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+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 12087 ***
+
+{85}
+
+The American Missionary
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Vol. XLII. April, 1888. No. 4.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+CONTENTS
+
+ EDITORIAL.
+ FINANCIAL--PARAGRAPH
+ MOUNTAIN WORK--ATLANTA UNIVERSITY
+ INDIAN ORDER--FROM GEO. W. CABLE
+ DEATH OF HON. A.S. BARNES
+ PARAGRAPHS
+ SPECIMENS OF SCHOOL ENDEAVOR
+ A SERIOUS ALARM IN GEORGIA
+ EDUCATIONAL WORK IN THE SOUTH
+ THE SOUTH.
+ LETTER FROM AN EVANGELIST
+ THE CHINESE.
+ RESULTS THAT ELUDE THE STATISTICIAN
+ BUREAU OF WOMAN'S WORK.
+ THE BLACK WOMAN OF THE SOUTH
+ YOUNG FOLKS.
+ WHAT SUSIE FOUND AT TOUGALOO
+ LETTER FROM AN INDIAN PUPIL
+ RECEIPTS
+
+ * * * * *
+
+New York.
+Price, 50 Cents a Year, in Advance. Published by the American
+Missionary Association.
+Entered at the Post-Office at New York, N.Y., as second-class matter.
+Rooms, 56 Reade Street.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+{86}
+
+American Missionary Association.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+PRESIDENT,
+
+------ ------
+
+Vice-Presidents.
+
+Rev. A.J.F. BEHRENDS, D.D., N.Y.
+
+Rev. ALEX. MCKENZIE, D.D., Mass.
+
+Rev. F.A. NOBLE, D.D., Ill.
+
+Rev. D.O. MEARS, D.D., Mass.
+
+Rev. HENRY HOPKINS, D.D., Mo.
+
+Corresponding Secretaries.
+
+Rev. M.E. STRIEBY, D.D., 56 Reade Street, N.Y.
+
+Rev. A.F. BEARD, D.D., 56 Reade Street, N.Y.
+
+Treasurer.
+
+H.W. HUBBARD, Esq., 56 Reade Street, N.Y.
+
+Auditors.
+
+PETER MCCARTEE.
+
+CHAS. P. PEIRCE.
+
+Executive Committee.
+
+JOHN H. WASHBURN, Chairman.
+
+ADDISON P. FOSTER, Secretary.
+
+For Three Years.
+
+LYMAN ABBOTT,
+
+A.S. BARNES,[1]
+
+J.R. DANFORTH,
+
+CLINTON B. FISK,
+
+ADDISON P. FOSTER,
+
+For Two Years.
+
+S.B. HALLIDAY,
+
+SAMUEL HOLMES,
+
+SAMUEL S. MARPLES,
+
+CHARLES L. MEAD,
+
+ELBERT B. MONROE,
+
+For One Year.
+
+J.E. RANKIN,
+
+WM. H. WARD,
+
+J.W. COOPER,
+
+JOHN H. WASHBURN,
+
+EDMUND L. CHAMPLIN.
+
+District Secretaries.
+
+Rev. C.J. RYDER, 21 Cong'l House, Boston.
+
+Rev. J.E. ROY, D.D., 151 Washington Street, Chicago.
+
+Financial Secretary for Indian Missions.
+
+Rev. CHAS. W. SHELTON,
+
+Bureau of Woman's Work.
+
+Secretary, Miss D.E. EMERSON, 56 Reade Street, N.Y.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ COMMUNICATIONS
+
+Relating to the work of the Association may be addressed to the
+Corresponding Secretaries; letters for "THE AMERICAN MISSIONARY," to
+the Editor, at the New York Office.
+
+ DONATIONS AND SUBSCRIPTIONS
+
+In drafts, checks, registered letters, or post office orders, may be
+sent to H.W. Hubbard, Treasurer, 56 Reade Street, New York, or, when
+more convenient, to either of the Branch Offices, 21 Congregational
+House, Boston, Mass., or 151 Washington Street, Chicago, Ill. A
+payment of thirty dollars at one time constitutes a Life Member.
+
+ FORM OF A BEQUEST.
+
+"I bequeath to my executor (or executors) the sum of ---- dollars, in
+trust, to pay the same in ---- days after my decease to the person
+who, when the same is payable, shall act as Treasurer of the 'American
+Missionary Association,' of New York City, to be applied, under the
+direction of the Executive Committee of the Association, to its
+charitable uses and purposes." The Will should be attested by three
+witnesses.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+{87}
+
+THE AMERICAN MISSIONARY.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Vol. XLII. April, 1888. No. 4.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ American Missionary Association.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+We acknowledge with gratitude to God and to his people the fact that
+our receipts during the month of February are such as greatly to
+encourage us.
+
+We are cheered, not only by the benevolences which are reporting
+themselves from the churches, but also by the kind words of sympathy
+and helpfulness which show us anew that this great and exigent work
+upon us was never nearer than now to the hearts of our pastors and
+churches.
+
+We may add that the month just past and those immediately before us
+are those upon which we must largely depend for our fiscal year. We
+are coming to the summer season, when contributions are less likely to
+be taken. We trust that those who believe that God has called the
+American Missionary Association to this immense work in the name of
+Christ, will not cease to pray that the hearts of men may be moved to
+heed the appeals of those who, through us, ask for the very bread of
+life, and who will not have it unless we carry it to them.
+
+We are now compelled to deny more appeals for help which ought to be
+heard than we are granting. Several schools which were begun by
+private enterprise with good intent, are now asking us to take them
+from their hands upon our own, where they can be perpetuated and
+saved. We would like to save these schools to the needy people whose
+hope is in them, and to protect the churches from indiscriminate
+appeals for works which they have not authorized, and which we could
+do with greater economy and better care; but for this we need a
+generous increase of gifts. Our faith was in Him who said, "Knock, and
+it shall be opened unto you," and the doors were opened. God withdrew
+the bolts of hindrance and said, "Beloved, I have set before you an
+open door." Our faith is in Him who also said "Ask, and ye shall
+receive."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A friend has just sent us eighteen subscriptions to the _American
+Missionary_. This might be repeated easily by a thousand friends. There
+is {88} scarcely a self-sustaining church in the United States where
+it could not be done by one who would try to do it as an act of
+missionary love. Some who read this, perhaps, will try and will
+succeed.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The name of Rev. Frank Cross, who was appointed to the charge of the
+Rosebud Indian Mission, was by mistake not printed in the roll of
+workers. He is there, however, and his work has gone on bravely and
+hopefully.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+We wish that the extent, and necessity, and hopefulness of our
+mountain work, were more fully understood by our readers. Now is our
+opportunity and the accepted time to answer the most urgent appeals
+from this neglected region in the heart of our country. Our
+Congregational churches are just what are needed to uplift these
+people. One of our earnest missionaries writes us:--
+
+ "The A.M.A. has done a work here to be profoundly grateful for as a
+ beginning, but thus far it is only playing around the edge of its
+ mountain work. This mountain region is of great extent. Sober
+ calculation from facts already gleaned, makes a thousand
+ Congregational churches in these mountains the possibility of the
+ future, if only the strategic points can now be occupied. One
+ church and one school to a county, should be our immediate aim;
+ then we can throw upon these the work of developing native teachers
+ and preachers for the rest. There are forty counties waiting for
+ us, and all our mountain work so far is in three or four. I see
+ this place where I am, changing like magic under the influence of
+ school and church, but the necessity for our going forward
+ oppresses me. I am ready for any additional labor, and will carry
+ any burden my strength will permit, if only the American Missionary
+ Association will take for its motto, 'One church and one school in
+ every mountain county, as fast as they can be established.' I feel,
+ when I see the need, as if I could plead the money right out of the
+ most self-indulgent members of our favored churches at home. It
+ would not be expensive as compared with other missionary work.
+ Cannot some way be devised for making a large advance on the
+ present movement?"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Those who thought to cripple Atlanta University because it could not
+yield its principles for the sake of a State appropriation of $8,000
+made a mistake. They have helped that which they meant to hinder. The
+university will get the money. Joseph's brethren took counsel together
+and said, "We will see what will become of his dream," and they
+thought they had a sure thing when they put him in a pit, but they
+discovered {89} some years after that this was but a way-station on
+the direct road to the Viceroyship of Egypt, and they saw what became
+of his dream.
+
+When Napoleon the First wished to hinder the Huguenot Church, he gave
+it a small stipend in order to retain hold of it. He appropriated just
+enough to keep it a cripple. When the State of Georgia thought the
+education of the Negro was becoming too marked, it reversed the policy
+of the far-seeing Bonaparte and took its hands off. We have never
+thought that Napoleon was a truly good man, but we do believe that he
+had a larger idea of the philosophy of control than the author of the
+Glenn Bill. If the State had held on, it might have hindered, but it
+has lost its hold.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Would it not sound well to the American people to have it said that in
+the United States of America, in the year 1888, our missionaries were
+imprisoned for reading the Bible to a heathen tribe of Indians who
+lived remote from civilization, the crime of it being that it was read
+in the only language which they could understand?
+
+Yet "the orders are," writes a missionary, "that we shall hold only
+two services on a Sunday and two during the week, and that we shall
+cease to read the Bible in the Indian homes." This is the Government
+authority of the great and free United States, but is there any
+authority greater than God?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In an eloquent address at the Old South Church in Boston, on Sunday,
+March 4th, George W. Cable accentuated in strong words the work in
+which we are engaged. "Here is the mightiest, the widest, the most
+fruitful, the most abundant, the most prolific, missionary field that
+was ever opened to any Christian people."
+
+We quote from his address:
+
+ The benevolence of Northern men and women, yea, and even of
+ Northern children, helped to establish in the South these
+ missionary colleges, these educational missions, wherein not the
+ black man alone, not the black woman alone, but every one who was
+ qualified with orderly behavior and a rational intellect might
+ come, and get, not only an education, but a Christian education,
+ and not only a Christian education, but a Christian American
+ education. These institutions, standing out in the darkness when
+ nothing else stood by them, when the land was racked and torn and
+ bled afresh under the agonies of reconstruction, these institutions
+ began and carried on the blessed work of raising up leaders,
+ intellectual leaders, among the black people, for the guidance and
+ stimulation of the colored race toward the aspirations of American
+ citizenship and Christian intelligence.
+
+ These institutions, these missionary colleges in the South, have
+ carried the torch of liberty, these have upheld it, these have
+ taught American citizenship, these have given to the Southern
+ States 16,000 colored teachers, when nobody else would teach the
+ poor black boy--nay, or the poor white boy either. Seven millions
+ of people concerned in the matter, and the National Bureau of
+ Public Education reporting year after year that {90} the reason why
+ there are 600,000 colored youth out of the public schools, is not
+ because they don't want to go, but because there are not
+ school-houses and school teachers.
+
+ Here is the mightiest, the widest, the most fruitful, the most
+ abundant, the most prolific, missionary field that was ever opened
+ to any Christian people. It is right here at your doors. It is not
+ across the Pacific Ocean and it is not down yonder around the Cape
+ of Good Hope. Right here at our doors is the greediest people for
+ education and the gospel there is on the face of this earth, not
+ counted among our white race. I suppose that ninety-nine
+ one-hundredths of those who generously give to this cause believe
+ to-day that it is being given to in generous proportion. Ah! you
+ never figured on it. Why, if you knew the national value of this
+ work, to say nothing of its gospel value, you would quadruplicate
+ it before the year is out. You would not submit to it for a moment,
+ as citizens, not merely as members of Christ's Church.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The American Missionary Association is called again to mourn the
+decease of one of its officers. Hon. Alfred S. Barnes, a member of its
+Executive Committee, after an illness extending over five months, at
+his residence in Brooklyn, finished his earthly life on Friday,
+February 17th, at the age of seventy-one years. Mr. Barnes was elected
+on the Executive Board of the A.M.A. nineteen years ago, and had
+served in that capacity continuously up to the day of his death. He
+was a wise counsellor, large-minded in his views and honorable in his
+spirit, known throughout the land as one of the foremost publishers in
+the country, largely interested in educational work, and yet he found
+time for an earnest devotion to various enterprises in the Christian
+church. His fidelity and helpfulness in the service of the A.M.A. are
+fully known only to those who were associated with him. Many
+organizations of missionary and Christian work will miss his presence
+and the help of his generous stewardship, but none will feel his
+departure more truly than the American Missionary Association, which
+has lost its President, one of its Secretaries, and this long-honored
+member of its Executive Board within the last half-year. The greatness
+of his work in our service will be remembered and cherished.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+We acknowledge among our exchanges, the _Fisk Herald_, published at
+Nashville; the _Atlanta Bulletin_; the _Olio_, of Straight University; the
+_Tougaloo Quarterly_; the _Head and Hand_, of Le Moyne Normal Institute at
+Memphis; the _Helping Hand_, of Sherwood, Tenn.; _Our Work_, of Talladega
+College; the _Howard University Reporter_, of Washington; the _Word
+Carrier_, of Santee Agency, and _Iapi Oahe_, of Santee Agency; also the
+_Christian Aid_, published by our church in Dallas; the _Beach Record_,
+(occasional) by our school in Savannah.
+
+Several of these papers are models of their kind, publishing original
+articles written by the students and professors, and printed by the
+students with superior typographical skill. As indicators of progress,
+they are full {91} of interest, apart from the items of local school
+and church intelligence with which they are freighted.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+We commend to our readers, "The Missionary Review of the World,"
+edited jointly by Rev. J.M. Sherwood, D.D., of New York, and Rev. A.T.
+Pierson, D.D., of Philadelphia.
+
+One rises from its pages as if he had been breathing Christian ozone.
+The editorials are upon living topics and issues, and are vigorously
+presented. The "Review" sweeps its vision over the entire world and it
+not only sees, but knows how to tell what it sees. If the high
+standard of literary excellence so far sustained can be continuously
+held, we shall have a magazine of missions which will be the peer of
+our best literary monthlies in quality and interest.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+We congratulate the Congregational Sunday-School and Publishing
+Society on the acceptance of its appointment of Rev. Geo. M. Boynton
+as its Secretary. We have known him as a member of the Executive
+Committee of the American Missionary Association, as editor of THE
+AMERICAN MISSIONARY, as a pastor, as a secretary of Associations and
+Conferences, as a wise counsellor and genial brother. We regard him as
+eminently fitted for the place to which he has been called. To Brother
+Boynton we extend most cordially a welcome to the honorable, the
+fraternity of the Secretaries.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The fifth annual report of the Executive Committee of the Indian
+Rights Association, written by Mr. James B. Harrison, is a strong and
+valuable contribution to the literature of Indian rights and wrongs,
+which should be considered by every friend of the Red Man. Respecting
+the orders of the Indian office at Washington which abridge the
+liberty of religious teaching, this report characterizes them as
+"unintelligent, arbitrary, despotic and unstatesmanlike, merely a blow
+at missionary work. There is no reason to suppose that a single Indian
+anywhere will ever learn ten words more of English by reason of these
+orders. There is, indeed, no provision made by the Government for any
+increase of facilities in the study of English. The damage to the
+missionary work produced by these orders is their sole result. The
+orders should be distinctly and wholly revoked and withdrawn. It is
+not necessary that the missionaries and churches should submit. If
+they will publish the facts fully these orders will be revoked. The
+facts must come to light. Then the people of the country will have
+something to say."
+
+The above quotation will give our readers the flavor of the pages.
+"Plain words are best," and it is time that the country should have
+them. {92} No one can read the statements in this able Report without
+having his heart stirred with honest indignation at the condition of
+Indian affairs, through the unfortunate unfitness of the Government
+Bureau.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ SPECIMENS OF SCHOOL ENDEAVOR.
+
+ THREE COMPOSITIONS.
+
+ LETHER.
+
+Lether is mad from the hide of animals. They first kill the animal
+then the hide is sent to a tan yard and there it is tan are made
+lether from, then to a shoemaker's shop where it is made into boots
+shoes saddles. The finest of gloves is the kid skin glove, that is all
+I will say about kid skin gloves. Most of the bad boots and shoes we
+have is horse lether or mule lether, that is all I will say about mule
+lether and horse lether. All the good boots and shoes we have is young
+calf lether, that is all I will say about young calf lether.
+
+All the boots shoes and every thing else we have made of lether is
+second thing because some poor animal was rob-ed of his coat that we
+might have boots and many other things.
+
+----, aged 16.
+
+ NETELY.
+
+Netely are clean always and handsome to everybody. It are good in the
+cite of God and man for it are a good thing to be netely always for it
+make a man look netely. If we all are netely it are a good thing to be
+clean for it are a good thing in the time of life so to be. Netely is
+deserving of everybody and grate with all mankind. It are a good thing
+to be netely for it is beautiful and pretty. It are correct always and
+never rong to nobody an it make a man feel better when he are netely
+an a nice looking person when he are netely are clean before every
+body.
+
+----, aged 25.
+
+ DRIVE WAGGON.
+
+That the kind of work I likes to do. When I drive waggon I rides a
+plenty. Riding are a good thing because when folks is sick it are good
+for the helt. I likes to drive it because I have been loadin it. This
+summer I hall fody. When I would load the barn yard wagon full of fody
+it would be high from the groun, that is nice but sometimes it would
+turn over, that would be truble. Truble are a bad thing.
+
+----, aged 17.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ ANSWERS TO QUESTIONS AT AN EXAMINATION OF TEACHERS IN GEORGIA.
+
+_What is writing?_
+
+"Writing is the Representation of the human voice on the 11th part of
+a noun."
+{93}
+
+_How long since writing was invented?_
+
+"From the creation of the world, or from the birth of Christ."
+
+_What are the chief products of the State of Georgia?_
+
+"The chief products are Agriculture, Turpentine, rail-roads, lumber
+and grate deel of merchandice bussyness."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ A SERIOUS ALARM IN GEORGIA.
+
+The American Missionary is not published for the entertainment of its
+readers. It has a more serious purpose. It speaks for races who have
+suffered grievous wrongs, and for peoples whose condition is
+exceedingly sad. It has to do with tragic facts, and much of what it
+has to say must excite compassion, and must appeal both to the
+consciences of our readers and to their sense of duty. To call upon
+those whom God has blessed, to insert themselves into the woes and
+spiritual wants of others who need their help, is grave and serious.
+
+This is one feature. There are others. The joy of the work and the joy
+of the worker, which we are called to record, are a relief to the
+stories of necessity, and are like beautiful pictures painted upon the
+dark background. When "Our eyes have seen the glory of the coming of
+the Lord," we can for the time forget the darkness upon which the
+light shines, and sing our hallelujahs. If it is saddening to tell of
+the night, it is cheering to mark the fact that the providences of God
+are working out his promises, and are surely bringing in God's day.
+
+Over and above the evils to which we must call earnest heed, the
+dangers which are not far away, and the exigencies of the cause of
+Christ, we are sure that no one can read the MISSIONARY without being
+cheered and quickened in gratitude to God for what he is graciously
+doing for his needy ones through his people.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+With the serious duty on the part of those who are working together
+with God for the salvation of men, there drift along in the current of
+his providences certain incidents that are exceedingly droll.
+
+As we have seen some very ludicrous manifestations of character and
+conduct in the terrible struggles of a battlefield, and have brushed
+aside our tears at times for an irrepressible _bon mot_ in a hospital,
+so in the weighty and solemn considerations which continually appeal
+to us, and while we are anxiously asking how we can make the most
+bricks for the Lord's building with the least straw, incidents arise
+which not only throw light upon our serious work, but which are
+irresistibly amusing.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+We think we should share with our readers a recent one which, when
+{94} we read it in the detail, impossible to be repeated here, made us
+smile. Every time we re-perused it we thought it, as _Alice in
+Wonderland_ said, "curiouser and curiouser."
+
+Our readers are not strangers to the name and fame of the leading
+editor of the chief paper in Georgia. They have heard of him as an
+eloquent orator with a brilliant imagination which saw a New South in
+almost millennial array, and told of it with an enthusiasm so
+contagious that to the sons of the Pilgrims after the fulness of a
+great dinner it seemed that the "Promised day of Israel" had at last
+arrived. It is true that when this dinner had been thoroughly
+digested, certain ones, removed from the afflatus of the occasion
+began to ask, "Are these things so?" And when the Glenn Bill sought
+the endorsement of public opinion, and substantially received it with
+no word of reprobation from the eloquent orator and editor, some
+recalled the speech of Sheridan in reply to Mr. Dundas, "The right
+honorable gentleman is indebted to his imagination for his facts."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In all this time no one suspected the _Atlanta Constitution_ of
+possessing the humorous character which it has lately revealed. In
+late issues of February it has, in the garb of gravity, about two
+columns that are ridiculously funny.
+
+It appears that Prof. Sumner Salter, a graduate of Amherst College, a
+son of an honored pastor of Iowa, a musical director of exceptional
+gifts and a teacher of eminent ability, was solicited by parties in
+Atlanta to take his residence there in the interest of the musical
+cultivation of such as could secure his services. He soon attracted
+the patronage of society, and all went smoothly until the tempter
+came. Alas, there was a serpent in Eden, so there was a skeleton in
+the closet of the _Atlanta Constitution_. It was a dreadful skeleton.
+The _Constitution_ seriously publishes the fact that "it was whispered
+about for some time," until patience ceased to be a virtue, when it
+sent a guardian of public safety in the form of a reporter to
+investigate. "Was it really true that a white man who was giving music
+lessons to white people was also teaching a colored class at another
+time and place? If so, what about the New South? The black man had no
+business to be black, but he _was_ all the same, and being so what right
+had Prof. Salter to teach _colored_ people to sing? Let the matter be
+thoroughly searched out. The reporter departed on his mission, with a
+countenance more in sorrow than in anger, and returned _vice versa_.
+
+ "'Tis true, 'tis pity,
+ And pity 'tis 'tis true."
