the, summer work Hook, Cecil, consecration of, as Bp., 795. Hooker, Warren B., escape of, 152. Hummel, Abraham, conviction of, 1070. Hungary, crisis in, 520, 573, 613, 655, 838. Huntington, W. R., on the Chew resolutions, Hyslop, Dr. Theodore B., on the therapeutic Immigration; statistics of, 188; Bishop Potter on, 273; the church and, 1072. India; resignation of Lord Curzon, 341; the Afghan frontier, 520; effect of Japanese Indians, North American; convocation of, in South Dakota, 418; Mohawk çonferences re- Inge, W. R., on sin and modern thought, 699. Ingraham, Bp., A. F, W.; visitation charge of, 698, 699; on the birth rate, 795; on prayer for the sick, 950; sermon of, at Oxford, 951; Interchurch conference on Federation; see Fed- International Lectureships, 789, 947. Isle of Pines, question of annexation of, 946. Japan; pulpit and pew in, 9; Buddhism and Christianity in, 57, 276, 342; Christian rationalism in, 254; Buddhism in, 274; war time relief in, 380; alliance of, with Eng- land, 412, 519; task of, after peace, 573; welcome of, to British fleet, 614; Bp. Audry on character of people of, 614; Christianity in, 634; Lord Rosebery on, 655; naval re- view in, 696; and opium, 696; and Korea, 696, 838; independence of churches in, 950; religious conditions in Tokyo, 950. Jayne, Bp., letter of, on vestments and com- Johnson, W. E., to Low Churchmen, 482. Joscelyne, A. E., election of, as Bp. Coadjutor, Kenyon College, commencement at, 89. King Hall, proposed abandonment of work at, Knox, Edm. A., mission of, at Blackpool, 344, Korea; reorganization of, 696; new U. S. min- Kitchener, Lord, military independence of, in Labor; the anthracite miners, 189; service for Lathbury, D. C., on the church in parliament, Lloyd, Dr. A. S., election of, as Bishop coadju- Lloyd, F. E. J., election of, as Bishop coadju- Loomis, Francis B., and Mr. Bowen, 8, 518. McCormick, J. N., election of, as bp. coadjutor, 1039. McVickar, Bp., W. N., and Bp. Harkins, 791. Macedonia, question of, 838, 892. Macrorie, Bp. Wm. K., death of, 616. Mail Franking abuses, 273. Matthews, Paul, and bp. coadjutorship of Mil- Methodism; in England, 245, 450, 451, 484; in U. S., 275, 450, 449, 752, 1037. Michigan, Bp. Coadjutor for, 414; (Western) coadjutor for, 574; special convention of Milwaukee, a bp. coadjutor for, 381. 122; work at Soo chow, 154; work at Wulu, 191; Bp. Graves' tour, 254; work at Hankow, 527; Seventy years in China, 578; century conference, 615; murder of missionaries, 750, 794, 841, 894; con- ference at Pekin, 841; Christian en- deavorers at Ningpo, 894; outlook for missions, 894;_number of baptisms in inland, 951; Fungchow mission, 998; conference of laymen at Shanghai, 998; indemnity for murder of missionaries, England; conference of united boards of, 91; work of C. M. S., 277, 313, 382, 484; bishops as missioners, 382; pioneer work, 700; S. P. G. discusses Japanese Episcopate, 753; intercession for, in dio- Honolulu, 794. Indians, convocation in South Dakota, 418. 59; Mikado's gifts to missions, 154; Eu- U. S.; report of summer school for, 90; contributions to, 190, 655, 840; finances of, 90, 121; Congregationalists and the Rockefeller gift, 343, 449; disaster at Kusiak and Ponape, 343; in district of Laramie, 414; meetings of church Board, 482, 523, 615, 840, 1035; woman's auxiliary, 615; work of N. Y. C. society, 794; A. C. M. S., 894; chair for mis- sions established at Yale, 949; conven- tion of church students association, 1003; statistics of Protestant foreign, 1037; business men as missionaries, 1038. Mitchell, Prof. H. G.; and the Methodists, 752;. Mohawk conferences, 483, 653, 696. Morgan, E. V., dinner to, 597. Morocco; France and Germany in, 121, 341,. 