+
+The professor was actually doing this very absurd thing. He had taken
+charge of a colored class in the church of which Rev. Evarts Kent is
+minister and was teaching them how rightly to use the talents with
+which God had so richly endowed them.
+{95}
+
+Accordingly, in the year of grace 1888, the _Atlanta Constitution_
+publishes the astounding fact, and calls the world to heed it, in
+conspicuous head lines:--
+
+ "WHITE OR BLACK--A PROMINENT MUSICIAN WHO TEACHES BOTH COLORS--HIS
+ BUSINESS SAID TO BE INJURED."
+
+Then followed the whole sad story. The musician had been interviewed
+and investigated. He did not deny the serious charge to this
+superintendent of public proprieties. With a heart as hard as old
+Pharaoh's he proposed to go on and do more likewise. In short, the
+representative of the _Constitution_ could do nothing with this
+intractable professor. Hence "he did not stand upon the order of his
+going, but went at once," and reported that "_according to Mr. Suiter's
+own statement, he is teaching a colored class_, and he has lost a white
+pupil, which shows that his course is hurting his business." "Diligent
+inquiry has failed to bring to light any proof that he has notified
+his _white_ pupils that he is teaching _colored_ people."
+
+Leaving out the meanness of this, has anyone read anything published
+lately more ridiculous? It is not necessary to quote the professor's
+public reply. It simply claimed the right of manhood and common sense,
+and doubtless left the _Constitution_ wondering how a man capable of
+making it appear so foolish could yet descend to such depths of
+ignominy as to teach people whose ancestors came from Africa, the
+unpardonable sin of singing praises to the Author of their being. To
+what deeps some will descend! Why should colored people add to the
+criminality of being born black, the fearful temptation of pay in
+advance to one who could teach them while he had pupils who had the
+merit of having been born white?
+
+This was really transpiring in the city of Atlanta several days in the
+month of February in the year 1888, and was in successive issues of
+the _Constitution_, which shows among other things that there is
+latitude, if not longitude, at a Brooklyn New England dinner.
+Meanwhile we think we hear Uncle Rastus quoting the prophecy, "The
+morning cometh and also the night," but he can't help laughing because
+it is "awful funny."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ THE EDUCATIONAL WORK IN THE SOUTH.
+
+BY REV. W.F. SLOCUM.
+
+We may remember at the outset that in this matter of the education of
+the Negro we are treating a question which must be considered, to a
+certain extent, ethnically. We are dealing with a people with race
+peculiarities: but it seems to me that it is very useless to ask
+whether we are training an inferior stock. There was a time when the
+Anglo-Saxon stock was far inferior {96} to its present condition. We
+ourselves are not enough removed from heathenism and barbarism to
+become very pharisaical.
+
+Here is a race with its idiosyncrasies, and its peculiar latent
+possibilities, which we cannot know until Christian education has
+unfolded them through many years. We ought not to wonder that in many
+respects this people is yet in its moral and intellectual infancy; but
+who dares say that it has not a future before it, with its statesmen,
+its poets, its painters, its men of letters; that it is not to have
+its own peculiar literature, its art, and even its own characteristic
+religious expression, just as marked and important as those produced
+by any other race? Certainly we have as much reason for believing it
+as that the Teutonic race of the second century should produce its
+Goethe and its Schiller, its Kant and its Hegel, its Luther and its
+Melanchthon; or that the Frank of the fifth century should develop its
+Victor Hugo, its Lamartine, its Madam de Stael; or that out of the
+barbarism, the cannibalism, the paganism of Norseman, Briton and
+Saxon, there should come Shakespeare, Spencer, Macaulay, Browning and
+Gladstone. And we may not have to wait as long; for in spite of
+slavery's binding chain thrice drawn round his soul, the American
+Negro has been absorbing during the past from a civilization which has
+been fitting him somewhat for the large Christian movement of the
+present. We are working for a people which in all probability will
+form at least one-eighth of our whole population; and we have the
+problem of lifting them as a race up into Christian enlightenment. The
+dark skin is growing darker. There will be less and less of
+intermixture of blood between the two races. Hence all study of this
+educational question must have in view the large moral and
+intellectual enterprise of dealing with a race as a race. I believe
+that there is nothing in all history to compare with this opportunity
+which has come to our very doors. Here is a nation in our land and
+with it every perplexity, every difficulty, every embarrassment, and
+also every encouragement, every hope, and every inspiration for work,
+that can appeal to any foreign missionary. Here is this God-given task
+laid at our very thresholds and with all the sentiments of patriotism
+and Christian devotion urging us to our large privilege.
+
+What the race needs now is right leadership, and for many years to
+come we are to equip men and women religiously and intellectually,
+who, in home, in church, in social and business life, will be moral
+and social leaders. And by this power of leadership I mean something
+far other than those foolish conceits which have taken possession of a
+few who have touched only the surface of the new life that is coming
+to this people.
+
+I have rather in mind leaders who shall have that moral and
+intellectual fitness which produces reverence, earnestness and
+humility, leaders who can draw their people away from their
+foolishness, weakness and self-consciousness into the larger life that
+is possible for them. Without a {97} doubt, what is needed is true
+leaders, and I wish to show where these leaders are now demanded.
+
+Before the war, the South knew nothing of the benefits of public
+schools, and the private school was in harmony with its social and
+political conceptions; but of late, and especially during the last
+decade, a remarkable change has taken place which is doing as much to
+affect the whole Southern problem as anything that has occurred there
+during half a century. It is a movement in the South, which, however
+imperfectly it has been developed as yet, has come to remain, and will
+ultimately affect every institution, social, political and religious,
+in our section of the country.
+
+_It is now being recognized in every Southern State that free
+government is based upon a public common-school system_. It has taken
+two decades to incorporate this public school policy upon Southern
+institutions, but it has now the evidence of permanency and it is
+offering to Christian philanthropy an unparalleled opportunity, such
+as God seldom gives to any people, and one which should rally the
+churches as never before in support of the great enterprises of the
+American Missionary Association.
+
+There has been forced upon the New South the conclusion that the best
+way to increase its wealth is to increase the number of educated,
+intelligent producers, and with this conclusion it realizes that it
+cannot afford to let two million colored children grow up in hopeless
+illiteracy. It perceives that its very institutions will be imperiled
+by such a condition. I have through personal interviews with leading
+educators in a recent trip through the South, by correspondence and by
+a careful examination of documents and reports from nearly all the
+Southern States, undertaken to find just what is being done at the
+present time in the public colored schools of the South.
+
+The significance of this public school movement will be understood
+when it is remembered that the acceptance of the idea that the
+constitution of a free State rests on universal education, marks a
+great change in theory; that this has come against the opinions of the
+old Bourbon party, which never forgets, and, it is to be feared, never
+learns; whose political economy is represented by the expression,
+"keep the negro down"; which regards his enfranchisment as a political
+outrage and his education as a mistake and a failure; that it has
+risen in the face of the poverty of the South and in the midst of its
+most intense prejudices. For when the new educational movement began,
+the property and a large part of the intelligence belonged to the
+opponents of the new educational policy, but now, in the words of a
+prominent Southern gentleman: "The conviction has become very deep
+that in the altered condition of our people the only hope left us is
+to do all that can be done towards elevating the masses irrespective
+of race." This certainly represents a tremendous transformation.
+Without stopping to trace the causes that produced it, or even the
+large place the American Missionary Association work has in it, let me
+simply quote from {98} a Southern Christian man, whose sympathies are
+full of prejudice against the North, but who has wakened with the
+awakening of the New South.
+
+Writing of the educational movement, in a recent book, he says: "Not a
+few of the best men and women of the North have come to teach in these
+institutions for colored youth: their motives and their work have not
+always been understood, but the Great Day will make manifest how they
+have been constrained by the love of Christ, to spend years in work
+which has had many discouragements." ('The New South' by J.C.C.
+Newton.) A few statistics may give some general idea of the extent of
+this movement.
+
+The State of Alabama has 104,150 colored pupils enrolled in the public
+schools. It pays an average of $25.97 per month to nearly 2,000
+colored teachers, and expends altogether $198,221 upon these colored
+schools. Georgia has 49 per cent. of its negro school population
+enrolled; that is, 119,248. In 1871, this State had 6,664 only in all
+public and private colored schools. Its teachers of this race now
+number 2,272. 40,909 colored children are enrolled in Louisiana, with
+672 negro teachers, who receive an average of $23.73 per month.
+
+Mississippi had last year 154,430 colored scholars. It employed 3,124
+colored teachers who receive an average of $28.73 per month. North
+Carolina enrolled, in 1886, 117,562 colored pupils, employed 2,016
+teachers of the same race, paying them about the same as its white
+teachers, $23.38 per month. The colored school population of Tennessee
+numbers 158,450, of whom 84,624 are enrolled in her 1,563 common
+schools, which are taught by 1,621 teachers of the same nationality. A
+county superintendent voluntarily adds: "I should do our colored
+teachers an injustice not to speak of them. Most of them are earnest,
+zealous workers, doing all in their power for their race."
+
+Turning now to Texas we find that this State has nearly doubled its
+enrollment of colored pupils in three years, which now number 62,040,
+with 1,696 licensed colored teachers who receive on an average, $41.73
+per month. Virginia has 111,114 out of a school population of 265,249
+with 1,734 colored teachers who receive $28.65 per month.
+
+That is, in eight representative States there are eight hundred
+thousand colored pupils who are now being trained by over fifteen
+thousand teachers of the same race. Now the simple but grave question
+that every Christian patriot ought to ask himself is, "What kind of
+teachers are these, and where are they to come from in the future?" I
+asked that question of a gentleman who of all others ought to be able
+to answer it correctly and he replied, "Nine-tenths of these teachers
+come from the missionary schools, and of these nine-tenths, more than
+one-half come from the institutions of the American Missionary
+Association." Now we can understand the truthfulness of the testimony
+of the Rev. J.L.M. Curry, D.D., the distinguished agent of the Peabody
+Fund, who says: "The most that {99} has been done at the South for the
+education of the negroes has been done by the Congregationalists. The
+American Missionary Association and those allied to it have been the
+chief agency, so far as benevolent effort is concerned, in diffusing
+right notions of religion, and in carrying education to the darkened
+mind of the negro."
+
+Here is the large door that God has opened for us, and through which
+we are reaching this people, and in a still larger degree may carry
+the truths of the Kingdom of God to them. What they need most of all
+is light. Give them that and the question of rights will take care of
+itself. When I was in New Orleans last May, President Hitchcock, of
+Straight University, pointed out to me in his office a pile of
+letters, which, he said, were applications for teachers for these
+public schools, and those which he showed me represented the number of
+applications which he was not able to fill. And yet he is compelled
+every term to turn away scores of young men and young women seeking to
+fit themselves for just this work, because there is not room for them
+and because there are not funds to care for them.
+
+As to this new movement in the South, I do not conclude that more than
+the first step has been taken, exceedingly important as that step is.
+Many of the schools as yet are in a wretched condition. The buildings
+in the rural districts are small and rudely built, and many of them
+are positively unfit to be used as school houses. There are neither
+maps, nor charts or other appliances for the teacher's use in his
+work, and in fact everything about these school houses is of the most
+primitive type. The school year often does not exceed four months, and
+many of these teachers are altogether unfit for their tasks.
+
+Are we to think the time has come to withhold our support and our
+prayers from this great work? Was there ever such an opportunity
+offered to any land as this which is presented to the Christian
+philanthropy of our own?
+
+I might tell of the needs of the cabin home life as I have seen them
+in these States, how the scholars from Christian schools are the
+leaven that is slowly transforming this, the greatest of all human
+institutions; how while from one-quarter to one-half of the colored
+population is progressing, gaining in education, property and
+character, there is another large part of the race that is either
+stationary or sinking into more miserable conditions. Are we seeking
+for paganism to battle with? Here it is in our own proud land. Do we
+want the opportunity of Christianizing a nation? Here it is; and with
+possibilities just as marked as those of any people that ever ascended
+the scale of intelligence and Christian morality.
+
+The problem of the New South is not merely one of successful
+railroads, of busy factories or of paying plantations, but much more
+is it one of upright, wise, Christian manhood and womanhood. This is
+the work to which we are most truly called of the Eternal Father.
+{100}
+
+Nobly has the American Missionary Association entered into these
+labors; but believe me, there is a larger work before it than it has
+yet accomplished.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ THE SOUTH.
+
+ LETTER FROM AN EVANGELIST.
+
+After my return from England for another winter's service in Gospel
+work among the people of the South, I began at
+
+ WASHINGTON, D.C.
+
+I had promised Rev. G.W. Moore last winter, before sailing for my home
+in England, to assist him in special religious effort. From the very
+commencement of the meetings a good spirit was manifest, which
+deepened day by day until forty or more persons professed faith in
+Christ, young and old being reached by the power of the gospel. One
+man sixty-one years of age surrendered to the overtures of God's love
+and received Christ as his Saviour. Another of seventy-five years was
+pointed out to me as a hardened sinner. When approached he was full of
+self and reason, "I don't believe in mourner's benches and such like;
+do you think my going there will make me a Christian or do me any
+good?" "No, but it will show the people you are intending to make a
+start for Heaven, and it will enlist their sympathy and prayers," I
+replied.
+
+Finally he knelt with me in the aisle with his head bowed on the end
+of the seat while I prayed. Soon the big tears were dropping from his
+eyes and he went home that night under conviction. The following night
+he returned. He was again prayed for, but went away undecided. The
+next night as soon as inquirers were given an opportunity to present
+themselves for prayers he was the first to respond, and the sinful man
+of seventy-five years had yielded his heart to Christ, and could sing
+from his heart "Happy day, when Jesus washed my sins away." His wife,
+who was present, rushed forward, and tears of joy ran down their
+cheeks. Scarcely a dry eye was to be seen, while above all there was
+joy in Heaven over another sinner saved. Deacon R. came to me
+afterwards and said, "Why, did you ever see what a change in the man
+in three days, and at last how he 'caved in.'"
+
+Ten persons made profession of their faith, in January. Two of these
+were teachers in the public schools. There were four conversions in
+one family. Since these meetings, many extra services have been held,
+with fruitful results. There are family altars where none before
+existed. The work in Washington under Mr. Moore is very hopeful. My
+next point was
+
+ SELMA, ALA.
+
+which I entered full of hopes as to successful meetings, and was not
+disappointed. {101} During my stay there, lasting three weeks, sixty
+professed to be converted. Most of these, through the efforts of Rev.
+C.B. Curtis and his wife, were formed into a "Children's Band," while
+others joined the churches. This is a most important feature in
+pastoral work, where the majority of the converts are children. They
+need to have something that will help them in their spiritual and new
+life and which may be instrumental in preserving them from
+temptations, snares and pitfalls, laid to entrap them by the enemy of
+their souls.
+
+I never before realized how easily people are led away by false
+teachers, nor saw so manifestly brought out the fulfillment of the
+Scriptures, [2 Pet. ii, 1] "But there were false prophets among the
+people, even as there shall be false teachers among you, who privily
+shall bring in damnable heresies, even denying the Lord that bought
+them, and bring upon themselves swift destruction. And many shall
+follow their pernicious ways; by reason of whom the way of truth shall
+be evil spoken of."
+
+A man calling himself a "prophet" and a "faith doctor" had been for
+some time experimenting upon people, both white and black, and
+professed to cure them of all their ailments. He had been holding
+meetings in a cottage weekly, and had gathered many followers, who
+were, alas, for the most part professing Christians. He announced that
+on the following Sunday he would hold the passover feast, burn the
+Bible, and, in plain words, would do wonders, the like of which had
+not been heard of for years. Accordingly, on Sunday morning, with a
+few of his followers, he came to the house of a Negro, and during the
+ceremony commanded a white woman to place her head on the table and
+offer herself as a sacrifice. She refused, upon which a Negro woman
+laid her head upon the table. He immediately raised an old cavalry
+sword and, with one blow, nearly severed her head from her body, and
+then commanded that they should "drag her out at once and put her with
+her feet towards the East and she will rise after three days."
+
+Soon there was a cry of murder raised; the false prophet was arrested
+after a struggle, and he, with a number of his followers, was safely
+lodged in the penitentiary, where it is to be hoped he will at least
+be kept from cutting off any more women's heads. Oh, how great the
+need of faithful men to lift up their voices like a trumpet, and spare
+them not, and show to these needy people, so religiously inclined, the
+way of truth!
+
+ TALLADEGA COLLEGE
+
+was the next place visited. Beginning the New Year, which is usually
+the "week of prayer," for two weeks the "old, old story" was told on
+every night among the resident students and scholars. At other times,
+services would be held in the Cassidy school in the morning, or in the
+afternoon, as school duties would permit. The Theological class, as
+well as the teachers and faculty, interested themselves greatly in
+seeking to win the unsaved to Jesus. Following out the teaching of the
+New Testament, the students {102} went out two and two in the
+surrounding neighborhood, calling at the homes of the people,
+conversing and praying in the family. They often returned with great
+joy to tell of the success and kindness they had met wherever they
+went. I am thankful to our blessed Lord to be able to report that not
+only forty or more of the young people were converted but also that
+professing Christians were strengthened in faith, all promising to do
+what God had required of them and to go to their respective homes,
+some of them hundreds of miles away, to make known a Saviour's love
+and to carry light as far as possible in the surrounding darkness.
+While here the Macedonian cry was heard from
+
+ JENIFER.
+
+I went there for a brief service. The first night the church was full,
+although the weather was stormy. The spirit of God brooded over the
+meeting and five came forward for prayer. The next night still was
+unpleasant, yet some of the congregation came several miles, and at
+the close eleven inquirers asked for prayers. A brother in the
+congregation rose, and, in pleading terms, his voice faltering,
+begged, "Oh, brodder, please do stop wid us; see de mourners; see de
+work de Lord is doing; please you brodder don't go away and leab us."
+After such heartfelt words I could but stay all the week, when sixteen
+professed to have accepted Christ, or, as they put it, to have "found
+religion."
+
+Miss Smith, at her home for motherless girls, is doing a noble work
+here. Rev. J.B. Grant is highly respected by all in the village and
+has a good name, which is worth more than great riches.
+
+ IRONATON
+
+was the next place visited. It was exceedingly muddy and dark, yet the
+people came out well. At the close of the first meeting the
+congregation arose _en masse_ and asked that I would remain a day
+longer, which I did.
+
+ MARION, ALA.
+
+I went to Marion with some doubts upon my mind as to the results. The
+first evening after my arrival I was very sick and threatened with a
+severe attack of chills and fever, but I was helped to strength enough
+to preach with difficulty. Twenty-five inquirers asked for prayers.
+Some that night became "new creatures in Christ Jesus," and every
+night as the meetings progressed the interest deepened and spread,
+until other churches were reached by the influence and their services
+given up that their members might come to our church and share in the
+work and blessing. Every night large numbers of seekers came to
+Christ. On one night twelve expressed their faith in a new life. Among
+the many inquirers was one who for twelve years had been an anxiety to
+her friends on account of her state of mind, and her conversion caused
+great joy in the church.
+
+Short morning meetings were held in the various schools in the town,
+and in a town-school seventeen seekers found the Lord Jesus precious
+to {103} their souls. Up to this time, during two weeks, more than one
+hundred profess to have been converted.
+
+I am happy to report that now, with the exception of two or three of
+the students, all in the new A.M.A. school have been reached by the
+gospel and are rejoicing that God's love has been shed abroad in their
+hearts. This blessing can be traced in a great measure to the faithful
+Scriptural teaching which Rev. A.W. Curtis and his devoted wife had
+been giving previous to my coming among them, prayer meetings having
+been held in the church for some time beforehand, and women's meetings
+at the pastor's home, led by Mrs. Curtis, thus preparing the way for
+the nightly preaching of the gospel. I go next to Mobile.
+
+JAMES WHARTON, Evangelist.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ THE CHINESE.
+
+ RESULTS THAT ELUDE THE STATISTICIAN.
+
+BY REV. C.T. WEITZEL.
+
+There are some effects which cannot be put into statistics. A boy's
+progress in a study is but imperfectly declared by the monthly report
+or the examination "stand." Much of the work accomplished in a Chinese
+mission school, is impossible to tabulate. Like the marvelous
+clearness of the atmosphere in Santa Barbara on a bright morning after
+a night of rain, it quite eludes the statistician.
+
+But effects may be felt, though we cannot represent them by figures.
+Go with me some evening through the Chinese quarter of our city; note
+the faces of the loungers in every door-way and at every corner. Watch
+the expression, or the want of expression, in these stolid, brutal,
+repulsive faces of opium-smokers and gamblers. Then step over with me
+to the Chinese mission-house two squares away. Before you enter, look
+in through the half-open door and take a survey of the scene within.
+The room is well-lighted, and contains, among other things, two long
+tables, a dozen benches, a cabinet organ, and a few chairs. The walls
+are bright with Scripture texts and illustrations from sacred history.
+About fifteen young Chinamen are seated at the tables, all reading and
+studying aloud in true Chinese fashion. Just as you enter the teacher,
+touches the bell. Books are closed and all take seats on the benches
+in front of the organ. A Chinese evangelist is present, and while he
+makes an impassioned address, accompanied by most expressive gestures,
+you are free to study the faces upturned to listen. What a contrast to
+the faces you have just left in Chinatown, idly staring at the
+passer-by, or, vacant of all interest, staring at nothing! At a glance
+you perceive effects which must be seen to be appreciated. You feel
+that not only is the whole atmosphere of this place essentially
+different {104} from that of the Chinese quarter, but there is also an
+essential difference between those who frequent the one and the other.