380, 413, 520; England, France and, 613;. approaching conference on, 1035. Morrison, T. N., missionary pastoral of, 190. Morton, Levi P., gift of, to N. Y. cathedral, 60.. Munil ownership, Charles Russel on, abroad,. Naval affairs; German and American Naval! Negroes; churches of, 382; work for, in N. Y.,. Old Catholic Slavs, organization of, 575. Pan-Anglican conference of 1908, 656, 752. Parker, E. M., sketch of life of, 893. Fhilamore, Sir Walter, on church problems, 277. Philippines; our educational mission in, 242; Red Cross in, 576; congress and, 612; pur- chase of friars' land in, 612; Rome and, 698; conditions in, 748; Mr. Brownell on Physicians, opportunities of, for Christian ser- Pius, Pope, on R. C. Church in America, 999. Polish R. C. Question, Mgr. Symon on, 381. Political Independence Dinner, speeches at, 946. Popular Preachers, "The guardian" оп, 753. Porto Rico, America in, 656. Portsmouth, N. H., Thanksgiving service at, Potter, Bp. H. C.; on immigration, 273; on Presbyterians; missionary policies of, 91; pro- posed book of common prayer, 383. Public Baths, maladministration of, 998. Radium, Mr. Burke's experiments with, 245. Railroad passes, abolishment of, by Penn. R. R., Railroad rates and rebates; Atcheson case, 8; Beef rebate conspiracy, 480; Prof. Ripley on, 572; Mr. Spencer on, 612; Pres. Roose- velt's policy regarding, 653; Senator Knox on, 749; prospects of legislation regarding, 892; new bill of Interstate Commerce Com- Raines' Law Hotels, fight against, 56, 613. Rainsford, Dr. W. S., a letter from, 792. Reciprocity convention at Chicago, 340. Religious teaching in Public Schools; Jewish attitude towards, 91; in England, 92, 795, Revised version,_10. Revivals; at St. Paul, 698; at Minneapolis, 793; Richfield Springs conferences; woman's, 192, 243, 275, 312; Sunday school, 342; close Riverside Bible Conference, 275. Ritual; unrest concerning, in England, 122, 227; question of vestments, 155, 192, 522, 523, 576, 616, 699, 841; value of cere- monials, 484; Bishop Jayne on vestments, 522; Archbishop Nuttall on vestments, 794; Bp. Percival on ritual, 895; reform of the prayer book, 950; English "Churchman" Ed. Robbins, W. L., address of, at church club, 697. Rockefeller, John D.; gifts of, to smaller col- England, Parochial schools, 484. France; and protectorate in the East, 153; Italy; Papacy and politics, 57, 89; Dr. U. S.; and education, 121; N. Y. "Review," 122; and question of burial, 244; mis- sionary methods of, 244; music of, 450; and the Protestants, 791; Pope Pius on, Roosevelt, President; sermon of, at Oyster Bay, 243; on labor unions and the Monroe Doc- trine, 272; and Public Printer Palmer, 412; Dean Lefroy on, 451; Lucien Millevoie on, 479; southern tour of, 652; railway policy of, 653; and civil service rules, 653; in Alabama, 694; at Little Rock, 694; at New Orieans, 695; Thanksgiving proclamation of, 853; message of, to congress, 952. Root, Elihu, appointment of, as Sec'y of State, Russia; massacre at Lodz, 8; removal of Alexis Russian church in America; Archbishop Tikhon Sacon, Y. S., And the Japanese Bible, 59. Sacred Literature, Institute of, at Chicago, 154, St. George's Church, N. Y., year book of, 792. Saranac Lake, work for sick at, 949. Schiff, Jacob, speech of, at accountants' ban- Scottish Churches' Bill, 156, 193. Senatorial election by popular vote in Virginia, Sermons, value of old fashioned, 343. Sessums, Bp. D., and the Yellow fever, 274, 387. Sewanee, settlement work at, 949. Shaw, Dr. J. B., on ethical revival, 449. Shaw, L. M.; on the tariff, 273; resignation of, Simmons, J. E.; speech of, at Maryland Bank- Smith, L. F. M. B., designation of as suffragan, Society for the Increase of the Ministry, 1036. Southwark; dedication of cathedral of, 155; Stryker, Dr., on superfluous churches, 615. Takahira, Togoro, farewell dinner to, 947. Talbot, Bp. E. S.; and non-conformists, 414; Tariff; and homes, 189; Mr. Shaw on, 273; discussion of, in reciprocity convention, 340; Massachusetts for reform of, 573. Telephone Co. of New York, report on opera- Temperance probation, in St. Louis, 948. Tintern Abbey, preservation of, 700. Toy, Professor, on the moral force of the church, Treasury Deficit, 241. Trinity College; commencement at, 61; opening Turkey; attack on the Sultan, 153; and the Tuskegee, annual report of, 750. Union Theological Seminary, extension courses, Universal Suffrage, in eastern Europe, 947. University of New York, Hall of Fame at, 614. Utah; work of church in, 948; leaflet on work Van Buren, Bp. J. H., on America in Porto Venezuela; Loomis-Bowen incident, 8, 518; Venezuelan finance and Mr. Calhoun's mis- sion, 120; asphalt decision, 273; asphalt Virgin Birth, The "Liberal Churchman" on, 60. Voters Civic League of Pittsburg, letter of, to Washington, Booker T., on business altruism, Washington Cathedral, site paid for, 893; plans Webb, W. W., election of, as bishop coadjutor, Welsh Revival, decline of, 123. White, William Allen, on Golden Rule, 573. Whitehead, Bp. Cortlandt, Sermon of, at Bishop Williams, C. D., election of as bishop, 939, 998; on the legalized conscience, 999. Williams, Sir George, death of, 794. Witte, Count, appointment of, as peace com- Woman's Auxiliary, report to Board of Missions, Worcester (England), Musical Festival, 523, Wordsworth, Bishop, and the dissenters, 895. Yale University; Pres. Hadley's baccalaureate sermon at, 57; laymen in corporation of, 191; chair for missions at, 949. Yellow Fever at New Orleans, 189, 241, 273, Y. M. C. A.; convention of railroad organiza- tions of, 575; week of prayer of, 697; death Zionists, council of, at Basel, 189. Addison, D. D., A correction, 849. Atkinson, R., "Sacerdotal functions," 801. Bailey, A. Q., Answer to "unity and peace," 425. Bailey, M. K., Federation of Church Clubs, 660. Baker, L. C., Our Christianity being weighed in Batten, L. W.; High finance in N. Y. convention, Beard, S. W., Question about Burial Service, Birdsall, R., Mending morals by vote, 915. Bragg, G. F., Jr.; "King Hall," 65; Higher education of colored clergy, 248; colored Burleson, E. W., Old church periodicals, 248. Canfield, J. H., Responsibility of Vestrymen, Chapin, D. D., The "Real Presence," 801. which? 658; Misdirected appeals, 799. Coupland, R. S., The moral value of Hell, 320. Crapsey, A. S., reply to Dr. Parks, 957. Davidson, Hunter, Spiritual Solidarity, 633. Doane, W. C., Diocesan Conventions and Morals, Dumbell, G. W., Liturgical Use of the Lord's Prayer, 489; Surrender of our Apostolical and Historical Ministry for Unity, 594; Mumbling, a great injustice, 659; Answer Emmon, W. E., Ascension services, 18. Evarts, P., Letters of introduction to College Fond du Lac, C. C., concerning Resurrection, Gailor, F. F., Rev. F. Meyrick's "Memories," Gammack, J., Are the clergy obliged to read mistranslations in Scripture? 1008. Gardiner, R. H.; Brotherhood of St. Andrew in the Colleges, 248; Notice to College Grafton, Bp. C. C., A question from the Bp. Hare, Bp. W. H.; correcting a mistake, 425; Church and the abuse of trusts, 1005. Hart, S., Answer to K. P. Battle, 426. Higgs, Wm., Condition of older criticism, 703. Holloway, E. S., Mumbling the Liturgy, 633. Hoskins, L., Mumbling; a great injustice, 659. Hughes, W. M., The Chew Resolutions, 971. Humphries, Revision of the Lectionary, 543. render of Apostolical and Historical Min- Kleiser, Grenville, Good Reading, 455. Kreitler, R. P., Thank-offering at Richmond, Litchfield, E. D., Mumbling the Liturgy, 425. Lloyd, A. S., Annual Meeting of the American Church Missionary Society, 619. Low, A. A., Sunday Observance, 1008. McClure, A. J. P.; A plan for Mt. St. Albans, 634; Te Deum Laudamus, 705; Fulfilment of canon and legislation is not "Creating McKim, R. H.; Stones for the Washington Cathedral, 530; Concerning Higher Criti- cism, 587; Reply to critics, 799; Reply to Dr. Peters, 1006; Are the great critics in the opposing camps in virtual agreement, 1076. McKnight, G. H.; Good Reading, 388; Union- McNulty, H. A., A correction, 1040. Middleton, E. S., A new tractarian movement, Mitchell, Walter, Mixed Marriages in Porto Nelson, R. H., Care for the sick at Saranac Nichols, H. P., Bible Stories for Children, 706. Olmstead, C. T., Utica Nursery Maids' Train- Paddock, E. M.; Dr. McKim and the Critics, Peirce, W. F., Statement from Kenyon College, Perkins, J. N., Information wanted, 286. Phelps, C. E.; The Real Presence, 763; A cor- Reed, P. W., Second Hand church Furniture, Roberts, D. C., Joint Thanksgiving Service, 489. Robertson, W. A., Ascension again, 18. Russel, E. H., Mumbling the Liturgy of the Russel, F. T., Elocution and Expression, 94. Sanford, D. L., Teaching the Catechism, 660. Satterlee, Bp. H. Y., Washington Cathedral Saville, H. M., A comment on discussion of Schwab, L. H., Revision of the Lectionary, 543. Smith, G. W.; King Hall, 18; Church and the Smith, W. W., A correction, 489. Steel, W. W., Information wanted, 806. Stoddard, E. V., "Municipal charity by Proxy," Suter, J. W., Bible in church, 452. Van Allen, W. H., Grieved but not surprised, Van Buren, Bp. J. H., Grateful appreciation, Waterman, T. A., Authority and unity, 