+
+Socially, intellectually, spiritually, the Chinese mission-school does
+its beneficent work. It must be borne in mind that the Chinaman in
+California is away from home. He is exposed to all the temptations of
+a stranger in a strange land, removed from the restraining influences
+of a community where one is known. Subject an equal number of men of
+any other nation to this severe test, and I doubt much if they would
+bear it as well. The mission school serves the purpose of a strong
+social support. So far as possible it takes the place of a home. It
+practically separates its attendants into a community by itself. It
+does much to keep them from contact with their vicious countrymen in
+Chinatown. It does much to bring them into contact with those whose
+influence upon them will be good. It does much to furnish a healthy
+social atmosphere in which to pass the hours of the afternoon and
+evening, which every Chinese servant is at liberty to spend as he
+will.
+
+Intellectually the work in the Chinese missions is already far beyond
+the elementary stage, and is growing more virile every year.
+
+But everything is made but the means to the spiritual end. Not for an
+hour is this lost sight of. The whole drift of the teaching, the
+songs, the pictures, the Scripture text, is to make known Christ.
+Every evening's lesson ends with worship. For a month or more the
+Chinese preacher to whom I have referred, has held evangelistic
+services in the Santa Barbara mission. To-day he leaves for points
+farther south to do the same work elsewhere.
+
+In no year, may I add, have there been so many conversions among the
+Chinese on this coast as in the one just past.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ BUREAU OF WOMAN'S WORK.
+
+MISS D.E. EMERSON, SECRETARY.
+
+ WOMAN'S STATE ORGANIZATIONS.
+
+ CO-OPERATING WITH THE AMERICAN MISSIONARY ASSOCIATION.
+
+ME.--Woman's Aid to A.M.A., Chairman of Committee, Mrs. C.A. Woodbury,
+Woodfords, Me.
+
+VT.--Woman's Aid to A.M.A., Chairman of Committee, Mrs. Henry
+Fairbanks, St. Johnsbury, Vt.
+
+CONN.--Woman's Home Miss. Union, Secretary, Mrs. S.M. Hotchkiss, 171
+Capitol Ave., Hartford, Conn.
+
+N.Y.--Woman's Home Miss. Union, Secretary, Mrs. C.C. Creegan,
+Syracuse, N.Y.
+
+OHIO.--Woman's Home Miss. Union, Secretary, Mrs. Flora K. Regal,
+Oberlin, Ohio.
+
+ILL.--Woman's Home Miss. Union, Secretary, Mrs. C.H. Taintor, 151
+Washington St., Chicago, Ill.
+
+MICH.--Woman's Home Miss. Union, Secretary, Mrs. Mary B. Warren,
+Lansing, Mich.
+
+WIS.--Woman's Home Miss. Union, Secretary, Mrs. C. Matter, Brodlhead,
+Wis.
+
+MINN.--Woman's Home Miss. Society, Secretary, Mrs. H.L. Chase, 2,750
+Second Ave., South, Minneapolis, Minn.
+
+IOWA.--Woman's Home Miss. Union, Secretary, Miss Ella K. Marsh,
+Grinnell, Iowa.
+
+KANSAS.--Woman's Home Miss. Society, Secretary, Mrs. Addison
+Blanchard, Topeka, Kan.
+
+SOUTH DAKOTA.--Woman's Home Miss. Union, Secretary, Mrs. W.H. Thrall,
+Amour, Dak.
+{105}
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ THE BLACK WOMAN OF THE SOUTH.
+
+The Rev. Alexander Crummell, D.D., formerly a missionary in Africa and
+now Rector of St. Luke's Church in Washington, D.C., is a native of
+Africa, a graduate of one of the leading Universities of England, who
+adds to the strength and graces of a sound scholarship, the devotion
+of a noble Christian character.
+
+From an address made by him upon the "Needs and Neglects of the Black
+Woman of the South," we quote his plea for "Woman's Work for Woman."
+Referring to the Negro woman in slavery days, he says:
+
+ "She was a 'hewer of wood and a drawer of water.' She had to keep
+ her place in the gang from morn till eve, under the burden of a
+ heavy task, or under the stimulus or the fear of a cruel lash. She
+ was a picker of cotton. She labored at the sugar mill and in the
+ tobacco factory. When, through weariness or sickness, she had
+ fallen behind her allotted task, then came, as punishment, the
+ fearful stripes upon her shrinking, lacerated flesh.
+
+ "Her home life was of the most degrading nature. She lived in the
+ rudest huts, and partook of the coarsest food, and dressed in the
+ scantiest garb, and slept, in multitudinous cabins, upon the
+ hardest boards!
+
+ "There was no sanctity of family, no binding tie of marriage, none
+ of the fine felicities and the endearing affections of home. Few of
+ these things were the lot of the Southern black woman. Instead,
+ thereof, a gross barbarism, which tended to blunt the tender
+ sensibilities, to obliterate feminine delicacy and womanly shame,
+ came down as her heritage from generation to generation; and it
+ seems a miracle of providence and grace that, notwithstanding these
+ terrible circumstances, so much struggling virtue lingered amid the
+ rude cabins, that so much womanly worth and sweetness remained, as
+ slaveholders themselves have borne witness to.
+
+ "Freed, legally, she has been; but the act of emancipation had no
+ talismanic influence to reach to and alter and transform her
+ degrading social life. The truth is, 'Emancipation Day' found her a
+ prostrate and degraded being; and, although it has brought numerous
+ advantages to her sons, it has produced but the simplest changes in
+ _her_ social and domestic condition. She is still the crude, rude,
+ ignorant mother. Remote from cities, the dweller still in the old
+ plantation hut, neighboring to the sulky, disaffected master-class,
+ who still think her freedom was a personal robbery of themselves,
+ none of the 'fair humanities' have visited her humble home. The
+ light of knowledge has not fallen upon her eyes. The fine
+ domesticities which give the charm to family life, and which, by
+ the refinement and delicacy of womanhood, preserve the civilization
+ of nations, have not come to _her_. She has still the rude, coarse
+ labor of men. With her rude husband, she still shares the hard
+ service of a field-hand. Her house, which shelters, perhaps, some
+ six or eight children, embraces but two rooms. Her furniture is of
+ the rudest kind. The clothing of the household is scant and of the
+ coarsest material; has oft-times the garniture of rags, and for
+ herself and offspring is marked, not seldom, by the absense {106}
+ of both hats and shoes. She has rarely been taught to sew, and the
+ field-labor of slavery times has kept her ignorant of the habitudes
+ of neatness and the requirements of order. Indeed, coarse food,
+ coarse clothes, coarse living, coarse manners, coarse companions,
+ coarse surroundings, coarse neighbors, both white and black, yea,
+ everything coarse, down to the coarse, ignorant, senseless
+ religion, which excites her sensibilities and starts her passions,
+ go to make up the life of the masses of black women in the hamlets
+ and villages of the South. This is the state of black womanhood.
+
+ "And now look at the _vastness_ of this degradation. If I had been
+ speaking of the population of a city, or town, or even a village,
+ the tale would be a sad and melancholy one. But I have brought
+ before you the condition of _millions of women_. And when you think
+ that the masses of these women live in the rural districts; that
+ they grow up in rudeness and ignorance; that their former masters
+ are using few means to break up their hereditary degradation, you
+ can easily take in the pitiful condition of this population and
+ forecast the inevitable future to multitudes of females, unless a
+ mighty special effort is made for the improvement of the black
+ womanhood of the South.
+
+ "I am anxious for a permanent and uplifting civilization to be
+ engrafted on the Negro race in this land. And this can only be
+ secured through the womanhood of a race. If you want the
+ civilization of a people to reach the very best elements of their
+ being, and then, having reached them, there to abide as an
+ indigenous principle, you must imbue the _womanhood_ of that people
+ with all its elements and qualities. Any movement which passes by
+ the female sex is an ephemeral thing. Without them, no true
+ nationality, patriotism, religion, cultivation, family life, or
+ true social status, is a possibility. In this matter it takes two
+ to make one--mankind is a duality. The male may bring, as an
+ exotic, a foreign graft, say, of civilization, to a new people. But
+ what then! Can a graft live or thrive of itself? By no manner of
+ means. It must get vitality from the stock into which it is put;
+ and it is the women who give the sap to every human organization
+ which thrives and flourishes on earth.
+
+ "I plead, therefore, for the establishment of at least one large
+ '_Industrial school_' in every Southern State for the black girls of
+ the South. I ask for the establishment of schools which may serve
+ specially the home life of the rising womanhood of my race.
+
+ "I want _boarding schools_ for the _industrial training_ of one hundred
+ and fifty or two hundred of the poorest girls, of the ages of
+ twelve to eighteen years.
+
+ "I wish the intellectual training to be limited to reading,
+ writing, arithmetic and geography.
+
+ "I would have these girls taught to do accurately all domestic
+ work, such as sweeping floors, dusting rooms, scrubbing,
+ bed-making, washing and ironing, sewing, mending and knitting.
+ {107}
+
+ "I would have the trades of dress-making, millinery, straw-plating,
+ tailoring for men, and such like, taught them.
+
+ "The art of cooking should be made a specialty, and every girl
+ should be instructed in it.
+
+ "In connection with these schools, garden plats should be
+ cultivated, and every girl should be required daily, to spend at
+ least an hour in learning the cultivation of small fruits,
+ vegetables and flowers.
+
+ "It is hardly possible to exaggerate either the personal, family or
+ society influence which would flow from these schools. Every class,
+ yea, every girl in an out-going class, would be a missionary of
+ thrift, industry, common-sense, and practicality. They would go
+ forth, year by year, a leavening power into the houses, towns and
+ villages of the Southern black population; girls fit to be the
+ wives of the honest peasantry of the South, the worthy matrons of
+ their numerous households.
+
+ "I am looking after the domestic training of the _masses_; for the
+ raising up of women meet to be the helpers of poor men, the _rank
+ and file_ of black society, all through the rural districts of the
+ South.
+
+ "A true civilization can only be attained when the life of woman is
+ reached, her whole being permeated by noble ideas, her fine taste
+ enriched by culture, her tendencies to the beautiful gratified and
+ developed, her singular and delicate nature lifted up to its full
+ capacity, and then, when all these qualities are fully matured,
+ cultivated and sanctified, all their sacred influences shall circle
+ around ten thousand firesides, and the cabins of the humblest
+ freedmen shall become the homes of Christian refinement through the
+ influence of the uplifted and cultivated black woman of the South."
+
+The above appeal is in the line of our American Missionary Association
+work. While we have higher schools and institutions for more thorough
+education, which these Negro women need as much as any women in the
+world, we are increasingly developing this idea which Dr. Crummell
+eloquently pleads.
+
+We remind our friends and those Christian women who are interested in
+the uplifting of Negro womanhood, that the American Missionary
+Association, the _ordained agency_ of the Congregational Churches for
+this work, could do much more of it if the means were forthcoming. The
+marked success of the domestic training in our schools at Tougaloo,
+Miss., Talladega, Ala., Thomasville, Ga., Memphis, Tenn., and other
+points, shows the advantage gained in the twenty-five years'
+experience which the A.M.A. has had in its work for the Negroes.
+
+We need the co-operation of all Christian women in carrying on these
+Industrial Schools already established, and to enable us to establish
+and carry forward _many more_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+{108}
+
+ YOUNG FOLKS.
+
+ WHAT SUSIE FOUND AT TOUGALOO.
+
+(SEE FEBRUARY AMERICAN MISSIONARY.)
+
+A roomful of girls of various sizes and complexions, all very much
+intent upon their work, and no one thinking just at that moment of a
+traveled fairy daughter, to adopt and love as her own, sent by a
+beneficent and tender-hearted northern "Fay." I doubt if Susie ever
+before saw so many "little women" laboring with needles and trying to
+set the troublesome stitches straight and even, to keep the thread
+from tangling and the seam clean. The results are far from perfection,
+but they are encouraging.
+
+Some of the children _wear_ thimbles, and some set them upon their desks
+and _wiggle_ the needle through without their aid. Here is a child so
+tiny that no thimble in the box will serve her. She has a delicate
+face, with big brown eyes, and her fingers are the slenderest of
+appendages to her atoms of hands. Her sister, a year or so older, has
+a round, chubby face, with plump, dimpled, brown hands, but these fat
+fingers also must grow to the smallest thimble. Here is a quiet,
+modest little girl whose five baptismal names, Cynthia Ann Finetta
+Bloomfield Celeste, furnish her nothing prettier for every day use
+than "Lusty." She could not thread a needle or tie a knot when she
+joined the Hope Band, and the second year she wore one of the smallest
+thimbles with a bit of cloth inside for "chinking" to keep it on. Here
+Susie's sympathies are drawn out towards a thin, nervous-looking
+little Frances, who has a hand and foot crippled. She walks painfully
+along to her place and holds her work at a disadvantage in the poor
+little cramped left hand, but she likes to be there with the others.
+
+Most of the heads are covered with little tight braids, on some heads
+standing at every angle, on some laid smoothly down, one braid tied to
+another. A few have their curly hair cropped close, and here is a
+little girl with a bushy mass overshadowing her lively face. She takes
+but a stitch or two until she goes up to the front and holds her work
+out for her teacher's inspection. Some time elapses before that lady
+can notice it and say, "That is pretty good, Lena; now go right on
+carefully." Lena returns slowly to her place, takes a stitch or two
+more and repeats the performance. When will the work be completed? O
+no, that is the way she used to do, but _now_--
+
+A middle-sized "Topsy" comes pushing rudely forward, tossing her head
+and whispering disagreeable things to those she has to pass, and Susy
+hopes she will not be brought into any closer relations with _her_, when
+she happens to see her tenderly fondling a broken-armed, broken-legged
+dollie, while her work is being adjusted, and thinks somewhat better
+of her. There are several Lilies and Roses in this growing garden. The
+lilies are not white and the roses are not red, but more attractive
+and interesting to their teacher's eyes than the black pansies the
+flower gardeners {109} labored so long to produce. Their teacher is
+fond of flowers and has her windows full, even in winter, but she does
+not smile upon them with such a heartful of affection as upon these,
+nor can those bask in the light of her merry face more freely. As her
+short, round figure moves down the aisle and back, and Susie gets a
+good look at her, she says to herself, "Why surely this is Mrs. Santa
+Claus! How glad I am!" and it is not a strange conclusion, for her
+figure and expression _are_ like the poet's description of dear Saint
+Nick.
+
+Here is a girl in one of the side seats a good deal taller than her
+teacher. Through the long, bright, warm summer she works in the cotton
+and the corn, alongside of father, brothers, uncles, men and women,
+boys and girls. Her hands are enlarged and roughened with toil, but
+she is taking pains to learn how to do this useful indoor work
+skillfully too.
+
+There is a goodly company of these larger girls, but Susie does not
+feel any more afraid of them, nor of "the middle-sized bears and the
+wee tiny, small bears" than did little Silverhair in the nursery tale.
+She doubts, however, if these largest ones have not laid aside
+dollies, and thinks she must look among the "leaster" ones for the
+little _step-mother_ who will respect her own little Fay-mother's
+request to "take good care of her." But when the sewing-lesson is
+ended and she notices one and another bring to light a little
+dollie-daughter to hug in her arms as she walks homeward, and sees the
+sociable interest of all the rest, she feels no further doubt about
+the mother-love in all these little Southern bosoms and resigns all
+care as to which one shall be hers, leaving the whole question to Mrs.
+Santa Claus.
+
+Perhaps some day we may call upon her when she is fully domesticated
+in her new home. There will not be many comforts and conveniences in
+that home. Possibly when we ask for Susie, her mamma will draw a
+little old box from under the head of her bed, as once when I called
+upon one of these little girls and asked her if she had a doll. It had
+lost some of its limbs and it was dressed in odds and ends, tacked
+together by the untaught little mother, but when I set the dollie on
+my knee and pretended to drink tea out of one of the tiny toy cups set
+forth from the same treasure-box, you could not find a more hilarious
+little mamma anywhere, though you should pick out one with all nursery
+stores at her command.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ A LETTER FROM ONE OF OUR INDIAN PUPILS IN NEBRASKA.
+
+SANTEE AGENCY, NEB.
+
+_Dear Eastern Friends_:--We have had five good prayer meetings during
+two weeks, and I am very glad to tell you dear friends that some of
+our school-mates said they will try and do as God wants them to do.
+And some pray who never did before. No words can tell how I felt one
+evening {110} after we came home from meeting. Just before I went up
+stairs I asked the Matron if I could talk Dakota to tell my room-mate
+about the meeting. The subject was, "What must I do to be saved?" I
+told it to her the best I could. After I was through talking I asked
+her if she understood all what I meant and she said "Yes." We both
+were silent for one minute. I was praying to God in my heart to help
+me to help this dear school-mate of mine. Then in a little while she
+said, "I believe in Jesus and now I will always try and be a
+Christian." When she said that, I couldn't do anything more, I was so
+glad that my tears came. And before we went to sleep I ask her to pray
+after I did, and she did; this was the first time she prayed in her
+own words. It was so dark and I couldn't see anything but I knew she
+was crying by the way she spoke. After long time I thought she went to
+sleep; but all at once she call my name and said, "I wish tomorrow
+morning they would sing in Dakota, '_Ring the bells in heaven, there is
+great joy to-day_.'" Dear friends we kindly ask you to remember us when
+you offer prayer to our dear God.
+
+Your friend,
+
+----
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ RECEIPTS FOR FEBRUARY, 1888.
+
+ MAINE, $1,119.63.
+
+Auburn. High St. Cong. Ch. 117.28 of which for Indian M. and 39.74
+for Chinese M. 302.85
+
+Augusta. Joel Spalding, to const. HON. WM. P. FRYE L.M. 30.00
+
+Bangor. Central Cong. Ch. 75; Hammond St. Cong. Ch., 2, for Pleasant
+Hill, Tenn. 77.00
+
+Bridgeton. By Mrs. Hale, Pkg. Basted Work, for Selma, Ala.
+
+Castine. Wm. G. Sargent, for Pleasant Hill, Tenn. 5.00
+
+Center Lebanon. Sab. Sch. Class., for Pleasant Hill, Tenn. 4.10
+
+Denmark. Box of C., for Mobile, Ala.
+
+East Orrington, Sab. Sch. 2; Miss M.F. George, 1, for Pleasant Hill,
+Tenn. 3.00
+
+Edgecomb. Cong. Ch. and Soc. 13.00
+
+Farmington Falls. By Miss Susan G. Crowell, for Freight 0.65
+
+Hampden. Cong. Ch. 4.80
+
+Harpswell. Mrs. John Dinsmore. for Pleasant Hill, Tenn. 7.00
+
+Island Falls. Miss D. Merriman, for Pleasant Hill, Tenn. 2.50
+
+Limington. Cong. Ch. 12.50
+
+Monson. Rev. R.W. Emerson, for Pleasant Hill, Tenn. 5.00
+
+Newcastle. Mrs. Wm. Heath, for Pleasant Hill, Tenn. 1.00
+
+New Gloucester. Ladies of Cong. Ch., Bbl. and Box of C., 1.75 for
+Freight, for Selma, Ala. 1.75
+
+New Sharon, Cong. Ch. 3.00
+
+North Bridgeton. Cong. Ch. 2.25
+
+Norway. Mrs. Amos. I. Holt, Bbl. of C., for Wilmington, N.C.; ---- 2,
+for Freight 2.00
+
+Orkland. H.T. and S.E. Buck, 20; Mrs. Trott, 3; "A Friend," 1 24.00
+
+Portland. "A Friend" (10 of which for Rosebud Indian M.) 15.00
+
+Saco. First Parish Ch. and Soc., to const. MRS. ELLA C. INGALLS L.M.
+30.00
+
+Scarboro. Cong. Ch. 5.16
+
+Skowhegan. Ladies of Miss'y Soc., Bbl. of C., for Selma, Ala.
+
+South Paris. by Mrs. Austin, Pkg. Work, for Selma, Ala.
+
+Union. 2 Classes, little girls in Sab. Sch., by Mrs. F.V. Norcross for
+Pleasant Hill, Tenn. 5.00
+
+Wells. B. Maxwell. 25.00
+
+Westbrook. Second Cong. Ch. 25.57
+
+Wilton. Ladies of Cong. Ch., Bbl. of C., for Selma, Ala.
+
+Yarmouthville. Rev. Amasa Loring, for Pleasant Hill, Tenn. 2.00
+
+----. "Friend in Maine," bal. to const. MRS. JULIA A. MERRILL L.M.
+10.50
+
+By Mrs. C.A. Woodbury, Treas. W.A. to A.M.A., for Woman's Work:
+
+Ladies of Maine 500.00
+
+ NEW HAMPSHIRE, $291.01.
+
+Amherst. Rev. A.J. McGown 10.00
+
+Auburn. Benjamin Chase, for Indian M. 2.00
+
+Candia. Cong. Ch. and Soc. 17.50
+
+Colebrook. "A Friend," Pkg. of Coats, Val. 16.16.
+
+East Derry, First Ch. 18.03
+
+East Jaffrey. "A Friend" 15.00
+
+Enfield. Cong. Ch. and Soc. 5.00
+
+Epping. Cong. Ch. 37.00
+
+Goffstown. Bbl. of C., Val. 30, for Greenwood, S.C., 1.40 for Freight
+1.40
+
+Great Falls. Mrs. J.A. Stickney, Bbl. and Box of C. and Christmas
+gifts, for Storrs Sch., Atlanta, Ga.
+
+Greenfield. Cong. Ch. 15.50
+
+Greenfield. "Friends" for Storrs Sch. 8.50
+
+Greenland. Cong. Ch. 15.56
+
+Hancock. By Miss B.D. Robertson 5.63
+{111}
+
+Henniker. By Miss B.D. Robertson 5.80
+
+Lyme. Cong. Ch. and Soc. 19.81
+
+Manchester. First Cong. Ch. and Soc., to const. ALLEN L. FRENCH L.M.
+53.18
+
+Mason. Ladies of Cong. Ch., Bbl. of C., for Storrs Sch., Atlanta, Ga.