849. Waring, Felix, Roman Catholic Church and Webbe, W. N., Church's methods should be Wheeler, E. J., A hopeful sign, 345. Wheeler, E. P., A defense of the N. Y. Con- vention, 594; our social sins, 1040. Whitney, H. B., Liturgical use of Lord's Wholton, Geo., A Protestant's view, 806. Anglican Cathedrals of the Present Day, Basil Arctic Skies, Some Lights of the, H. Stuck, 157. Athanasian Creed, The, D. C. Lathbury, 92. Bishop Gore's Three Tests of Doctrine, 344. Brittany Pardon, A,, A. B. Hunter, 805. Brotherhood Convention in Chicago, J. W. Wood, Centennial of Christ Church, New Orleans, C. China, Japan, and the Philippines, Secretary China, Seventy Years in, Joshua Kimber, 578. Christianity in Perspective, 657. Christmas message to American Churchmen, A., Church and Institutions, The, R. Kidner, 156. Church in a New Hampshire Town, The, 526. Cowley Fathers in London, The, D. C. Lath- Devotionals: Body and the Flesh, The, Canon Newbolt, 392; Christ of God, The, Canon Christianity and Social Service, G. S. Streat- Christmas Afterthought, A, S. Holland, 1083. Divine Limitations, The, Holland Scott, 762. Disestablishment or Liberty in the Establish- Ecclesiastical Art, an Exhibition of, A. R. and Education of a Minister of God, The, Bishop England, Letters on Church Matters in, D. C. Lathbury, 92, 278, 577, 955, 1074. Ethics of Letter Writing, The, G. F. Seymour, Hankow; the District of, Eliza L. Roots, 527; Has Conscience an Origin, H. H. Williams, 415. Historical Ethics, Bishop Creighton, 384. Japanese Adventure, A., C. W. Kaji, 138. James, John, Paul, J. S. Tucker, 27. Liberal Churchmanship, W. R. Inge, 956. Liverpool Cathedral, some remarks on the De- Lord's Day, The, Bishop Potter, 486. Missionary Conference at Dallas, Dr. Lloyd's Missionary conferences at Nashville and At- Natural and the Spiritual Body, The, J. H. New Orleans, the centennial of Christ church Nippur "Library," The, B. W. Wells, 193. Opium in the Philippines, Major E. C. Carter, Oxford commencement Sermon, Scott Holland, Philippines; A glimpse of the Benquet Road, Pitmen's Bishop, The, Jean Roberts, 162. Presbyterian Book of Common Prayer, the pro- Priesthood of the People, The, E. B. Brewster, Priest to the Temple, A., Bp. J. B. Cheshire, Prison Correspondence School, A., E. S. Far- Prospects of Roman Catholic Reform, Felix Public Spirit, Gifford Pinchot, 953. Pursuit of Happiness, The, Dean Hodges, 805, Race Problem, The Pacific Coast equation of Roman Catholic Church and Modern Scholar- Seminary and the Modern Life, Dean Hodges Sewanee, Dr. Wm. P. Du Bose, 799. Social Relationships, Bp. B. F. Westcott, 164. Study of Man and of Nature, The, Sir Oliver Three Standards of Honesty, 525. Unto us a child is born, Bp. E. S. Talbot, 1049. West, The call of the, Pacific Churchman, 797. Westcott, B. F., See Pitmen's Bishop, 162. Word to Mothers, A, Bp. Johnston, 386. How the Missionary Board went a-wooing, "Leroux," Serial story by Mrs. Forbes, 259, Pastor Cauche's Vineyard, Edouard Rod, 873, Poems: The bride of Christ, H. M. Kimball, November Violet, The, C. F. Saunders, 717. Uncle Phil, R. Williamson, 821. "Wild Wheat," Serial story by M. E. Francis Because their pocketbooks are hurt, they would drive the people back to the old coffee slavery. One coffee prevaricator says: "It (Postum) has lately been exposed and found to contain an excess of very ordinary coffee." Another that "it (Postum) is made from a small amount of parched peas, beans, wheat, dried sweet potatoes, and paste of wheat middlings." Here's to you, oh, faithful followers of the tribe of Ananias. $100,000.00 CASH will be deposited with any reputable trust company (or a less amount if desired) against a like amount by any coffee roaster or dealer. If the charges prove true, we lose; if not, we take the money as partial liquidation for the infamous insult to our business. The Postum Pure Food factories are the largest in the world, the business having been built upon absolutely pure food products, made on scientific lines, "for a reason" and the plain unvarn ished truth told every day and all the time. These factories are visited by thousands of people every month. They are shown into every cranny and examine every ingredient and process. Each visitor sees Postum made of different parts of the wheat berry treated by different mechanical methods, and one part blended with a small part of pure New Orleans molasses. So he knows Postum contains not one thing in the world, but Wheat and New Orleans molasses. It took more than a year of experimenting to perfect the processes and learn how to develop the diastase and properly treat the other elements in the wheat to produce the coffee-like flavor that makes suspicious people "wonder.' But there never has been one grain of old-fashioned or drug coffee in Postum and never will be. Another thing, we have on file in our general offices the original of every testimonial letter we have ever published. We submit that our attitude regarding coffee is now and always has been absolutely fair. If one wants a stimulant and can digest coffee and it does not set up any sort of physical ailment, drink it. But, if coffee overtaxes and weakens the heart (and it does with some). Or if it sets up disease of the stomach and bowels (and it does with some). Or if it causes weak eyes (and it does with some). Or if it causes nervous prostration (and it does with many). Then good, plain, old-fashioned common sense might (without asking permission of coffee merchants) suggest to quit putting caffeine (the drug of coffee) into a highly organized human body, for health is really wealth and the happiest sort of wealth. reason Then, if one's own best interest urges him to study into the and "There's a reason," he will unearth great big facts that all of the sophistries of the coffee importers and roasters cannot refute. Take time to read the following from the famous Dr. B. F. Underwood in The American Physician: coffee one morning that was fully up to her ideal, and which, although I noticed that it possessed nearly the strength of Samson, I drank without consideration. I had been feeling rather better than usual for a day or two, but soon after breakfast I was attacked with such peculiar sensations that I was unable to go a colleague for treatment. Singularly enough, although I had the feeling that I was under the influence of some drug, it was not until some time afterward that I realized that I had been poisoned by the coffee. Under strong tonic treatment I grew better for a time, but in out, and was obliged to call upon Coffee as a Factor in the Production of December, 1903, I began to grow worse Gastric and Cardiac Disorders. BY B. F. UNDERWOOD, M.D. The pathogenetic properties of coffee have received but scant attention from medical authors, although it is not doubtful, I think, that, more than any other single substance, coffee is responsible for the great prevalence of nervous, gastric, and cardiac diseases at the present time, and that the great increase in sudden deaths from heart affection in recent years may be justly set down to the use or abuse of coffee as a beverage. Shoemaker, in his "Materia Medica,' treating upon coffee, says: "Used in excess it disorders digestion and causes functional disturbance of the nervous system, shown by headache, vertigo, mental confusion and palpitation of the heart. It increases secretion, blunts sensation, exalts reflex excitability, increases mental activity, and may produce insomnia and great nervous restlessness, ," and this is as much as any medical author has to say upon the subject. In my case it may be merely the zeal of the recent convert which inspires me, but I feel strongly from both my personal and professional experience that there is so much more that could and should be said about the deleterious effects of coffee and its potency as a factor This has in the production of disease. been so strongly impressed upon me the past winter, that I am impelled to make a contribution to the subject, by reporting a few cases in which coffee was so manifestly causing or continuing the disease that it could not be ignored. Case I. In the latter part of Decem ber, 1903, I had under treatment an old lady, seventy-four years, who was convalescing from an attack of pneumonia. She had responded favorably to the treatment and was doing nicely except for a peculiar rise and fall of the temperature and an irregular action of the heart. She had been troubled more or less with weakness of the heart, and at this time its action was giving me a good deal of concern, its