+
+Nashua. Miss Sarah Kendall, for Greenwood, S.C. 3.00
+
+Nashua. 2 Bbls. of C., for Greenwood, S.C., 2 for Freight 2.00
+
+Newport. Cong. Ch. 40.10
+
+Pittsfield. Box and Bbl. of C., etc., for Marion, Ala.
+
+South Newmarket. For Freight 2.50
+
+West Lebanon. Tilden Sem., Box of C. and Christmas Gifts, for Storrs
+Sch., Atlanta, Ga.
+
+By George Swain:
+
+Amherst. Cong. Ch. 1.50
+
+Greenville. Cong. Ch. 10.00
+
+Mason. Mrs. P.S. Wilson 2.00
+
+.----
+
+.13.50
+
+ VERMONT. $174.06.
+
+Bethel. Sab. Sch. of Cong. Ch., for McIntosh, Ga. 3.43
+
+East Hardwick. O. Paine 0.50
+
+Fairhaven. For McIntosh, Ga. 5.35
+
+Irasburg. Mrs. J.E. Chamberlin 5.00
+
+Jamaica. Ladies, for McIntosh, Ga. by Mrs. Ellen D. Wild 2.00
+
+Lyndon. Dr. L.W. Hubbard 2.00
+
+Middlebury. Bbl. of C., and 2 for McIntosh, Ga. 2.00
+
+Montpeller. Bbl. of C., for Storrs Sch., Atlanta, Ga.
+
+North Thetford. Cong. Ch. 7.00
+
+Norwich. Cong. Ch., 15; "A Friend," 5 20.00
+
+Peru. Dea. Edmund Batchelder, 3; Rev. A.B. Peffers, 2. 5.00
+
+Pittsford. Mrs. Nancy P. Humphrey 10.00
+
+Post Mills. Cong. Ch. (3 of which for McIntosh, Ga.) 8.00
+
+Quechee. Bbl. of C. and 1.75 for McIntosh, Ga. 1.75
+
+Saint Johnsbury East. Cong. Ch. 6.50
+
+Shoreham. R.H. Holmes 5.00
+
+Stratford. Cong, Ch. 25.00
+
+Townshend. Cong. Ch. (5 of which from Mrs. Anna Rice) 25.53
+
+Wells River. Cong. Ch. 20.00
+
+West Brattleboro. Ladies of Cong. Ch., 15; A.L. Grout, 5, for
+McIntosh, Ga. 20.00
+
+ MASSACHUSETTS, $5,925.07
+
+Amesbury. Union Evang. Ch. 4.03
+
+Amherst. "A Friend," to const. JOHN RICHARDS L.M. 30.00
+
+Andover. Rev. F.W. Greene, 20; A Friend, 10 30.00
+
+Andover. Juv. Miss'y Soc. of West Parish, for Indian Student Aid 15.00
+
+Andover. Ladies of Free Ch., Bbl. of C., for Marion, Ala.
+
+Ashfield. "A Friend" 1.16
+
+Auburn. Infant Class. Sab. Sch. of Cong. Ch., for Conn. Ind'l Sch.,
+Ga. 7.00
+
+Belchertown. Mrs. D.B. Bruce, to const. REV. CHARLES R. BRUCE L.M.
+30.00
+
+Beverly. Dane St. Sab. Sch., for Student Aid, Fisk U. 50.00
+
+Boston. J.H. Nichols, A.A. Lawrence and S.W. Marston, Val. Sch. Books
+and Sch. Apparatus
+
+Dorchester. Miss Mary A. Tutle, for Marie Adlof Sch'p Fund 0.40
+
+Jamaica Plain. Miss Nellie Riley, Pkg cards, etc., for Straight U.
+----
+
+.0.40
+
+Boxboro. Cong. Ch. 15.00
+
+Boxford. A Friend, for Ch., Corbin, Ky. 5.00
+
+Brimfield. Sab. Sch. of Cong. Ch., for Student Aid, Fisk U. 10.60
+
+Buckland. First Cong. Ch., for Sherwood, Tenn. 4.00
+
+Cambridgeport. Miss Hannah E. Moore 8.00
+
+Chelsea. Y.P.S.C.E. of First Cong. Ch., for Student Aid, Fisk U. 7.50
+
+Chelsea. Miss E. Davenport 5.00
+
+Chelsea. Mrs. Emma B. Evans, for Indian M. 5.00
+
+Clinton. Young People's Mite Soc., for Indian Sch'p 43.00
+
+Cohasset. Second Cong. Ch. and Soc. 31.33
+
+Cummington. Mrs. H.M. Porter 3.00
+
+Dalton. Sab. Sch. of Cong. Ch., for Student Aid, Williamsburg, Ky.
+45.00
+
+Dracut. First Cong. Ch. 10.00
+
+Dunstable. Cong. Ch. and Soc. 30.74
+
+East Douglas. Second Cong. Ch. and Soc. 49.97
+
+East Weymouth. Ch. and Sab. Sch., for Pleasant Hill, Tenn. 50.00
+
+Georgetown. First Cong. Ch. and Soc. 33.50
+
+Globe Village. Young Helpers of Evan. Free Ch., for Student Aid, Fisk
+U. 25.00
+
+Greenwich. Daniel Parker, deceased, by Mrs. M.P. Estey 5.00
+
+Groton. Ladies' Benev. Soc., by Mrs. Caroline Blood, for Freight 2.00
+
+Hampshire Co. "A Friend" 5.00
+
+Haverhill. Sab. Sch. of West Cong. Ch., for Freight 3.00
+
+Hyde Park. Woman's H.M.U. and Children's M. Soc. of First Cong. Ch.,
+for Tougaloo U., and to const. MISS ALICE GRAY L.M. 30.00
+
+Ipswich. South Cong. Ch. 20.00
+
+Lakeville. Mrs. C.L. Ward 25.00
+
+Lawrence. Lawrence St. Ch. and Soc. 150.00
+
+Long Meadow. "A Friend," for Indian M. 1.00
+
+Lowell. John St. Cong. Ch., 41.92; "A Friend in Elliot Ch." 5; Geo. C.
+Osgood, M.D., 1.50 48.42
+
+Lowell. Ladies' Benev. Soc. of First Cong. Ch., Bbl. of C., for
+Wilmington, N.C.
+
+Malden. Infant Sab. Sch., for Straight U. 10.00
+
+Manchester. Cong. Ch. and Soc. 20.75
+
+Mansfield. Ladies' Miss'y Soc., for Wilmington, N.C. 8.17
+
+Middlefield. Cong. Ch. 28.00
+
+Monson. Mrs. Abbie G. Smith 5.00
+
+Neponset. Stone Mission Circle of Trin. Cong. Ch., for Student Aid,
+Wilmington, N.C. 10.00
+
+Newburyport. "Friends," for Mountain Work 3.00
+
+Norfolk. Cong. Ch. 2.14
+
+North Abington. Cong. Ch. 5.00
+
+North Adams. "A Friend" 10.00
+
+Northhampton. "C" 100.00
+
+Northbridge. Cong. Ch. 10.00
+
+North Brookfield. Freight on Box to Pleasant Hill, Tenn. 4.60
+
+North Leominister. Mrs. S.F. Houghton, to const. REV. F.A. BALCOM L.M.
+30.00
+
+Peabody. Sab. Sch. of South Cong. Ch., for Indian M. 50.00
+
+Peabody. Sab. Sch. of First Cong. Ch., Box Books and Christmas Gifts,
+for Sherwood, Tenn.
+
+Pepperell. Ladies of Cong. Soc., Bbl. of C., for Greenwood, S.C., 2
+for Freight 2.00
+
+Randolph. Collected by Mrs. J.C. Labaree, 30; Y.L. Miss'y Soc,. Bbl.
+of C., for Tougaloo, U. 30.00
+
+Randolph. Annie T. and Marion Belcher 10.00
+
+Reading. Cong. Ch. 18.00
+
+Royalston. "A Friend," 10; ----, Bbl. of C., for Greenwood, S.C. 10.00
+
+Royalston. First Cong. Ch. 2.50
+
+Somerset. Cong. Ch. 2.00
+
+Somerville. Sab. Sch. of Franklin St. Cong. Ch., for Indian Student
+Aid, add'l 40.00
+{112}
+
+Somerville. Winter Hill Cong. Ch., 17.50; Day St. Ch., 10.50 28.00
+
+Somerville. Ladies of Cong. Ch., for Freight 3.35
+
+South Amherst. South Cong. Ch. 6.12
+
+South Braintree. Cong. Ch. 11.00
+
+Southington. Ladies' Benev. Soc., 2 Bbls. of C., for Tougaloo, Miss
+
+South Weymouth. Children's Soc., Bbl. of Christmas Gifts
+
+Spencer. Mrs. G.H. Marsh's S.S. Class, for Wilmington, N.C. 7.00
+
+Springfield. "H.M." 1000.00
+
+Taunton. Union Cong. Ch. 27.50
+
+Waltham. Trin. Cong. Ch. 15.80
+
+Waltham. Sab. Sen. Class, for Storrs Sch. Atlanta, Ga. 3.00
+
+Warren. Sab. Sch. of Cong. Ch., for Student Aid, Tillotson C. & N.
+Inst. 42.00
+
+Watertown. Mrs. M. Pryor 0.50
+
+Wellesley. Cong. Ch. and Soc 123.14
+
+Wellesley. Wellesley College, to const. GEORGE W. CABLE L.M. 45.00
+
+Wellesley. "Friends" in Wellesley Col., for Marion, Ala 26.00
+
+West Boylston. First Cong. Ch. and Soc. 9.00
+
+Westhampton. ladies' Benev. Soc., for Tougaloo U 10.00
+
+Westminster. "Cheerful Givers," for Student Aid, Fisk U 5.00
+
+West Newton. Earnest Workers, for Student Aid, Storrs Sch 5.00
+
+West Springfield. Mrs. Lucy m. Bagg, for Pleasant Hill, Tenn 50.00
+
+Weymouth. Sab. Sch. of Cong. Ch., for Pleasant Hill, Tenn 55.00
+
+Whitman. Cong. Ch. and Soc. 77.00
+
+Winchendon. Sab. Sch. of Cong. Ch., for Pleasant Hill, Tenn 20.00
+
+Winchester. Cong. Ch. and Soc. 19.59
+
+Worchester. Old So. Ch., to const. GEO. R. BLISS and MRS. GEO. M.
+PIERSE L.M.'s 61.26
+
+Yarmouth. Rev. John W. Dodge, for Pleasant Hill, Tenn 25.00
+-------------- $2,925 07
+
+LEGACY.
+
+Whitinsville. Estate of Chas. P. Whitin, by Edward Whitin, Ex. 3000.00
+-------------- $5,925 07
+
+CLOTHING, ETC., RECEIVED AT BOSTON OFFICE.
+
+Farmington Falls, Me. By Miss Susan G. Crosswell, Box, for
+Williamsburg, Ky
+
+Litchfield, Me. Ladies' Aid Soc., Bbl., for Williamsburg, Ky
+
+Brookfield, Mass. Mrs. R.B. Montague. Bbl., for Sherwood, Tenn
+
+Cambridgeport, Mass. Miss Lacena Palmer, Basted Patchwork
+
+Cambridgeport, Mass. By Mrs. R.L. Snow, Box and Bbl., for Tougaloo U
+
+Haverhill, Mass. West Cong. Sab. Sch., Bbl., for Talladega C.
+
+Hyde Park, Mass. W.H.M.U., of First Cong. Ch., Bbl., Val. 40 for
+Tougaloo U.
+
+Roxbury, Mass. Mrs. Arthur W. Tuffts, Box, for Sherwood, Tenn
+
+Somerville, Mass. Mission Circle of Franklin St. Ch., Bbl., for Santee
+Indian M.
+
+ RHODE ISLAND, $448.63.
+
+East Providence. Samuel Belden, for Atlanta U 100.00
+
+Newport. United Cong. Ch. 34.68
+
+Pawtucket. "Friends," Cong. Ch., for Indian M. 105.00
+
+Providence. Sam. Sch. of Union Cong. Ch., 50 for Indian M. and 25 for
+Williamsburg Ky 75.00
+
+Providence. Union Cong. Ch. and Soc. 131.87
+
+Riverside. Riverside Cong. Ch 2.08
+
+ CONNECTICUT, $2,001.63.
+
+Berlin. "A Friend," 70; The Misses Churchill, 2, for Student Aid,
+Tougaloo U. 72.00
+
+Branford. E. Davis 1.00
+
+Bridgeport. First Cong. Ch 129.76
+
+Bristol. Sab. Sch. Class, for Indian Sch'p 14.00
+
+Columbia. Ladies' Miss'y Soc., 3, and Bbl. of C., for Louisville, Ky
+3.00
+
+Danbury. "A Friend," for Lexington, Ky. 50.00
+
+East Canaan. Cong. Ch. 5.00
+
+East Hartford. Sab. Sch. of Cong. Ch., 29.77 and Box of Christmas
+Gifts, for Student Aid, Williamsburg, Ky 29.77
+
+East Wallingford. Mrs. Benj. Hall 3.50
+
+Enfield. Sab Sch. of First Cong. Ch., for Indian Sch'p Fund 25.00
+
+Fairfield. Sab. Sch. of Cong. Ch., for Tougaloo U 25.00
+
+Gaylordsville. Miss Grace Hendricks, for Tillotson C. & N. Inst. 10.00
+
+Glastonbury. "Friends," for Indian M. 217.00
+
+Hartford. Teachers and Scholars, Sab. Sch. of Asylum Hill Cong. Ch.,
+12.50 for Santee Indian Sch.; 10 for Atlanta U.; 5 for Chinese Sch.
+Cal. 27.50
+
+Hartford. Sab. Sch. of Windsor Av. Cong. Ch., for Student Aid, Fisk U
+20.00
+
+Lakeville. Mrs. S.C. Robbins 4.50
+
+Ledyard. Cong. Ch. and Soc 22.77
+
+Mansfield Center. Ladies' Soc. of Cong. Ch., Half Bbl, of C., etc.,
+for Storrs Sch., Atlanta, Ga
+
+Middletown. Sab. Sch of First Cong. Ch., for Indian M. 25.00
+
+Milton. Cong. Ch. 5.00
+
+Naugatuck. "Young Friends," for Indian Sch'p 70.00
+
+New Britian. Miss Mary L. Stanley, 9 for Student Aid; Miss Mary L.
+Stanley and Miss Daniels, Box of C, for Williamsburg, Ky 9.00
+
+New haven. "A Friend" 10.00
+
+New Haven. Davenport Ch., for Indian M 5.50
+
+New Haven. First Ch., Miss Barnes' S.S. Class and Others. Box for Jones'
+Kindergarten, Storrs Sch
+
+New London. "Member of Second Ch." 1.00
+
+Norfolk "A Friend" 4.50
+
+North Branford. Sab. Sch., for Oaks, N.C. 20.00
+
+North Coventry. Sab. Sch. of Cong. Ch., for Student Aid, Williamsburg,
+Ky 24.00
+
+Norwalk. Miss C.L. Marsh, for Tillotson C. & N. Inst 10.00
+
+Norwich. Sab. Sch. of Second Cong. Ch., for Santee Indian M. 50.87
+
+Norwich. Sab. Sch. of Second Cong. Ch 2.08
+
+Poquonock. Willing Workers of Cong. Ch., for Student Aid, Williamsburg,
+Ky. 9.00
+
+Salisbury. Sab. Sch. of Cong. Ch., for Indian M 12.50
+
+Sharon. John H. Cleaveland 5.00
+
+Simsbury. Miss'y Soc. for Freight 3.00
+
+South Coventry. Dea. and Mrs. Kingsbury, 10; Miss Louisa Lord, 5 for
+Williamsburg, Ky 15.00
+
+South Glastonbury. Cong. Ch. and Sab. Sch. 10.58
+
+Southington. First Cong. Ch., for Thomasville, Ga 1.50
+
+Southport. "A Friend" 30.00
+
+Southport. Sab. Sch. of Cong. Ch., for Indian M 8.92
+
+Thomaston. Cong. Ch. 35.15
+
+Thompsonville. Mrs. J.C. Simpson, 5; Miss Maggie Drigg, 5, for Student
+Aid, Straight U 10.00
+
+Unionville. First Ch. of Christ 37.92
+
+Unionville. "A Friend," Communion Service, 8 pieces, for Ch., Austin,
+Tex
+
+Warren. Cong. Ch. 21.00
+
+Waterbury. First Cong. Ch. 200.86
+
+Waterbury. Ladies' Benev. Soc., First Cong. Ch., for Conn. Ind'l Sch.,
+Ga 25.00
+{113}
+
+Waterbury. "A Friend," for Santee Indian M. 50.00
+
+Waterbury. Sunshine Circle, for Indian M. 5.00 West Hartford. "S.H.,"
+for Indian M. 10.00
+
+West Hartland. Cong. Ch., for Conn. Ind'l Sch., Ga. 6.00
+
+Weston. Cong. Ch. 10.00
+
+Windham. Ladies' Soc. Cong. Ch., Box of C., etc., for Thomasville.,
+Ga.
+
+Woodbridge. Cong. Ch. 14.83
+
+Woodbury. Ladies' Miss. Soc. of South Cong. Ch., for Conn. Ind'l Sch.,
+Ga. 25.00 Woman's Home Missionary Union of Conn., by Mrs. S.M.
+Hotchkiss, Sec.:
+
+Kent. Sab. Sch. of Cong, Ch., for Mountain White Work 20.00
+
+New Haven. Ladies' Miss'y Soc. of College St. Ch., for Conn. Ind'l
+Sch. 35.00
+
+------- 55.00
+
+--------- $1,497.96
+
+LEGACIES.
+
+Durham. Estate of Dea. Gaylord Newton, by H.G. Newton, to const. HENRY
+G. NEWTON, MISS LOIS CAMP and THOMAS R. NOBLE L.M.'s 100.00
+
+New Haven. Estate of Mary Dutton, by Samuel D. Gilbert, Ex. 100.00
+
+Woodbury. Estate of Sarah J. Deming, by Anson A. Root, Adm. 303.67
+
+--------- $2,001 63
+
+ NEW YORK, $1,676.98.
+
+Adams Basin. Mrs. H. Clark 5.00
+
+Aquebogue. Cong. Ch. 11.00
+
+Binghamton. Cong. Bible Sch., for Student Aid, Fisk U. 25.00
+
+Brooklyn. Sab. Sch. of Tompkins Av. Cong. Ch., for Atlanta U., to
+const. REV. ROBERT R. MEREDITH, D.D., REV. GEO. F. PENTECOST, D.D.,
+HENRY T. HOLT and MRS. ELMA M. STEBBINS L.M.'s 123.00
+
+Brooklyn, Ladies' Circle, Lee Av. Cong. Ch., 22; South Bushwick Sab.
+Sch., 12; Daughters of the King, Lee Av., Cong. Ch., 7; Penny Offering
+Park Av. Sab. Sch., 5; Mrs. Anna Pollock, 3, for Student Aid. Mrs.
+Sarah Wilde, 10; Miss Sarah Hulst, 5; Daughters or the King, Lee Av.
+Cong. Sab. Sch., Pkg. of C.; Flossie Bringham, 1; Carrie Strong, 1,
+for Student Aid. Ladies' Circle, Lee Av. Cong. Ch., 2 Boxes of C.;
+South Bushwick Reformed Sab. Sch., 2 Bbls. of C. and Box of Books, for
+Williamsburg, Ky. 66.00
+
+Brooklyn. Sab. Sch. of Central Cong. Ch., for Santee Indian M. 37.50
+
+Brooklyn. Park Cong. Ch., 16.43; A.G. Brinkckerhoff, 5 21.43
+
+Fairport. J.E. Howard 50.00
+
+Flushing. First Cong. Ch. 56.00
+
+Gloversville. Cong. Ch. 235.34
+
+Honeoye. Cong. Ch. 26.00
+
+Kiantone. Cong. Ch. 4.50
+
+Lawrenceville. Lucius Hulburd 5.00
+
+Lima. Mrs. Orson Warner 2.00
+
+Lisbon. First Cong. Ch., 8.51; Mrs. Wm. Sheldon, 1 9.51
+
+Miller's Place. Mount Sinai Cong. Ch. 12.00
+
+New York. Miss D.E. Emerson, for Student Aid, Tougaloo U. 25.00
+
+New York. "A Friend," Christmas Gift, for Williamsburg, Ky. 5.00
+
+Paris. Cong. Ch. 24.00
+
+Perry Centre. Cong. Soc., for Freight 1.25
+
+Riverhead. Cong. Ch. 10.30
+
+Rochester. Mrs. E.R. Andrews 4.50
+
+Union Valley. Wm. C. Angel 5.00
+
+Walton. First Cong. Ch. 69.82
+
+Walton. Cong. Sab. Sch., Christmas Gifts, 33.93, and 2 Bbls. of C.,
+etc.; H.E. St. John, 9; Miss Jennie Hull, 2, for Student Aid,
+Williamsburg, Ky. 44.93
+
+West Bloomfield. Cong. Ch. 20 of which for Student Aid, Fisk U. 41.00
+
+Woodbridge. First Cong. Ch. 8.37
+
+--------
+
+$938.45
+
+LEGACY.
+
+Waverly. Estate of Mrs. Phebe Bepburne, Howard Elmer, Ex. 738.53
+
+---------
+
+$1,676.98
+
+ NEW JERSEY, $36.91.
+
+Colt's Neck. Reformed Ch. 5.16
+
+East Orange. "True Blue Card," Collected by Mary Brenner 1.00
+
+Lakewood. Rev. Geo. and E.O. Langdon 3.00
+
+Newark. "X.Y." 1.75
+
+Newark. "A Sister in Christ," Box Papers, etc., for Sherwood, Tenn.
+
+Upper Montclair. Ladies' Aid Soc. of Cong. Ch., Bbl. Of C., for Storrs
+Sch., Atlanta, Ga.
+
+Westfield. "A Friend" 1.00
+
+----. "Heart's Content" 25.00
+
+ PENNSYLVANIA, $7.00.
+
+Braddock. Thomas Addenbrook, Box Books, etc., for Sherwood, Tenn.
+
+Guy's Mills. Mrs. F. Maria Guy 2.00
+
+Linesville. M.T. Donaldson 5.00
+
+ OHIO, $407.82.
+
+Austinburg. Cong. Ch. 11.00
+
+Berea. First Cong. Ch. 6.50
+
+Cleveland. Jennings Av. Cong. Ch., 75; Plymouth Cong. Ch., 72.16; John
+Jay Low, 20 167.16
+
+Cleveland. Mount Zion Sab. Sch., for Student Aid, Fisk U. 8.64
+
+Cleveland. Sab. Sch. First Cong. Ch., Box of C., for Tillotson C. & N.
+Inst.
+
+Medina. W.H. Sipher 2.00
+
+Mount Vernon. Sab. Sch. of Cong. Ch. 19.37
+
+North Ridgeville. Ladies' Benev. Soc., Box Canned Fruit; Cong. Sab.
+Sch., Bbl. of Goods, for Williamsburg, Ky.
+
+Oberlin. Sab. Sch. of First Cong. Ch., 10; "A Friend," 12.50; Mrs.
+L.G.B. Hills, 5 27.50
+
+Oberlin. Sab. Sch. of Second Cong. Ch., for Lexington, Ky. 15.00
+
+Oberlin. Mrs. Vance, for Student Aid, Williamsburg, Ky. 5.00
+
+Oberlin. Ladies of Cong. Ch., Bbl. of C., for Storrs Sch., Atlanta,
+Ga.
+
+Painesville. First Cong. Ch. 27.90
+
+Painesville. Y.L.M. Soc., of First Cong. Ch., for Fort Berthold Indian
+M. 4.75
+
+South Salem. Daniel S. Pricer 5.00
+
+Toledo. Miss A.M. Nicholas, for Wilmington, N.C.. 5.00
+
+West Andover. "Friends," by L.L. Coleman 10.00
+
+Willoughby. Lyndon Freeman 1.50
+
+Ohio Woman's Home Missionary Union, by Mrs. Phebe A. Crafts, Treas.,
+for Woman's Work:
+
+Burton. Mrs. A.S. Hotchkiss 3.00
+
+Cleveland. L.H.M.S., of Euclid Av. Ch. 20.00 Cleveland. Euclid Av.
+Ch., L.M. Soc. 20.00
+
+Columbus. Eastwood Ch., Y.L.M. Soc. 10.00
+
+Columbus. Eastwood Ch., "Family Mite Box." 12.00
+
+Willoughby. Mrs. Mary P. Hastings 26.00
+
+----- 91.00
+{114}
+
+ INDIANA, $25.00.
+
+Bloomington, Mrs. A.B. Woodford, for Student Aid, Fisk U. 5.00
+
+New Corydon. Geo. Storz 20.00
+
+ ILLINOIS, $468.20.
+
+Albion. James Green 10.00
+
+Bunker Hill. D.E. Pettengill 1.00
+
+Canton. Cong. Ch. 42.20
+
+Chicago. Sedgwick St. Sab. Sch. 25.00
+
+Chicago. Major E.D. Redington, for Lexington, Ky. 17.00
+
+Earlville. Mrs. Rindell, 1; Mabel Rindell, 20 cts.; Bertie Rindell, 15
+cts. 1.35
+
+Galesburg. Sab. Sch. of Cong. Ch., for Fisk U. 10.00
+
+Geneseo. First Cong. Ch. 145.18
+
+Greenville. Ladies' Miss'y Circle, Box of C., Val. 25
+
+Joliet. "A Thank Offering" 5.00
+
+La Grange. W.M.S., for Chinese M. 5.00
+
+Lake View. Church of the Redeemer 22.55
+
+Lyonsville. Cong. Ch. 5.60
+
+Naperville. Prof. Geo. W. Sindlinger, for Pleasant Hill, Tenn. 10.00
+
+Odell. Mrs. H.E. Dana 10.00
+
+Ottawa. First Cong. Ch. 32.66
+
+Princeton. Mrs. R.D. Harrison, for Student Aid, Fisk U. 1.00
+
+Prospect Park. Cong. Ch., in part 7.00
+
+Shabbona. Woman's Miss'y Soc., 2 Boxes Papers, etc., for Sherwood,
+Tenn.
+
+Turner. Mrs. R. Currier 1.00
+
+Wheaton. College Ch. of Christ, in part 28.81
+
+Winnebago. Ladies' Miss'y Soc., for Woman's Work 9.00
+
+Woman's Home Missionary Union of Ill., Mrs. B.L. Leavitt, Treas., for
+Woman's Work:
+
+Chicago. L.M. Soc. of New Eng. Ch. 30.00
+
+Oak Park. Ladies' Benev. Circle 23.00
+
+Rockford. Peter Holman Fund, First Ch. 20.65
+
+Sheffield. Aux. 5.20
+
+------ 78.85
+
+ MICHIGAN, $90.01
+
+Allendale. Cong. Ch. 2.75
+
+Ann Arbor. Ladies' Miss'y Soc. of Cong. Ch., Bbl. of C., for Athens,
+Ala.
+
+Banks. Cong. Ch. 8.70
+
+Cheboygan. First Cong. Ch., add'l 0.97
+
+Grand Rapids. First Cong. Ch. 25.50
+
+Hopkins. First Ch. 6.50
+
+Laingsburg. Cong. Ch. 4.50
+
+Lansing. Cong. Ch. 7.00
+
+Northville. D. Pomeroy 5.00
+
+Salem. Miss'y Soc. of Second Cong. Ch., for Athens, Ala. 5.59
+
+South Haven. First Cong. Ch. 14.50
+
+----. "Muskegon" 2.00
+
+Woman's Home Missionary Union of Mich., by Mrs. E.F. Grabill, Treas.,
+for Woman's Work:
+
+Bay City. W.H.M.S. 2.00
+
+Cheboygan. W.H.M.S. 5.00
+
+------ 7.00
+
+ WISCONSIN, $222.03.
+
+Baraboo. Miss'y Soc., Bbl. of C., for Storrs Sch., Atlanta, Ga.
+
+Boscobel. Cong. Ch. 2.25
+
+Bristol and Paris. Christian Endeavor Soc., 2.55; Ladies' Soc. of
+Cong. Ch., Bbl. of C., for Thomasville, Ga. 2.55
+
+Brodhead. Cong. Ch. 4.27
+
+Darlington. Cong. Ch. ..7.33
+
+Fond du Lac. First Cong. Ch., 2 Bbls. C., for Storrs Sch., Atlanta,
+Ga.
+
+Green Bay. Ladies' Miss'y Soc., Bbl. of C., for Austin, Tex.
+
+Janesville. "Friends," Box of C., for Marion, Ala.
+
+La Crosse. "A Friend," 25; Cong. Ch., 10 35.00
+
+Lake Geneva. Mrs. Geo. Allen 5.00
+
+Leeds. Cong. Ch. 5.00
+
+Mazo Manie. Cong. Ch. 7.07
+
+Milwaukee. Plymouth Ch. 40.58
+
+Peshtigo. Cong. Ch. 3.22
+
+Sparta. Cong. Ch. 40.41
+
+Stoughton. Miss Sewell's S.S. Class, Christmas Gifts, for Austin,
+Texas
+
+Waukesha. "Friends," for Student Aid, Marion Ala. 15.00
+
+Wauwatosa. Ladies' Miss'y Soc., Box of C., for Austin, Texas
+
+Windsor. Cong. Ch. 18.75
+
+Woman's Home Missionary Union of Wis., for Woman's Work:
+
+Green Bay. W.M.S. 9.00
+
+Milwaukee. W.H.M.U., Grand Av. Ch. 25.00
+
+Stoughton. Sab. Sch. Birthday Box 1.60
+
+------- 35.60
+
+ IOWA, $204.31
+
+Burlington. Mercy Lewis, for Chinese M. 0.50
+
+Cedar Rapids. Sab. Sch. of First Cong. Ch., Birthday Offerings 1.97
+
+Cherokee. Sab. Sch. of Cong. Ch., for Student Aid, Straight U. 10.00
+
+Chester Center. Cong. Ch. 9.85
+
+Danville. L. Mix 5.00
+
+Denmark. Sab. Sch. of Cong. Ch. 14.50 Farragut. Mrs. L.S. Chapin, for
+Woman's Work 2.00
+
+Garnaville. Rev. G.M. Porter 3.00
+
+Hull. Mrs. E.C. Davidson, for Student Aid, Williamsburg, Ky. 6.00
+
+Iowa City. Sab. Sch., for Pleasant Hill, Tenn. 15.00
+
+Iowa City. Mrs. R.A. McClain 5.00
+
+McGregor. J.H. Ellsworth 10.00
+
+McGregor. S.S. Class, by Mrs. S.J. Peterson, for Student Aid, Straight
+U. 5.00
+
+McGregor. Mrs. C.E. Daniels, for Freight 2.30
+
+New Hampton. First Cong. Ch. 12.30
+
+Newton. Wittenberg Sab. Sch. 14.78
+
+Sioux City. First Cong. Ch. 44.00
+
+Stuart. Bbl. of C., for Savannah, Ga.
+
+Tabor. Cong. Ch., for Tillotson C. & N. Inst. 10.00
+
+Tipton. Mrs. M.D. Clapp 3.50
+
+Tyrone. Wm. Griffiths 0.25
+
+Woman's Home Missionary Union of Iowa, for Woman's Work:
+
+Grinnell. W.H.M.U. 3.68
+
+Le Mars. " " 5.73
+
+McGregor. L.M.S. 6.95
+
+Osage. W.M.S. 3.00
+
+Tipton. L.M.S. 10.00
+
+------- 29.36
+
+ MINNESOTA, $220.25.
+
+Brainerd. First Cong. Ch. 12.00
+
+Hancock. Sab. Sch. Miss'y Soc., for Savannah, Ga. 5.00
+
+Leech Lake. C.P. Allen, M.D. 30.00
+
+Plainview. Cong. Ch. 14.11
+
+Plainview. Box of S.S. Supplies, for Corbin, Ky.
+
+Rochester. W.J. Eaton, 50; Cong. Ch., 40.87 90.87
+
+Sauk Center. Sab. Sch. of Cong. Ch. 8.00
+
+Sauk Center. "Little Lights," Box Papers, etc., for Jonesboro, Tenn.
+
+Stillwater. Grace Cong. Ch. 2.92
+
+Wabasha. Cong. Sab. Sch. and Y.P.S.C.E. 27.25
+{115}
+
+Worthington. Union Cong. Ch. 21.55
+
+Zumbrota. Cong. Ch. 8.55
+
+ MISSOURI, $236.60.
+
+Bevier. Luella J. Hudelson 2.00
+
+Kansas City. Olivet Cong. Ch., in part 9.05
+
+St. Louis. Pilgrim Cong. Ch., 200; Third Cong. Ch., 10.55 210.55
+
+St. Louis. Mrs. R.H. Webb, for Straight U. 10.00
+
+Webster Groves. Cong. Ch. 5.00
+
+ KANSAS, $85.65.
+
+Atchison. Cong. Ch., for Tillotson C. & N. Inst. 5.00
+
+Dover. Cong. Ch. 2.80
+
+Lawrence. Second Cong. Ch., "Thank Offering" 1.00
+
+Topeka. Woman's H.M. Soc., for Storrs Sch., Atlanta, Ga. 75.00
+
+Topeka. Ladies' Miss'y Soc. 2 Bbls. of C. for Storrs Sch., Atlanta,
+Ga.
+
+Wakarusa. Cong. Ch. 1.85
+
+ DAKOTA, $5.00.
+
+Sioux Falls. W.M.S., by Mrs. Sue Fifield, Terr. Treas. 5.00
+
+ NEBRASKA, $47.00.
+
+Cowles. Cong. Ch. 2.00
+
+Omaha. First Cong. Ch. (in part) 10.00
+
+Oxford. F.A. Wood 5.00
+
+Wahoo. Cong. Ch., to const. Rev. A.A. CRESSMAN L.M. 30.00
+
+ CALIFORNIA, $62.50.
+
+Riverside. C.W. Herron's S.S. Class, for Student Aid, Tougaloo U. 8.00
+
+San Luis Obispo. Rev. E.N. Bartlett 4.50
+
+Santa Barbara. Rev. Edward Hildreth, to const. PHILO C. HILDRETH L.M.
+50.00
+
+ DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA, $70.00.
+
+Washington. "Two Members First Cong. Ch.," for Indian M., and to
+const. MRS. SARAH B.A. ROBINSON and MISS SARAH M. ROBINSON L.M.'s
+60.00
+
+Washington. Lincoln Memorial Ch. 10.00
+
+ MARYLAND, $393.16.
+
+Baltimore. First Cong. Ch. 105 of which for Indian M. 393.16
+
+ KENTUCKY, $450.86.
+
+Lexington. Tuition 314.21
+
+Williamsburg. Tuition 136.65
+
+ TENNESSEE, $1,126.03.
+
+Grand View. Tuition 45.00
+
+Jonesboro. Tuition, 22.25; County Fund, 40 62.25
+
+Memphis. Tuition 467.20
+
+Nashville. Tuition, 509.08; Rent, 6.50 515.58
+
+Pleasant Hill. Miss J.A. Calkins, 31; Mrs. Shroyer, 1; "A Friend," 1;
+"A Friend," by Mrs. Shroyer, 1, for Pleasant Hill, Tenn. 34.00
+
+Sherwood. Mrs. O.N. Alden 2.00
+
+ NORTH CAROLINA, $177.35.
+
+Raleigh. First Cong. Ch., Christmas Offering 4.85
+
+Troy. By S.D. Leak 1.00
+
+Wilmington. Tuition 163.00
+
+Wilmington. By Miss H.L. Fitts 8.50
+
+ SOUTH CAROLINA, $228.62.
+
+Charleston. Tuition 228.62
+
+ GEORGIA, $882.94.
+
+Atlanta. Storrs Sch., Tuition 295.85
+
+Atlanta. First Cong. Ch., Birthday Offerings 1.04
+
+Macon. Tuition 246.35
+
+Marietta. Ch. and Sab. Sch. 1.00
+
+McIntosh. Tuition 58.75
+
+Savannah. Tuition 207.70
+
+Thomasville. Tuition 72.25
+
+ ALABAMA, $706.35.
+
+Athens. Tuition 57.75
+
+Birmingham. Christmas Gift, Cong. Ch. 5.60
+
+Ironaton. Cong. Ch. 1.50
+
+Jenifer. Cong. Ch. 3.60
+
+Marion. Tuition, 130.50; "Southern Friend" (C.W.L.). for Marion,
+Ala., 5; Cong. Ch., 3 138.50
+
+Mobile. Tuition 288.90
+
+Selma. "Two Southern Friends," for Marion, Ala. 30.00
+
+Selma. W.M. Ass'n, Cong. Ch., for Indian M. 5.00
+
+Talladega. Tuition 176.10
+
+ FLORIDA, $80.00.
+
+Orlando. M. Marty 10.00
+
+Saint Augustine. Pub. Sch. Fund 70.00
+
+ LOUISIANA, $419.75
+
+New Orleans. Tuition 389.75
+
+New Orleans. M.L. Berger, D.D., to const himself L.M. 30.00
+
+ MISSISSIPPI, $209.65.
+
+Port Gibson. Mrs. M.S. Bradford, for Freight 1.85
+
+Tougaloo. Tuition 206.30
+
+Tougaloo. Rent 2.00
+
+ TEXAS, $127.84.
+
+Austin. Tuition, 123.84; "Friends." 4; Mr. Blatchford, Ag't, 1
+Webster's Unabridged Dictionary, 1 Webster's Academic Dictionary, for
+Tillotson C. & N. Inst. 127.84
+
+ INCOMES, $29.05.
+
+Avery Fund, for Mendi M. 29.05
+
+ CANADA, $10.00.
+
+Montreal. Chas. Alexander 5.00
+
+Toronto. Mrs. Jane Ebbs 5.00
+
+ TURKEY, $10.00.
+
+Van. Rev. Geo. C. Raynolds 10.00
+
+==========
+
+Donations 10,146.59
+
+Legacies 4,242.20
+
+Incomes 29.05
+
+Tuition 4,250.05
+
+Rents 8.50
+
+----------
+
+Total for February 18,676.39
+
+Total from Oct. 1 to Feb'y 29 110,091.90
+
+==========
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ FOR THE AMERICAN MISSIONARY.
+
+Subscriptions for February 104.41
+
+Previously acknowledged 458.09
+
+------
+
+Total 562.50
+
+======
+
+H.W. HUBBARD, Treasurer,
+
+56 Reade St., N.Y.
+{116}
+
+ * * * * *
+
+JAMES McCREERY & CO.
+
+invite special attention to the
+
+FURLEY & BUTTRUM
+
+Celebrated English Fine Merino Underwear, in all weights and grades
+for men, women and children, for the spring and summer season.
+
+ORDERS BY MAIL will receive prompt attention.
+
+BROADWAY and ELEVENTH ST.,
+
+NEW YORK.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Liquid Cottage Colors.
+
+The best MIXED PAINTS manufactured. Guaranteed to give perfect
+satisfaction if properly applied. They are heavy bodied, and for work
+that does not require an extra heavy coat, they can be thinned (with
+our Old Fashioned Kettle-boiled Linseed Oil) and still cover better
+than most of the mixed paints sold in the market, many of which have
+so little stock in them that they will not give a good solid coat.
+
+Some manufacturers of mixed paints direct NOT to rub out the paint,
+but to FLOW it on; the reason being that if such stuff were rubbed out
+there would be but little left to cover, would be transparent. Our
+Cottage Colors have great strength or body, and, like any good paint,
+should be worked out well under the brush. The covering property of
+this paint is so excellent as to allow this to be done.
+
+Put up for shipment as follows: In 3-gal. and 5-gal. bailed buckets,
+also barrels; in cans of 1/8, 1/4, 1/2, 1-gal. and 2-gal. each.
+
+Sample Cards of Colors, Testimonials and prices sent on application to
+
+Chicago White Lead & Oil Co.,
+
+Cor. Green & Fulton Streets,
+
+CHICAGO, ILL.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+6%, 7%.
+
+THE AMERICAN INVESTMENT CO. OF EMMETTSBURG, IOWA,
+
+with a PAID-UP CAPITAL of $600,000, SURPLUS $75,000, offers First
+Mortgage Loans drawing SEVEN per cent., both Principal and Interest
+FULLY GUARANTEED. Also 6 per cent. ten-year Debenture Bonds, secured
+by 105 per cent. of First Mortgage Loans held in trust by the
+MERCANTILE TRUST COMPANY, New York. 5 per cent. certificates of
+deposit for periods under one year.
+
+7 2/3% CAN BE REALIZED BY CHANGING 4 Per Ct. Government Bonds Into 6
+Per Cent. Debentures.
+
+Write for full information and reference to the Company at
+
+150 NASSAU STREET, NEW YORK.
+
+A.L. ORMSBY, Vice-President and Gen. Manager
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MUSIC IN THE SPRING
+
+There are yet some weeks of cool weather in which to prepare and
+practice music for the concluding concerts and festivals of the
+season.
+
+It is quite time to send for our complete and rich lists of EASTER
+MUSIC
+
+Now let girls and boys begin to practice the sweet CANTATAS--VOICES OF
+NATURE, or FOREST JUBILEE BAND, or MERRY COMPANY, or NEW FLORA'S
+FESTIVAL; each 40 cents, or $3.60 per dozen.
+
+Pupils of the higher schools will like DRESS REHEARSAL (50c., or $4.50
+per doz.), NEW FLOWER QUEEN (60c., or $5.40 per doz.), or HAYMAKERS
+($1.00, or $9.00 per doz.)
+
+Fine Cantatas of moderate difficulty for adults are: HEROES OF '76
+($1.00), HERBERT AND ELSA (75c.), JOSEPH'S BONDAGE ($1.00), REBECCA
+(65c.), RUTH AND BOAZ (65c.), WRECK OF HESPERUS (35c), FAIR MELUSINA
+(75c.), BATTLE OF HUNS (80c.), Send for lists.
+
+For Male Quartets and Choruses:
+
+SANGERFEST ($1.38), MALE VOICE GLEE BOOK ($1.00), EMERSON'S QUARTETS
+AND CHORUSES (60 cts.), EMERSON'S MALE VOICE GEMS ($1.00).
+
+Mailed for the Retail Price.
+
+Oliver Ditson & Co., Boston.
+
+C.H. DITSON & CO., 867 Broadway, New York.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Footnote 1: Deceased.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The American Missionary, Vol. XLII.
+April, 1888. No. 4., by Various
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 12087 ***
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+ <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=UTF-8" />
+ <title>American Missionary - April 1888.</title>
+ <style type="text/css">
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+ <body>
+<div>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 12087 ***</div>
+
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page85" id="page85"></a>{85}</span>
+ <h1>The American Missionary</h1>
+ <hr class="full" />
+ <table width="100%" summary="Title">
+ <tr>
+ <td align="left" width="25%"><b>Vol. XLII.</b></td>
+ <td align="center" width="50%"><b>April, 1888.</b></td>
+ <td align="right" width="25%"><b>No. 4.</b></td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+ <hr class="full" />
+ <h2>CONTENTS</h2>
+ <ul>
+ <li>
+ EDITORIAL.