beat being irregular and feeble, and at times much more so than others. A study of conditions and causes threw no light on the case until I found that the irregularity was more marked on the mornings when she had coffee, which she did not have every morning. As I could not discover any other cause I advised that she should not take the coffee. After some demur on the part of the patient, she acceded and Postum Cereal was substituted for the coffee. A favorable effect was almost immediately apparent; the irregular action gave place to a steady, regular beat, the pulse became fuller and stronger, the temperature became normal and the case went on to uninterrupted recovery. Case II. The result in case one set me thinking. For some years I had been troubled with nervous dyspepsia, with cardiac irritability, and at times, great irregularity in the action of the heart, intermittent beat of the pulse and much nervous depression, all of which, in spite of treatment, was steadily getting worse. I had had light enough thrown on the cause, if I had not been so blinded by prejudice that I could not see. As, for instance, on one occasion, when the cook, who did not believe that coffee was any good unless it rivalled in color her ebony face, gave me a cup of again, and treatment failing to effect any improvement, it began to look as if I was in danger of a complete breakdown. The colleague who was treating me was suspicious of kidney disease, but an urinary analysis cleared up that point, It was at this but I did not improve. time, as I have said, the result in case No. 1 set me thinking, and I found from a study of the modalities, that I was worse and more depressed after taking coffee, and it finally penetrated into my inner consciousness that possibly coffee was the cause of my condition. I took my own prescription and gave up coffee, with the result of an almost immediate change for the better. The depression cardiac disturbance disappeared, the ceased, and the dyspeptic symptoms lessened and a steady improvement set in. Case III. About the same time I had under treatment a young lady suffering from chronic .nephritis, who presented an almost endless variety of symptoms, which would yield to treatment for a time, only to return in an aggravated form. Among the more persistent and annoying of these was a gastric irritability with an absolute refusal of the stomach to digest or absorb any food, progressive emaciation with great weakness, and a constant sensation of hunger with nausea and frequent spells of vomiting, when the food taken would be returned unchanged; palpitation of the heart, ædema, hectic fever, colliquative sweats, etc. Under treatment and a most rigid diet the mitigation of the symptoms was very slight. I had advised her that coffee was in jurious and should be given up, but it was not until her condition was almost hopeless that she could be induced to follow my advice and refrain from coffee. The beneficial effect of this was apparent at once; the stomach began to recover its tone, and the irritability ceased, the vomiting stopped, and the food taken was digested and absorbed; the sensation of continual hunger disappeared, the emaciation lessened, and her strength slowly returned. course, the disease has not been cured, but a cure which seemed hopeless before has been made possible. Of As a result of these experiences, to which more could be added, in all cases of intractable nervous or gastric diseases, I have come to regard coffee as an incitant, and an important, if not the chief, factor in the production of the disease, and to insist upon its discontinuance as a part of the treatment, and, I may add, with uniformly good effect. I have found also that, although the giving up of coffee has been in many cases done only under protest and with great reluctance, it has been attended with but little difficulty when a palatable and satisfactory substitute was provided. In my own case and in that of the others described, I used the Postum Cereal and found it entirely satisfactory. Even the most inveterate coffee drinkers after a short use of the Postum seem to lose all desire for coffee and to be perfectly satisfied with the Cereal. STUDY THE SUBJECT AND APPLY THE FACTS TO YOURSELF. THERE'S A REASON FOR POSTUM |