+ <ul>
+ <li><a href="#editorial1">FINANCIAL&mdash;PARAGRAPH</a></li>
+ <li><a href="#editorial2">MOUNTAIN WORK&mdash;ATLANTA UNIVERSITY</a></li>
+ <li><a href="#editorial3">INDIAN ORDER&mdash;FROM GEO. W. CABLE</a></li>
+ <li><a href="#editorial4">DEATH OF HON. A.S. BARNES</a></li>
+ <li><a href="#editorial5">PARAGRAPHS</a></li>
+ <li><a href="#editorial6">SPECIMENS OF SCHOOL ENDEAVOR</a></li>
+ <li><a href="#editorial7">A SERIOUS ALARM IN GEORGIA</a></li>
+ <li><a href="#editorial8">EDUCATIONAL WORK IN THE SOUTH</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li>
+ THE SOUTH.
+ <ul>
+ <li><a href="#south">LETTER FROM AN EVANGELIST</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li>
+ THE CHINESE.
+ <ul>
+ <li><a href="#chinese">RESULTS THAT ELUDE THE STATISTICIAN</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li>
+ BUREAU OF WOMAN'S WORK.
+ <ul>
+ <li><a href="#bureau">THE BLACK WOMAN OF THE SOUTH</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li>
+ YOUNG FOLKS.
+ <ul>
+ <li><a href="#young1">WHAT SUSIE FOUND AT TOUGALOO</a></li>
+ <li><a href="#young2">LETTER FROM AN INDIAN PUPIL</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li><a href="#receipts">RECEIPTS</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ <hr class="full" />
+ <table width="100%" summary="Publisher">
+ <tr>
+ <td align="left" width="25%"><b>New York.</b><br />
+ Price, 50 Cents a Year, in Advance.</td>
+ <td align="center" width="50%"><b>Published by the American Missionary
+ Association.</b><br />
+ Entered at the Post-Office at New York, N.Y., as second-class matter.</td>
+ <td align="right" width="25%"><b>Rooms, 56 Reade Street.</b></td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+ <hr class="full" />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page86" id="page86"></a>{86}</span>
+ <h2>American Missionary Association.</h2>
+ <hr class="quarter" />
+ <div class="association">
+ <p class="title">PRESIDENT,</p>
+ <p>&mdash;&mdash;&mdash; &mdash;&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+ <p class="title"><i>Vice-Presidents.</i></p>
+ <p>Rev. A.J.F. BEHRENDS, D.D., N.Y.</p>
+ <p>Rev. ALEX. MCKENZIE, D.D., Mass.</p>
+ <p>Rev. F.A. NOBLE, D.D., Ill.</p>
+ <p>Rev. D.O. MEARS, D.D., Mass.</p>
+ <p>Rev. HENRY HOPKINS, D.D., Mo.</p>
+ <p class="title"><i>Corresponding Secretaries.</i></p>
+ <p>Rev. M.E. STRIEBY, D.D., 56 Reade Street, N.Y.</p>
+ <p>Rev. A.F. BEARD, D.D., 56 Reade Street, N.Y.</p>
+ <p class="title"><i>Treasurer.</i></p>
+ <p>H.W. HUBBARD, Esq., 56 Reade Street, N.Y.</p>
+ <p class="title"><i>Auditors.</i></p>
+ <p>PETER MCCARTEE.</p>
+ <p>CHAS. P. PEIRCE.</p>
+ <p class="title"><i>Executive Committee.</i></p>
+ <p>JOHN H. WASHBURN, Chairman.</p>
+ <p>ADDISON P. FOSTER, Secretary.</p>
+ <p class="title"><i>For Three Years.</i></p>
+ <p>LYMAN ABBOTT,</p>
+ <p>A.S. BARNES,<a id="footnotetag1" name="footnotetag1"></a><a
+ href="#footnote1"><sup>1</sup></a></p>
+ <p>J.R. DANFORTH,</p>
+ <p>CLINTON B. FISK,</p>
+ <p>ADDISON P. FOSTER,</p>
+ <p class="title"><i>For Two Years.</i></p>
+ <p>S.B. HALLIDAY,</p>
+ <p>SAMUEL HOLMES,</p>
+ <p>SAMUEL S. MARPLES,</p>
+ <p>CHARLES L. MEAD,</p>
+ <p>ELBERT B. MONROE,</p>
+ <p class="title"><i>For One Year.</i></p>
+ <p>J.E. RANKIN,</p>
+ <p>WM. H. WARD,</p>
+ <p>J.W. COOPER,</p>
+ <p>JOHN H. WASHBURN,</p>
+ <p>EDMUND L. CHAMPLIN.</p>
+ <p class="title"><i>District Secretaries.</i></p>
+ <p>Rev. C.J. RYDER, <i>21 Cong'l House, Boston.</i></p>
+ <p>Rev. J.E. ROY, D.D., 151 <i>Washington Street, Chicago</i>.</p>
+ <p class="title"><i>Financial Secretary for Indian Missions.</i></p>
+ <p>Rev. CHAS. W. SHELTON,</p>
+ <p class="title"><i>Bureau of Woman's Work.</i></p>
+ <p><i>Secretary</i>, Miss D.E. EMERSON, 56 <i>Reade Street, N.Y.</i></p>
+ </div>
+ <hr class="full" />
+ <h3>COMMUNICATIONS</h3>
+ <p>Relating to the work of the Association may be addressed to the Corresponding
+ Secretaries; letters for "THE AMERICAN MISSIONARY," to the Editor, at the New York
+ Office.</p>
+ <h3>DONATIONS AND SUBSCRIPTIONS</h3>
+ <p>In drafts, checks, registered letters, or post office orders, may be sent to H.W.
+ Hubbard, Treasurer, 56 Reade Street, New York, or, when more convenient, to either of
+ the Branch Offices, 21 Congregational House, Boston, Mass., or 151 Washington Street,
+ Chicago, Ill. A payment of thirty dollars at one time constitutes a Life Member.</p>
+ <h3>FORM OF A BEQUEST.</h3>
+ <p>"I bequeath to my executor (or executors) the sum of &mdash;&mdash; dollars, in
+ trust, to pay the same in &mdash;&mdash; days after my decease to the person who,
+ when the same is payable, shall act as Treasurer of the 'American Missionary
+ Association,' of New York City, to be applied, under the direction of the Executive
+ Committee of the Association, to its charitable uses and purposes." The Will should
+ be attested by three witnesses.</p>
+ <hr class="full" />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page87" id="page87"></a>{87}</span>
+ <h2>THE AMERICAN MISSIONARY.</h2>
+ <hr />
+ <table width="50%" summary="Title" align="center">
+ <tr>
+ <td align="left" width="25%"><b>Vol. XLII.</b></td>
+ <td align="center" width="50%"><b>April, 1888.</b></td>
+ <td align="right" width="25%"><b>No. 4.</b></td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+ <hr />
+ <h4>American Missionary Association.</h4>
+ <hr class="quarter" />
+ <a name="editorial1" id="editorial1"></a>
+ <p>We acknowledge with gratitude to God and to his people the fact that our receipts
+ during the month of February are such as greatly to encourage us.</p>
+ <p>We are cheered, not only by the benevolences which are reporting themselves from
+ the churches, but also by the kind words of sympathy and helpfulness which show us
+ anew that this great and exigent work upon us was never nearer than now to the hearts
+ of our pastors and churches.</p>
+ <p>We may add that the month just past and those immediately before us are those upon
+ which we must largely depend for our fiscal year. We are coming to the summer season,
+ when contributions are less likely to be taken. We trust that those who believe that
+ God has called the American Missionary Association to this immense work in the name
+ of Christ, will not cease to pray that the hearts of men may be moved to heed the
+ appeals of those who, through us, ask for the very bread of life, and who will not
+ have it unless we carry it to them.</p>
+ <p>We are now compelled to deny more appeals for help which ought to be heard than we
+ are granting. Several schools which were begun by private enterprise with good
+ intent, are now asking us to take them from their hands upon our own, where they can
+ be perpetuated and saved. We would like to save these schools to the needy people
+ whose hope is in them, and to protect the churches from indiscriminate appeals for
+ works which they have not authorized, and which we could do with greater economy and
+ better care; but for this we need a generous increase of gifts. Our faith was in Him
+ who said, "Knock, and it shall be opened unto you," and the doors were opened. God
+ withdrew the bolts of hindrance and said, "Beloved, I have set before you an open
+ door." Our faith is in Him who also said "Ask, and ye shall receive."</p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>A friend has just sent us eighteen subscriptions to the <i>American
+ Missionary.</i> This might be repeated easily by a thousand friends. There is <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page88" id="page88"></a>{88}</span> scarcely a
+ self-sustaining church in the United States where it could not be done by one who
+ would try to do it as an act of missionary love. Some who read this, perhaps, will
+ try and will succeed.</p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>The name of Rev. Frank Cross, who was appointed to the charge of the Rosebud
+ Indian Mission, was by mistake not printed in the roll of workers. He is there,
+ however, and his work has gone on bravely and hopefully.</p>
+ <hr />
+ <a name="editorial2" id="editorial2"></a>
+ <p>We wish that the extent, and necessity, and hopefulness of our mountain work, were
+ more fully understood by our readers. Now is our opportunity and the accepted time to
+ answer the most urgent appeals from this neglected region in the heart of our
+ country. Our Congregational churches are just what are needed to uplift these people.
+ One of our earnest missionaries writes us:&mdash;</p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>"The A.M.A. has done a work here to be profoundly grateful for as a beginning,
+ but thus far it is only playing around the edge of its mountain work. This mountain
+ region is of great extent. Sober calculation from facts already gleaned, makes a
+ thousand Congregational churches in these mountains the possibility of the future,
+ if only the strategic points can now be occupied. One church and one school to a
+ county, should be our immediate aim; then we can throw upon these the work of
+ developing native teachers and preachers for the rest. There are forty counties
+ waiting for us, and all our mountain work so far is in three or four. I see this
+ place where I am, changing like magic under the influence of school and church, but
+ the necessity for our going forward oppresses me. I am ready for any additional
+ labor, and will carry any burden my strength will permit, if only the American
+ Missionary Association will take for its motto, 'One church and one school in every
+ mountain county, as fast as they can be established.' I feel, when I see the need,
+ as if I could plead the money right out of the most self-indulgent members of our
+ favored churches at home. It would not be expensive as compared with other
+ missionary work. Cannot some way be devised for making a large advance on the
+ present movement?"</p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <hr />
+ <p>Those who thought to cripple Atlanta University because it could not yield its
+ principles for the sake of a State appropriation of $8,000 made a mistake. They have
+ helped that which they meant to hinder. The university will get the money. Joseph's
+ brethren took counsel together and said, "We will see what will become of his dream,"
+ and they thought they had a sure thing when they put him in a pit, but they
+ discovered <span class="pagenum"><a name="page89" id="page89"></a>{89}</span> some
+ years after that this was but a way-station on the direct road to the Viceroyship of
+ Egypt, and they saw what became of his dream.</p>
+ <p>When Napoleon the First wished to hinder the Huguenot Church, he gave it a small
+ stipend in order to retain hold of it. He appropriated just enough to keep it a
+ cripple. When the State of Georgia thought the education of the Negro was becoming
+ too marked, it reversed the policy of the far-seeing Bonaparte and took its hands
+ off. We have never thought that Napoleon was a truly good man, but we do believe that
+ he had a larger idea of the philosophy of control than the author of the Glenn Bill.
+ If the State had held on, it might have hindered, but it has lost its hold.</p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>Would it not sound well to the American people to have it said that in the United
+ States of America, in the year 1888, our missionaries were imprisoned for reading the
+ Bible to a heathen tribe of Indians who lived remote from civilization, the crime of
+ it being that it was read in the only language which they could understand?</p>
+ <p>Yet "the orders are," writes a missionary, "that we shall hold only two services
+ on a Sunday and two during the week, and that we shall cease to read the Bible in the
+ Indian homes." This is the Government authority of the great and free United States,
+ but is there any authority greater than God?</p>
+ <hr />
+ <a name="editorial3" id="editorial3"></a>
+ <p>In an eloquent address at the Old South Church in Boston, on Sunday, March 4th,
+ George W. Cable accentuated in strong words the work in which we are engaged. "Here
+ is the mightiest, the widest, the most fruitful, the most abundant, the most
+ prolific, missionary field that was ever opened to any Christian people."</p>
+ <p>We quote from his address:</p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>The benevolence of Northern men and women, yea, and even of Northern children,
+ helped to establish in the South these missionary colleges, these educational
+ missions, wherein not the black man alone, not the black woman alone, but every one
+ who was qualified with orderly behavior and a rational intellect might come, and
+ get, not only an education, but a Christian education, and not only a Christian
+ education, but a Christian American education. These institutions, standing out in
+ the darkness when nothing else stood by them, when the land was racked and torn and
+ bled afresh under the agonies of reconstruction, these institutions began and
+ carried on the blessed work of raising up leaders, intellectual leaders, among the
+ black people, for the guidance and stimulation of the colored race toward the
+ aspirations of American citizenship and Christian intelligence.</p>
+ <p>These institutions, these missionary colleges in the South, have carried the
+ torch of liberty, these have upheld it, these have taught American citizenship,
+ these have given to the Southern States 16,000 colored teachers, when nobody else
+ would teach the poor black boy&mdash;nay, or the poor white boy either. Seven
+ millions of people concerned in the matter, and the National Bureau of Public
+ Education reporting year after year that <span class="pagenum"><a name="page90"
+ id="page90"></a>{90}</span> the reason why there are 600,000 colored youth out of
+ the public schools, is not because they don't want to go, but because there are not
+ school-houses and school teachers.</p>
+ <p>Here is the mightiest, the widest, the most fruitful, the most abundant, the
+ most prolific, missionary field that was ever opened to any Christian people. It is
+ right here at your doors. It is not across the Pacific Ocean and it is not down
+ yonder around the Cape of Good Hope. Right here at our doors is the greediest
+ people for education and the gospel there is on the face of this earth, not counted
+ among our white race. I suppose that ninety-nine one-hundredths of those who
+ generously give to this cause believe to-day that it is being given to in generous
+ proportion. Ah! you never figured on it. Why, if you knew the national value of
+ this work, to say nothing of its gospel value, you would quadruplicate it before
+ the year is out. You would not submit to it for a moment, as citizens, not merely
+ as members of Christ's Church.</p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <hr />
+ <a name="editorial4" id="editorial4"></a>
+ <p>The American Missionary Association is called again to mourn the decease of one of
+ its officers. Hon. Alfred S. Barnes, a member of its Executive Committee, after an
+ illness extending over five months, at his residence in Brooklyn, finished his
+ earthly life on Friday, February 17th, at the age of seventy-one years. Mr. Barnes
+ was elected on the Executive Board of the A.M.A. nineteen years ago, and had served
+ in that capacity continuously up to the day of his death. He was a wise counsellor,
+ large-minded in his views and honorable in his spirit, known throughout the land as
+ one of the foremost publishers in the country, largely interested in educational
+ work, and yet he found time for an earnest devotion to various enterprises in the
+ Christian church. His fidelity and helpfulness in the service of the A.M.A. are fully
+ known only to those who were associated with him. Many organizations of missionary
+ and Christian work will miss his presence and the help of his generous stewardship,
+ but none will feel his departure more truly than the American Missionary Association,
+ which has lost its President, one of its Secretaries, and this long-honored member of
+ its Executive Board within the last half-year. The greatness of his work in our
+ service will be remembered and cherished.</p>
+ <hr />
+ <a name="editorial5" id="editorial5"></a>
+ <p>We acknowledge among our exchanges, the <i>Fisk Herald</i>, published at
+ Nashville; the <i>Atlanta Bulletin</i>; the <i>Olio</i>, of Straight University; the
+ <i>Tougaloo Quarterly</i>; the <i>Head and Hand</i>, of Le Moyne Normal Institute at
+ Memphis; the <i>Helping Hand</i>, of Sherwood, Tenn.; <i>Our Work</i>, of Talladega
+ College; the <i>Howard University Reporter</i>, of Washington; the <i>Word
+ Carrier</i>, of Santee Agency, and <i>Iapi Oahe</i>, of Santee Agency; also the
+ <i>Christian Aid</i>, published by our church in Dallas; the <i>Beach Record</i>,
+ (occasional) by our school in Savannah.</p>
+ <p>Several of these papers are models of their kind, publishing original articles
+ written by the students and professors, and printed by the students with superior
+ typographical skill. As indicators of progress, they are full <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page91" id="page91"></a>{91}</span> of interest, apart from
+ the items of local school and church intelligence with which they are freighted.</p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>We commend to our readers, "The Missionary Review of the World," edited jointly by
+ Rev. J.M. Sherwood, D.D., of New York, and Rev. A.T. Pierson, D.D., of
+ Philadelphia.</p>
+ <p>One rises from its pages as if he had been breathing Christian ozone. The
+ editorials are upon living topics and issues, and are vigorously presented. The
+ "Review" sweeps its vision over the entire world and it not only sees, but knows how
+ to tell what it sees. If the high standard of literary excellence so far sustained
+ can be continuously held, we shall have a magazine of missions which will be the peer
+ of our best literary monthlies in quality and interest.</p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>We congratulate the Congregational Sunday-School and Publishing Society on the
+ acceptance of its appointment of Rev. Geo. M. Boynton as its Secretary. We have known
+ him as a member of the Executive Committee of the American Missionary Association, as
+ editor of THE AMERICAN MISSIONARY, as a pastor, as a secretary of Associations and
+ Conferences, as a wise counsellor and genial brother. We regard him as eminently
+ fitted for the place to which he has been called. To Brother Boynton we extend most
+ cordially a welcome to the honorable, the fraternity of the Secretaries.</p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>The fifth annual report of the Executive Committee of the Indian Rights
+ Association, written by Mr. James B. Harrison, is a strong and valuable contribution
+ to the literature of Indian rights and wrongs, which should be considered by every
+ friend of the Red Man. Respecting the orders of the Indian office at Washington which
+ abridge the liberty of religious teaching, this report characterizes them as
+ "unintelligent, arbitrary, despotic and unstatesmanlike, merely a blow at missionary
+ work. There is no reason to suppose that a single Indian anywhere will ever learn ten
+ words more of English by reason of these orders. There is, indeed, no provision made
+ by the Government for any increase of facilities in the study of English. The damage
+ to the missionary work produced by these orders is their sole result. The orders
+ should be distinctly and wholly revoked and withdrawn. It is not necessary that the
+ missionaries and churches should submit. If they will publish the facts fully these
+ orders will be revoked. The facts must come to light. Then the people of the country
+ will have something to say."</p>
+ <p>The above quotation will give our readers the flavor of the pages. "Plain words
+ are best," and it is time that the country should have them. <span class="pagenum"><a
+ name="page92" id="page92"></a>{92}</span> No one can read the statements in this able
+ Report without having his heart stirred with honest indignation at the condition of
+ Indian affairs, through the unfortunate unfitness of the Government Bureau.</p>
+ <hr class="full" />
+ <a name="editorial6" id="editorial6"></a>
+ <h4>SPECIMENS OF SCHOOL ENDEAVOR.</h4>
+ <h5>THREE COMPOSITIONS.</h5>
+ <h6>LETHER.</h6>
+ <p>Lether is mad from the hide of animals. They first kill the animal then the hide
+ is sent to a tan yard and there it is tan are made lether from, then to a shoemaker's
+ shop where it is made into boots shoes saddles. The finest of gloves is the kid skin
+ glove, that is all I will say about kid skin gloves. Most of the bad boots and shoes
+ we have is horse lether or mule lether, that is all I will say about mule lether and
+ horse lether. All the good boots and shoes we have is young calf lether, that is all
+ I will say about young calf lether.</p>
+ <p>All the boots shoes and every thing else we have made of lether is second thing
+ because some poor animal was rob-ed of his coat that we might have boots and many
+ other things.</p>
+ <p>&mdash;&mdash;, aged 16.</p>
+ <h6>NETELY.</h6>
+ <p>Netely are clean always and handsome to everybody. It are good in the cite of God
+ and man for it are a good thing to be netely always for it make a man look netely. If
+ we all are netely it are a good thing to be clean for it are a good thing in the time
+ of life so to be. Netely is deserving of everybody and grate with all mankind. It are
+ a good thing to be netely for it is beautiful and pretty. It are correct always and
+ never rong to nobody an it make a man feel better when he are netely an a nice
+ looking person when he are netely are clean before every body.</p>
+ <p>&mdash;&mdash;, aged 25.</p>
+ <h6>DRIVE WAGGON.</h6>
+ <p>That the kind of work I likes to do. When I drive waggon I rides a plenty. Riding
+ are a good thing because when folks is sick it are good for the helt. I likes to
+ drive it because I have been loadin it. This summer I hall fody. When I would load
+ the barn yard wagon full of fody it would be high from the groun, that is nice but
+ sometimes it would turn over, that would be truble. Truble are a bad thing.</p>
+ <p>&mdash;&mdash;, aged 17.</p>
+ <hr class="full" />
+ <h5>ANSWERS TO QUESTIONS AT AN EXAMINATION OF TEACHERS IN GEORGIA.</h5>
+ <p><i>What is writing?</i></p>
+ <p>"Writing is the Representation of the human voice on the 11th part of a noun."</p>
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page93" id="page93"></a>{93}</span>
+ <p><i>How long since writing was invented?</i></p>
+ <p>"From the creation of the world, or from the birth of Christ."</p>
+ <p><i>What are the chief products of the State of Georgia?</i></p>
+ <p>"The chief products are Agriculture, Turpentine, rail-roads, lumber and grate deel
+ of merchandice bussyness."</p>
+ <hr class="full" />
+ <a name="editorial7" id="editorial7"></a>
+ <h4>A SERIOUS ALARM IN GEORGIA.</h4>
+ <p>The American Missionary is not published for the entertainment of its readers. It
+ has a more serious purpose. It speaks for races who have suffered grievous wrongs,
+ and for peoples whose condition is exceedingly sad. It has to do with tragic facts,
+ and much of what it has to say must excite compassion, and must appeal both to the
+ consciences of our readers and to their sense of duty. To call upon those whom God
+ has blessed, to insert themselves into the woes and spiritual wants of others who
+ need their help, is grave and serious.</p>
+ <p>This is one feature. There are others. The joy of the work and the joy of the
+ worker, which we are called to record, are a relief to the stories of necessity, and
+ are like beautiful pictures painted upon the dark background. When "Our eyes have
+ seen the glory of the coming of the Lord," we can for the time forget the darkness
+ upon which the light shines, and sing our hallelujahs. If it is saddening to tell of
+ the night, it is cheering to mark the fact that the providences of God are working
+ out his promises, and are surely bringing in God's day.</p>
+ <p>Over and above the evils to which we must call earnest heed, the dangers which are
+ not far away, and the exigencies of the cause of Christ, we are sure that no one can
+ read the MISSIONARY without being cheered and quickened in gratitude to God for what
+ he is graciously doing for his needy ones through his people.</p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>With the serious duty on the part of those who are working together with God for
+ the salvation of men, there drift along in the current of his providences certain
+ incidents that are exceedingly droll.</p>
+ <p>As we have seen some very ludicrous manifestations of character and conduct in the
+ terrible struggles of a battlefield, and have brushed aside our tears at times for an
+ irrepressible <i>bon mot</i> in a hospital, so in the weighty and solemn
+ considerations which continually appeal to us, and while we are anxiously asking how
+ we can make the most bricks for the Lord's building with the least straw, incidents
+ arise which not only throw light upon our serious work, but which are irresistibly
+ amusing.</p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>We think we should share with our readers a recent one which, when <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page94" id="page94"></a>{94}</span> we read it in the
+ detail, impossible to be repeated here, made us smile. Every time we re-perused it we
+ thought it, as <i>Alice in Wonderland</i> said, "curiouser and curiouser."</p>
+ <p>Our readers are not strangers to the name and fame of the leading editor of the
+ chief paper in Georgia. They have heard of him as an eloquent orator with a brilliant
+ imagination which saw a New South in almost millennial array, and told of it with an
+ enthusiasm so contagious that to the sons of the Pilgrims after the fulness of a
+ great dinner it seemed that the "Promised day of Israel" had at last arrived. It is
+ true that when this dinner had been thoroughly digested, certain ones, removed from
+ the afflatus of the occasion began to ask, "Are these things so?" And when the Glenn
+ Bill sought the endorsement of public opinion, and substantially received it with no
+ word of reprobation from the eloquent orator and editor, some recalled the speech of
+ Sheridan in reply to Mr. Dundas, "The right honorable gentleman is indebted to his
+ imagination for his facts."</p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>In all this time no one suspected the <i>Atlanta Constitution</i> of possessing
+ the humorous character which it has lately revealed. In late issues of February it
+ has, in the garb of gravity, about two columns that are ridiculously funny.</p>
+ <p>It appears that Prof. Sumner Salter, a graduate of Amherst College, a son of an
+ honored pastor of Iowa, a musical director of exceptional gifts and a teacher of
+ eminent ability, was solicited by parties in Atlanta to take his residence there in
+ the interest of the musical cultivation of such as could secure his services. He soon
+ attracted the patronage of society, and all went smoothly until the tempter came.
+ Alas, there was a serpent in Eden, so there was a skeleton in the closet of the
+ <i>Atlanta Constitution</i>. It was a dreadful skeleton. The <i>Constitution</i>
+ seriously publishes the fact that "it was whispered about for some time," until
+ patience ceased to be a virtue, when it sent a guardian of public safety in the form
+ of a reporter to investigate. "Was it really true that a white man who was giving
+ music lessons to white people was also teaching a colored class at another time and
+ place? If so, what about the New South? The black man had no business to be black,
+ but he <i>was</i> all the same, and being so what right had Prof. Salter to teach
+ <i>colored</i> people to sing? Let the matter be thoroughly searched out. The
+ reporter departed on his mission, with a countenance more in sorrow than in anger,
+ and returned <i>vice versa</i>.</p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>"'Tis true, 'tis pity,</p>
+ <p>And pity 'tis 'tis true."</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p>The professor was actually doing this very absurd thing. He had taken charge of a
+ colored class in the church of which Rev. Evarts Kent is minister and was teaching
+ them how rightly to use the talents with which God had so richly endowed them.</p>
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page95" id="page95"></a>{95}</span>
+ <p>Accordingly, in the year of grace 1888, the <i>Atlanta Constitution</i> publishes
+ the astounding fact, and calls the world to heed it, in conspicuous head
+ lines:&mdash;</p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>"WHITE OR BLACK&mdash;A PROMINENT MUSICIAN WHO TEACHES BOTH COLORS&mdash;HIS
+ BUSINESS SAID TO BE INJURED."</p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>Then followed the whole sad story. The musician had been interviewed and
+ investigated. He did not deny the serious charge to this superintendent of public
+ proprieties. With a heart as hard as old Pharaoh's he proposed to go on and do more
+ likewise. In short, the representative of the <i>Constitution</i> could do nothing
+ with this intractable professor. Hence "he did not stand upon the order of his going,
+ but went at once," and reported that "<i>according to Mr. Suiter's own statement, he
+ is teaching a colored class</i>, and he has lost a white pupil, which shows that his
+ course is hurting his business." "Diligent inquiry has failed to bring to light any
+ proof that he has notified his <i>white</i> pupils that he is teaching <i>colored</i>
+ people."</p>
+ <p>Leaving out the meanness of this, has anyone read anything published lately more
+ ridiculous? It is not necessary to quote the professor's public reply. It simply
+ claimed the right of manhood and common sense, and doubtless left the
+ <i>Constitution</i> wondering how a man capable of making it appear so foolish could
+ yet descend to such depths of ignominy as to teach people whose ancestors came from
+ Africa, the unpardonable sin of singing praises to the Author of their being. To what
+ deeps some will descend! Why should colored people add to the criminality of being
+ born black, the fearful temptation of pay in advance to one who could teach them
+ while he had pupils who had the merit of having been born white?</p>
+ <p>This was really transpiring in the city of Atlanta several days in the month of
+ February in the year 1888, and was in successive issues of the <i>Constitution</i>,
+ which shows among other things that there is latitude, if not longitude, at a
+ Brooklyn New England dinner. Meanwhile we think we hear Uncle Rastus quoting the
+ prophecy, "The morning cometh and also the night," but he can't help laughing because
+ it is "awful funny."</p>
+ <hr class="full" />
+ <a name="editorial8" id="editorial8"></a>
+ <h4>THE EDUCATIONAL WORK IN THE SOUTH.</h4>
+ <p>BY REV. W.F. SLOCUM.</p>
+ <p>We may remember at the outset that in this matter of the education of the Negro we
+ are treating a question which must be considered, to a certain extent, ethnically. We
+ are dealing with a people with race peculiarities: but it seems to me that it is very
+ useless to ask whether we are training an inferior stock. There was a time when the
+ Anglo-Saxon stock was far inferior <span class="pagenum"><a name="page96"
+ id="page96"></a>{96}</span> to its present condition. We ourselves are not enough
+ removed from heathenism and barbarism to become very pharisaical.</p>
+ <p>Here is a race with its idiosyncrasies, and its peculiar latent possibilities,
+ which we cannot know until Christian education has unfolded them through many years.
+ We ought not to wonder that in many respects this people is yet in its moral and
+ intellectual infancy; but who dares say that it has not a future before it, with its
+ statesmen, its poets, its painters, its men of letters; that it is not to have its
+ own peculiar literature, its art, and even its own characteristic religious
+ expression, just as marked and important as those produced by any other race?
+ Certainly we have as much reason for believing it as that the Teutonic race of the
+ second century should produce its Goethe and its Schiller, its Kant and its Hegel,
+ its Luther and its Melanchthon; or that the Frank of the fifth century should develop
+ its Victor Hugo, its Lamartine, its Madam de Stael; or that out of the barbarism, the
+ cannibalism, the paganism of Norseman, Briton and Saxon, there should come
+ Shakespeare, Spencer, Macaulay, Browning and Gladstone. And we may not have to wait
+ as long; for in spite of slavery's binding chain thrice drawn round his soul, the
+ American Negro has been absorbing during the past from a civilization which has been
+ fitting him somewhat for the large Christian movement of the present. We are working
+ for a people which in all probability will form at least one-eighth of our whole
+ population; and we have the problem of lifting them as a race up into Christian
+ enlightenment. The dark skin is growing darker. There will be less and less of
+ intermixture of blood between the two races. Hence all study of this educational
+ question must have in view the large moral and intellectual enterprise of dealing
+ with a race as a race. I believe that there is nothing in all history to compare with
+ this opportunity which has come to our very doors. Here is a nation in our land and
+ with it every perplexity, every difficulty, every embarrassment, and also every
+ encouragement, every hope, and every inspiration for work, that can appeal to any
+ foreign missionary. Here is this God-given task laid at our very thresholds and with
+ all the sentiments of patriotism and Christian devotion urging us to our large
+ privilege.</p>
+ <p>What the race needs now is right leadership, and for many years to come we are to
+ equip men and women religiously and intellectually, who, in home, in church, in
+ social and business life, will be moral and social leaders. And by this power of
+ leadership I mean something far other than those foolish conceits which have taken
+ possession of a few who have touched only the surface of the new life that is coming
+ to this people.</p>
+ <p>I have rather in mind leaders who shall have that moral and intellectual fitness
+ which produces reverence, earnestness and humility, leaders who can draw their people
+ away from their foolishness, weakness and self-consciousness into the larger life
+ that is possible for them. Without a <span class="pagenum"><a name="page97"
+ id="page97"></a>{97}</span> doubt, what is needed is true leaders, and I wish to show
+ where these leaders are now demanded.</p>
+ <p>Before the war, the South knew nothing of the benefits of public schools, and the
+ private school was in harmony with its social and political conceptions; but of late,
+ and especially during the last decade, a remarkable change has taken place which is
+ doing as much to affect the whole Southern problem as anything that has occurred
+ there during half a century. It is a movement in the South, which, however
+ imperfectly it has been developed as yet, has come to remain, and will ultimately
+ affect every institution, social, political and religious, in our section of the
+ country.</p>
+ <p><i>It is now being recognized in every Southern State that free government is
+ based upon a public common-school system</i>. It has taken two decades to incorporate
+ this public school policy upon Southern institutions, but it has now the evidence of
+ permanency and it is offering to Christian philanthropy an unparalleled opportunity,
+ such as God seldom gives to any people, and one which should rally the churches as
+ never before in support of the great enterprises of the American Missionary
+ Association.</p>
+ <p>There has been forced upon the New South the conclusion that the best way to
+ increase its wealth is to increase the number of educated, intelligent producers, and
+ with this conclusion it realizes that it cannot afford to let two million colored
+ children grow up in hopeless illiteracy. It perceives that its very institutions will
+ be imperiled by such a condition. I have through personal interviews with leading
+ educators in a recent trip through the South, by correspondence and by a careful
+ examination of documents and reports from nearly all the Southern States, undertaken
+ to find just what is being done at the present time in the public colored schools of
+ the South.</p>
+ <p>The significance of this public school movement will be understood when it is
+ remembered that the acceptance of the idea that the constitution of a free State
+ rests on universal education, marks a great change in theory; that this has come
+ against the opinions of the old Bourbon party, which never forgets, and, it is to be
+ feared, never learns; whose political economy is represented by the expression, "keep
+ the negro down"; which regards his enfranchisment as a political outrage and his
+ education as a mistake and a failure; that it has risen in the face of the poverty of
+ the South and in the midst of its most intense prejudices. For when the new
+ educational movement began, the property and a large part of the intelligence
+ belonged to the opponents of the new educational policy, but now, in the words of a
+ prominent Southern gentleman: "The conviction has become very deep that in the
+ altered condition of our people the only hope left us is to do all that can be done
+ towards elevating the masses irrespective of race." This certainly represents a
+ tremendous transformation. Without stopping to trace the causes that produced it, or
+ even the large place the American Missionary Association work has in it, let me
+ simply quote from <span class="pagenum"><a name="page98" id="page98"></a>{98}</span>
+ a Southern Christian man, whose sympathies are full of prejudice against the North,
+ but who has wakened with the awakening of the New South.</p>
+ <p>Writing of the educational movement, in a recent book, he says: "Not a few of the
+ best men and women of the North have come to teach in these institutions for colored
+ youth: their motives and their work have not always been understood, but the Great
+ Day will make manifest how they have been constrained by the love of Christ, to spend
+ years in work which has had many discouragements." ('The New South' by J.C.C.
+ Newton.) A few statistics may give some general idea of the extent of this
+ movement.</p>
+ <p>The State of Alabama has 104,150 colored pupils enrolled in the public schools. It
+ pays an average of $25.97 per month to nearly 2,000 colored teachers, and expends
+ altogether $198,221 upon these colored schools. Georgia has 49 per cent. of its negro
+ school population enrolled; that is, 119,248. In 1871, this State had 6,664 only in
+ all public and private colored schools. Its teachers of this race now number 2,272.
+ 40,909 colored children are enrolled in Louisiana, with 672 negro teachers, who
+ receive an average of $23.73 per month.</p>
+ <p>Mississippi had last year 154,430 colored scholars. It employed 3,124 colored
+ teachers who receive an average of $28.73 per month. North Carolina enrolled, in
+ 1886, 117,562 colored pupils, employed 2,016 teachers of the same race, paying them
+ about the same as its white teachers, $23.38 per month. The colored school population
+ of Tennessee numbers 158,450, of whom 84,624 are enrolled in her 1,563 common
+ schools, which are taught by 1,621 teachers of the same nationality. A county
+ superintendent voluntarily adds: "I should do our colored teachers an injustice
+ not to speak of them. Most of them are earnest, zealous workers, doing all in their
+ power for their race."</p>
+ <p>Turning now to Texas we find that this State has nearly doubled its enrollment of
+ colored pupils in three years, which now number 62,040, with 1,696 licensed colored
+ teachers who receive on an average, $41.73 per month. Virginia has 111,114 out of a
+ school population of 265,249 with 1,734 colored teachers who receive $28.65 per
+ month.</p>
+ <p>That is, in eight representative States there are eight hundred thousand colored
+ pupils who are now being trained by over fifteen thousand teachers of the same race.
+ Now the simple but grave question that every Christian patriot ought to ask himself
+ is, "What kind of teachers are these, and where are they to come from in the future?"
+ I asked that question of a gentleman who of all others ought to be able to answer it
+ correctly and he replied, "Nine-tenths of these teachers come from the missionary
+ schools, and of these nine-tenths, more than one-half come from the institutions of
+ the American Missionary Association." Now we can understand the truthfulness of the
+ testimony of the Rev. J.L.M. Curry, D.D., the distinguished agent of the Peabody
+ Fund, who says: "The most that <span class="pagenum"><a name="page99"
+ id="page99"></a>{99}</span> has been done at the South fcr the education of the
+ negroes has been done by the Congregationalists. The American Missionary Association
+ and those allied to it have been the chief agency, so far as benevolent effort is
+ concerned, in diffusing right notions of religion, and in carrying education to the
+ darkened mind of the negro."</p>
+ <p>Here is the large door that God has opened for us, and through which we are
+ reaching this people, and in a still larger degree may carry the truths of the
+ Kingdom of God to them. What they need most of all is light. Give them that and the
+ question of rights will take care of itself. When I was in New Orleans last May,
+ President Hitchcock, of Straight University, pointed out to me in his office a pile
+ of letters, which, he said, were applications for teachers for these public schools,
+ and those which he showed me represented the number of applications which he was not
+ able to fill. And yet he is compelled every term to turn away scores of young men and
+ young women seeking to fit themselves for just this work, because there is not room
+ for them and because there are not funds to care for them.</p>
+ <p>As to this new movement in the South, I do not conclude that more than the first
+ step has been taken, exceedingly important as that step is. Many of the schools as
+ yet are in a wretched condition. The buildings in the rural districts are small and
+ rudely built, and many of them are positively unfit to be used as school houses.
+ There are neither maps, nor charts or other appliances for the teacher's use in his
+ work, and in fact everything about these school houses is of the most primitive type.
+ The school year often does not exceed four months, and many of these teachers are
+ altogether unfit for their tasks.</p>
+ <p>Are we to think the time has come to withhold our support and our prayers from
+ this great work? Was there ever such an opportunity offered to any land as this which
+ is presented to the Christian philanthropy of our own?</p>
+ <p>I might tell of the needs of the cabin home life as I have seen them in these
+ States, how the scholars from Christian schools are the leaven that is slowly
+ transforming this, the greatest of all human institutions; how while from one-quarter
+ to one-half of the colored population is progressing, gaining in education, property
+ and character, there is another large part of the race that is either stationary or
+ sinking into more miserable conditions. Are we seeking for paganism to battle with?
+ Here it is in our own proud land. Do we want the opportunity of Christianizing a
+ nation? Here it is; and with possibilities just as marked as those of any people that
+ ever ascended the scale of intelligence and Christian morality.</p>
+ <p>The problem of the New South is not merely one of successful railroads, of busy
+ factories or of paying plantations, but much more is it one of upright, wise,
+ Christian manhood and womanhood. This is the work to which we are most truly called
+ of the Eternal Father.</p>
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page100" id="page100"></a>{100}</span>
+ <p>Nobly has the American Missionary Association entered into these labors; but
+ believe me, there is a larger work before it than it has yet accomplished.</p>
+ <hr class="full" />
+ <h3>THE SOUTH.</h3>
+ <a name="south" id="south"></a>
+ <h4>LETTER FROM AN EVANGELIST.</h4>
+ <p>After my return from England for another winter's service in Gospel work among the
+ people of the South, I began at</p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>WASHINGTON, D.C.</p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>I had promised Rev. G.W. Moore last winter, before sailing for my home in England,
+ to assist him in special religious effort. From the very commencement of the meetings
+ a good spirit was manifest, which deepened day by day until forty or more persons
+ professed faith in Christ, young and old being reached by the power of the gospel.
+ One man sixty-one years of age surrendered to the overtures of God's love and
+ received Christ as his Saviour. Another of seventy-five years was pointed out to me
+ as a hardened sinner. When approached he was full of self and reason, "I don't
+ believe in mourner's benches and such like; do you think my going there will make me
+ a Christian or do me any good?" "No, but it will show the people you are intending to
+ make a start for Heaven, and it will enlist their sympathy and prayers," I
+ replied.</p>
+ <p>Finally he knelt with me in the aisle with his head bowed on the end of the seat
+ while I prayed. Soon the big tears were dropping from his eyes and he went home that
+ night under conviction. The following night he returned. He was again prayed for, but
+ went away undecided. The next night as soon as inquirers were given an opportunity to
+ present themselves for prayers he was the first to respond, and the sinful man of
+ seventy-five years had yielded his heart to Christ, and could sing from his heart
+ "Happy day, when Jesus washed my sins away." His wife, who was present, rushed
+ forward, and tears of joy ran down their cheeks. Scarcely a dry eye was to be seen,
+ while above all there was joy in Heaven over another sinner saved. Deacon R. came to
+ me afterwards and said, "Why, did you ever see what a change in the man in three
+ days, and at last how he 'caved in.'"</p>
+ <p>Ten persons made profession of their faith, in January. Two of these were teachers
+ in the public schools. There were four conversions in one family. Since these
+ meetings, many extra services have been held, with fruitful results. There are family
+ altars where none before existed. The work in Washington under Mr. Moore is very
+ hopeful. My next point was</p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>SELMA, ALA.</p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>which I entered full of hopes as to successful meetings, and was not disappointed.
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page101" id="page101"></a>{101}</span> During my stay
+ there, lasting three weeks, sixty professed to be converted. Most of these, through
+ the efforts of Rev. C.B. Curtis and his wife, were formed into a "Children's Band,"
+ while others joined the churches. This is a most important feature in pastoral work,
+ where the majority of the converts are children. They need to have something that
+ will help them in their spiritual and new life and which may be instrumental in
+ preserving them from temptations, snares and pitfalls, laid to entrap them by the
+ enemy of their souls.</p>
+ <p>I never before realized how easily people are led away by false teachers, nor saw
+ so manifestly brought out the fulfillment of the Scriptures, [2 Pet. ii, 1] "But
+ there were false prophets among the people, even as there shall be false teachers
+ among you, who privily shall bring in damnable heresies, even denying the Lord that
+ bought them, and bring upon themselves swift destruction. And many shall follow their
+ pernicious ways; by reason of whom the way of truth shall be evil spoken of."</p>
+ <p>A man calling himself a "prophet" and a "faith doctor" had been for some time
+ experimenting upon people, both white and black, and professed to cure them of all
+ their ailments. He had been holding meetings in a cottage weekly, and had gathered
+ many followers, who were, alas, for the most part professing Christians. He announced
+ that on the following Sunday he would hold the passover feast, burn the Bible, and,
+ in plain words, would do wonders, the like of which had not been heard of for years.
+ Accordingly, on Sunday morning, with a few of his followers, he came to the house of
+ a Negro, and during the ceremony commanded a white woman to place her head on the
+ table and offer herself as a sacrifice. She refused, upon which a Negro woman laid
+ her head upon the table. He immediately raised an old cavalry sword and, with one
+ blow, nearly severed her head from her body, and then commanded that they should
+ "drag her out at once and put her with her feet towards the East and she will rise
+ after three days."</p>
+ <p>Soon there was a cry of murder raised; the false prophet was arrested after a
+ struggle, and he, with a number of his followers, was safely lodged in the
+ penitentiary, where it is to be hoped he will at least be kept from cutting off any
+ more women's heads. Oh, how great the need of faithful men to lift up their voices
+ like a trumpet, and spare them not, and show to these needy people, so religiously
+ inclined, the way of truth!</p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>TALLADEGA COLLEGE</p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>was the next place visited. Beginning the New Year, which is usually the "week of
+ prayer," for two weeks the "old, old story" was told on every night among the
+ resident students and scholars. At other times, services would be held in the Cassidy
+ school in the morning, or in the afternoon, as school duties would permit. The
+ Theological class, as well as the teachers and faculty, interested themselves greatly
+ in seeking to win the unsaved to Jesus. Following out the teaching of the New
+ Testament, the students <span class="pagenum"><a name="page102"
+ id="page102"></a>{102}</span> went out two and two in the surrounding neighborhood,
+ calling at the homes of the people, conversing and praying in the family. They often
+ returned with great joy to tell of the success and kindness they had met wherever
+ they went. I am thankful to our blessed Lord to be able to report that not only forty
+ or more of the young people were converted but also that professing Christians were
+ strengthened in faith, all promising to do what God had required of them and to go to
+ their respective homes, some of them hundreds of miles away, to make known a
+ Saviour's love and to carry light as far as possible in the surrounding darkness.
+ While here the Macedonian cry was heard from</p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>JENIFER.</p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>I went there for a brief service. The first night the church was full, although
+ the weather was stormy. The spirit of God brooded over the meeting and five came
+ forward for prayer. The next night still was unpleasant, yet some of the congregation
+ came several miles, and at the close eleven inquirers asked for prayers. A brother in
+ the congregation rose, and, in pleading terms, his voice faltering, begged, "Oh,
+ brodder, please do stop wid us; see de mourners; see de work de Lord is doing; please
+ you brodder don't go away and leab us." After such heartfelt words I could but stay
+ all the week, when sixteen professed to have accepted Christ, or, as they put it, to
+ have "found religion."</p>
+ <p>Miss Smith, at her home for motherless girls, is doing a noble work here. Rev.
+ J.B. Grant is highly respected by all in the village and has a good name, which is
+ worth more than great riches.</p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>IRONATON</p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>was the next place visited. It was exceedingly muddy and dark, yet the people came
+ out well. At the close of the first meeting the congregation arose <i>en masse</i>
+ and asked that I would remain a day longer, which I did.</p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>MARION, ALA.</p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>I went to Marion with some doubts upon my mind as to the results. The first
+ evening after my arrival I was very sick and threatened with a severe attack of
+ chills and fever, but I was helped to strength enough to preach with difficulty.
+ Twenty-five inquirers asked for prayers. Some that night became "new creatures in
+ Christ Jesus," and every night as the meetings progressed the interest deepened and
+ spread, until other churches were reached by the influence and their services given
+ up that their members might come to our church and share in the work and blessing.
+ Every night large numbers of seekers came to Christ. On one night twelve expressed
+ their faith in a new life. Among the many inquirers was one who for twelve years had
+ been an anxiety to her friends on account of her state of mind, and her conversion
+ caused great joy in the church.</p>
+ <p>Short morning meetings were held in the various schools in the town, and in a
+ town-school seventeen seekers found the Lord Jesus precious to <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page103" id="page103"></a>{103}</span> their souls. Up to
+ this time, during two weeks, more than one hundred profess to have been
+ converted.</p>
+ <p>I am happy to report that now, with the exception of two or three of the students,
+ all in the new A.M.A. school have been reached by the gospel and are rejoicing that
+ God's love has been shed abroad in their hearts. This blessing can be traced in a
+ great measure to the faithful Scriptural teaching which Rev. A.W. Curtis and his
+ devoted wife had been giving previous to my coming among them, prayer meetings having
+ been held in the church for some time beforehand, and women's meetings at the
+ pastor's home, led by Mrs. Curtis, thus preparing the way for the nightly preaching
+ of the gospel. I go next to Mobile.</p>
+ <p>JAMES WHARTON, Evangelist.</p>
+ <hr class="full" />
+ <a name="chinese" id="chinese"></a>
+ <h3>THE CHINESE.</h3>
+ <h4>RESULTS THAT ELUDE THE STATISTICIAN.</h4>
+ <p>BY REV. C.T. WEITZEL.</p>
+ <p>There are some effects which cannot be put into statistics. A boy's progress in a
+ study is but imperfectly declared by the monthly report or the examination "stand."
+ Much of the work accomplished in a Chinese mission school, is impossible to tabulate.
+ Like the marvelous clearness of the atmosphere in Santa Barbara on a bright morning
+ after a night of rain, it quite eludes the statistician.</p>
+ <p>But effects may be felt, though we cannot represent them by figures. Go with me
+ some evening through the Chinese quarter of our city; note the faces of the loungers
+ in every door-way and at every corner. Watch the expression, or the want of
+ expression, in these stolid, brutal, repulsive faces of opium-smokers and gamblers.
+ Then step over with me to the Chinese mission-house two squares away. Before you
+ enter, look in through the half-open door and take a survey of the scene within. The
+ room is well-lighted, and contains, among other things, two long tables, a dozen
+ benches, a cabinet organ, and a few chairs. The walls are bright with Scripture texts
+ and illustrations from sacred history. About fifteen young Chinamen are seated at the
+ tables, all reading and studying aloud in true Chinese fashion. Just as you enter the
+ teacher, touches the bell. Books are closed and all take seats on the benches in
+ front of the organ. A Chinese evangelist is present, and while he makes an
+ impassioned address, accompanied by most expressive gestures, you are free to study
+ the faces upturned to listen. What a contrast to the faces you have just left in
+ Chinatown, idly staring at the passer-by, or, vacant of all interest, staring at
+ nothing! At a glance you perceive effects which must be seen to be appreciated. You
+ feel that not only is the whole atmosphere of this place essentially different <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page104" id="page104"></a>{104}</span> from that of the
+ Chinese quarter, but there is also an essential difference between those who frequent
+ the one and the other.</p>
+ <p>Socially, intellectually, spiritually, the Chinese mission-school does its
+ beneficent work. It must be borne in mind that the Chinaman in California is away
+ from home. He is exposed to all the temptations of a stranger in a strange land,
+ removed from the restraining influences of a community where one is known. Subject an
+ equal number of men of any other nation to this severe test, and I doubt much if they
+ would bear it as well. The mission school serves the purpose of a strong social
+ support. So far as possible it takes the place of a home. It practically separates
+ its attendants into a community by itself. It does much to keep them from contact
+ with their vicious countrymen in Chinatown. It does much to bring them into contact
+ with those whose influence upon them will be good. It does much to furnish a healthy
+ social atmosphere in which to pass the hours of the afternoon and evening, which
+ every Chinese servant is at liberty to spend as he will.</p>
+ <p>Intellectually the work in the Chinese missions is already far beyond the
+ elementary stage, and is growing more virile every year.</p>
+ <p>But everything is made but the means to the spiritual end. Not for an hour is this
+ lost sight of. The whole drift of the teaching, the songs, the pictures, the
+ Scripture text, is to make known Christ. Every evening's lesson ends with worship.
+ For a month or more the Chinese preacher to whom I have referred, has held
+ evangelistic services in the Santa Barbara mission. To-day he leaves for points
+ farther south to do the same work elsewhere.</p>
+ <p>In no year, may I add, have there been so many conversions among the Chinese on
+ this coast as in the one just past.</p>
+ <hr class="full" />
+ <a name="bureau" id="bureau"></a>
+ <h3>BUREAU OF WOMAN'S WORK.</h3>
+ <p>MISS D.E. EMERSON, SECRETARY.</p>
+ <h4>WOMAN'S STATE ORGANIZATIONS.</h4>
+ <h4>CO-OPERATING WITH THE AMERICAN MISSIONARY ASSOCIATION.</h4>
+ <p>ME.&mdash;Woman's Aid to A.M.A., Chairman of Committee, Mrs. C.A. Woodbury,
+ Woodfords, Me.</p>
+ <p>VT.&mdash;Woman's Aid to A.M.A., Chairman of Committee, Mrs. Henry Fairbanks, St.
+ Johnsbury, Vt.</p>
+ <p>CONN.&mdash;Woman's Home Miss. Union, Secretary, Mrs. S.M. Hotchkiss, 171 Capitol
+ Ave., Hartford, Conn.</p>
+ <p>N.Y.&mdash;Woman's Home Miss. Union, Secretary, Mrs. C.C. Creegan, Syracuse,
+ N.Y.</p>
+ <p>OHIO.&mdash;Woman's Home Miss. Union, Secretary, Mrs. Flora K. Regal, Oberlin,
+ Ohio.</p>
+ <p>ILL.&mdash;Woman's Home Miss. Union, Secretary, Mrs. C.H. Taintor, 151 Washington
+ St., Chicago, Ill.</p>
+ <p>MICH.&mdash;Woman's Home Miss. Union, Secretary, Mrs. Mary B. Warren, Lansing,
+ Mich.</p>
+ <p>WIS.&mdash;Woman's Home Miss. Union, Secretary, Mrs. C. Matter, Brodlhead,
+ Wis.</p>
+ <p>MINN.&mdash;Woman's Home Miss. Society, Secretary, Mrs. H.L. Chase, 2,750 Second
+ Ave., South, Minneapolis, Minn.</p>
+ <p>IOWA.&mdash;Woman's Home Miss. Union, Secretary, Miss Ella K. Marsh, Grinnell,
+ Iowa.</p>
+ <p>KANSAS.&mdash;Woman's Home Miss. Society, Secretary, Mrs. Addison Blanchard,
+ Topeka, Kan.</p>
+ <p>SOUTH DAKOTA.&mdash;Woman's Home Miss. Union, Secretary, Mrs. W.H. Thrall, Amour,
+ Dak.</p>
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page105" id="page105"></a>{105}</span>
+ <hr class="full" />
+ <h4>THE BLACK WOMAN OF THE SOUTH.</h4>
+ <p>The Rev. Alexander Crummell, D.D., formerly a missionary in Africa and now Rector
+ of St. Luke's Church in Washington, D.C., is a native of Africa, a graduate of one of
+ the leading Universities of England, who adds to the strength and graces of a sound
+ scholarship, the devotion of a noble Christian character.</p>
+ <p>From an address made by him upon the "Needs and Neglects of the Black Woman of the
+ South," we quote his plea for "Woman's Work for Woman." Referring to the Negro woman
+ in slavery days, he says:</p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>"She was a 'hewer of wood and a drawer of water.' She had to keep her place in
+ the gang from morn till eve, under the burden of a heavy task, or under the
+ stimulus or the fear of a cruel lash. She was a picker of cotton. She labored at
+ the sugar mill and in the tobacco factory. When, through weariness or sickness, she
+ had fallen behind her allotted task, then came, as punishment, the fearful stripes
+ upon her shrinking, lacerated flesh.</p>
+ <p>"Her home life was of the most degrading nature. She lived in the rudest huts,
+ and partook of the coarsest food, and dressed in the scantiest garb, and slept, in
+ multitudinous cabins, upon the hardest boards!</p>
+ <p>"There was no sanctity of family, no binding tie of marriage, none of the fine
+ felicities and the endearing affections of home. Few of these things were the lot
+ of the Southern black woman. Instead, thereof, a gross barbarism, which tended to
+ blunt the tender sensibilities, to obliterate feminine delicacy and womanly shame,
+ came down as her heritage from generation to generation; and it seems a miracle of
+ providence and grace that, notwithstanding these terrible circumstances, so much
+ struggling virtue lingered amid the rude cabins, that so much womanly worth and
+ sweetness remained, as slaveholders themselves have borne witness to.</p>
+ <p>"Freed, legally, she has been; but the act of emancipation had no talismanic
+ influence to reach to and alter and transform her degrading social life. The truth
+ is, 'Emancipation Day' found her a prostrate and degraded being; and, although it
+ has brought numerous advantages to her sons, it has produced but the simplest
+ changes in <i>her</i> social and domestic condition. She is still the crude, rude,
+ ignorant mother. Remote from cities, the dweller still in the old plantation hut,
+ neighboring to the sulky, disaffected master-class, who still think her freedom was
+ a personal robbery of themselves, none of the 'fair humanities' have visited her
+ humble home. The light of knowledge has not fallen upon her eyes. The fine
+ domesticities which give the charm to family life, and which, by the refinement and
+ delicacy of womanhood, preserve the civilization of nations, have not come to
+ <i>her</i>. She has still the rude, coarse labor of men. With her rude husband, she
+ still shares the hard service of a field-hand. Her house, which shelters, perhaps,
+ some six or eight children, embraces but two rooms. Her furniture is of the rudest
+ kind. The clothing of the household is scant and of the coarsest material; has
+ oft-times the garniture of rags, and for herself and offspring is marked, not
+ seldom, by the absense <span class="pagenum"><a name="page106"
+ id="page106"></a>{106}</span> of both hats and shoes. She has rarely been taught to
+ sew, and the field-labor of slavery times has kept her ignorant of the habitudes of
+ neatness and the requirements of order. Indeed, coarse food, coarse clothes, coarse
+ living, coarse manners, coarse companions, coarse surroundings, coarse neighbors,
+ both white and black, yea, everything coarse, down to the coarse, ignorant,
+ senseless religion, which excites her sensibilities and starts her passions, go to
+ make up the life of the masses of black women in the hamlets and villages of the
+ South. This is the state of black womanhood.</p>
+ <p>"And now look at the <i>vastness</i> of this degradation. If I had been speaking
+ of the population of a city, or town, or even a village, the tale would be a sad
+ and melancholy one. But I have brought before you the condition of <i>millions of
+ women</i>. And when you think that the masses of these women live in the rural
+ districts; that they grow up in rudeness and ignorance; that their former masters
+ are using few means to break up their hereditary degradation, you can easily take
+ in the pitiful condition of this population and forecast the inevitable future to
+ multitudes of females, unless a mighty special effort is made for the improvement
+ of the black womanhood of the South.</p>
+ <p>"I am anxious for a permanent and uplifting civilization to be engrafted on the
+ Negro race in this land. And this can only be secured through the womanhood of a
+ race. If you want the civilization of a people to reach the very best elements of
+ their being, and then, having reached them, there to abide as an indigenous
+ principle, you must imbue the <i>womanhood</i> of that people with all its elements
+ and qualities. Any movement which passes by the female sex is an ephemeral thing.
+ Without them, no true nationality, patriotism, religion, cultivation, family life,
+ or true social status, is a possibility. In this matter it takes two to make
+ one&mdash;mankind is a duality. The male may bring, as an exotic, a foreign graft,
+ say, of civilization, to a new people. But what then! Can a graft live or thrive of
+ itself? By no manner of means. It must get vitality from the stock into which it is
+ put; and it is the women who give the sap to every human organization which thrives
+ and flourishes on earth.</p>
+ <p>"I plead, therefore, for the establishment of at least one large '<i>Industrial
+ school</i>' in every Southern State for the black girls of the South. I ask for the
+ establishment of schools which may serve specially the home life of the rising
+ womanhood of my race.</p>
+ <p>"I want <i>boarding schools</i> for the <i>industrial training</i> of one
+ hundred and fifty or two hundred of the poorest girls, of the ages of twelve to
+ eighteen years.</p>
+ <p>"I wish the intellectual training to be limited to reading, writing, arithmetic
+ and geography.</p>
+ <p>"I would have these girls taught to do accurately all domestic work, such as
+ sweeping floors, dusting rooms, scrubbing, bed-making, washing and ironing, sewing,
+ mending and knitting.</p>
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page107" id="page107"></a>{107}</span>
+ <p>"I would have the trades of dress-making, millinery, straw-plating, tailoring
+ for men, and such like, taught them.</p>
+ <p>"The art of cooking should be made a specialty, and every girl should be
+ instructed in it.</p>
+ <p>"In connection with these schools, garden plats should be cultivated, and every
+ girl should be required daily, to spend at least an hour in learning the
+ cultivation of small fruits, vegetables and flowers.</p>
+ <p>"It is hardly possible to exaggerate either the personal, family or society
+ influence which would flow from these schools. Every class, yea, every girl in an
+ out-going class, would be a missionary of thrift, industry, common-sense, and
+ practicality. They would go forth, year by year, a leavening power into the houses,
+ towns and villages of the Southern black population; girls fit to be the wives of
+ the honest peasantry of the South, the worthy matrons of their numerous
+ households.</p>
+ <p>"I am looking after the domestic training of the <i>masses</i>; for the raising
+ up of women meet to be the helpers of poor men, the <i>rank and file</i> of black
+ society, all through the rural districts of the South.</p>
+ <p>"A true civilization can only be attained when the life of woman is reached, her
+ whole being permeated by noble ideas, her fine taste enriched by culture, her
+ tendencies to the beautiful gratified and developed, her singular and delicate
+ nature lifted up to its full capacity, and then, when all these qualities are fully
+ matured, cultivated and sanctified, all their sacred influences shall circle around
+ ten thousand firesides, and the cabins of the humblest freedmen shall become the
+ homes of Christian refinement through the influence of the uplifted and cultivated
+ black woman of the South."</p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>The above appeal is in the line of our American Missionary Association work. While
+ we have higher schools and institutions for more thorough education, which these
+ Negro women need as much as any women in the world, we are increasingly developing
+ this idea which Dr. Crummell eloquently pleads.</p>
+ <p>We remind our friends and those Christian women who are interested in the
+ uplifting of Negro womanhood, that the American Missionary Association, the
+ <i>ordained agency</i> of the Congregational Churches for this work, could do much
+ more of it if the means were forthcoming. The marked success of the domestic training
+ in our schools at Tougaloo, Miss., Talladega, Ala., Thomasville, Ga., Memphis, Tenn.,
+ and other points, shows the advantage gained in the twenty-five years' experience
+ which the A.M.A. has had in its work for the Negroes.</p>
+ <p>We need the co-operation of all Christian women in carrying on these Industrial
+ Schools already established, and to enable us to establish and carry forward <i>many
+ more</i>.</p>
+ <hr class="full" />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page108" id="page108"></a>{108}</span> <a
+ name="young1" id="young1"></a>
+ <h3>YOUNG FOLKS.</h3>
+ <h4>WHAT SUSIE FOUND AT TOUGALOO.</h4>
+ <p>(SEE FEBRUARY AMERICAN MISSIONARY.)</p>
+ <p>A roomful of girls of various sizes and complexions, all very much intent upon
+ their work, and no one thinking just at that moment of a traveled fairy daughter, to
+ adopt and love as her own, sent by a beneficent and tender-hearted northern "Fay." I
+ doubt if Susie ever before saw so many "little women" laboring with needles and
+ trying to set the troublesome stitches straight and even, to keep the thread from
+ tangling and the seam clean. The results are far from perfection, but they are
+ encouraging.</p>
+ <p>Some of the children <i>wear</i> thimbles, and some set them upon their desks and
+ <i>wiggle</i> the needle through without their aid. Here is a child so tiny that no
+ thimble in the box will serve her. She has a delicate face, with big brown eyes, and
+ her fingers are the slenderest of appendages to her atoms of hands. Her sister, a
+ year or so older, has a round, chubby face, with plump, dimpled, brown hands, but
+ these fat fingers also must grow to the smallest thimble. Here is a quiet, modest
+ little girl whose five baptismal names, Cynthia Ann Finetta Bloomfield Celeste,
+ furnish her nothing prettier for every day use than "Lusty." She could not thread a
+ needle or tie a knot when she joined the Hope Band, and the second year she wore one
+ of the smallest thimbles with a bit of cloth inside for "chinking" to keep it on.
+ Here Susie's sympathies are drawn out towards a thin, nervous-looking little Frances,
+ who has a hand and foot crippled. She walks painfully along to her place and holds
+ her work at a disadvantage in the poor little cramped left hand, but she likes to be
+ there with the others.</p>
+ <p>Most of the heads are covered with little tight braids, on some heads standing at
+ every angle, on some laid smoothly down, one braid tied to another. A few have their
+ curly hair cropped close, and here is a little girl with a bushy mass overshadowing
+ her lively face. She takes but a stitch or two until she goes up to the front and
+ holds her work out for her teacher's inspection. Some time elapses before that lady
+ can notice it and say, "That is pretty good, Lena; now go right on carefully." Lena
+ returns slowly to her place, takes a stitch or two more and repeats the performance.
+ When will the work be completed? O no, that is the way she used to do, but
+ <i>now</i>&mdash;</p>
+ <p>A middle-sized "Topsy" comes pushing rudely forward, tossing her head and
+ whispering disagreeable things to those she has to pass, and Susy hopes she will not
+ be brought into any closer relations with <i>her</i>, when she happens to see her
+ tenderly fondling a broken-armed, broken-legged dollie, while her work is being
+ adjusted, and thinks somewhat better of her. There are several Lilies and Roses in
+ this growing garden. The lilies are not white and the roses are not red, but more
+ attractive and interesting to their teacher's eyes than the black pansies the flower
+ gardeners <span class="pagenum"><a name="page109" id="page109"></a>{109}</span>
+ labored so long to produce. Their teacher is fond of flowers and has her windows
+ full, even in winter, but she does not smile upon them with such a heartful of
+ affection as upon these, nor can those bask in the light of her merry face more
+ freely. As her short, round figure moves down the aisle and back, and Susie gets a
+ good look at her, she says to herself, "Why surely this is Mrs. Santa Claus! How glad
+ I am!" and it is not a strange conclusion, for her figure and expression <i>are</i>
+ like the poet's description of dear Saint Nick.</p>
+ <p>Here is a girl in one of the side seats a good deal taller than her teacher.
+ Through the long, bright, warm summer she works in the cotton and the corn, alongside
+ of father, brothers, uncles, men and women, boys and girls. Her hands are enlarged
+ and roughened with toil, but she is taking pains to learn how to do this useful
+ indoor work skillfully too.</p>
+ <p>There is a goodly company of these larger girls, but Susie does not feel any more
+ afraid of them, nor of "the middle-sized bears and the wee tiny, small bears" than
+ did little Silverhair in the nursery tale. She doubts, however, if these largest ones
+ have not laid aside dollies, and thinks she must look among the "leaster" ones for
+ the little <i>step-mother</i> who will respect her own little Fay-mother's request to
+ "take good care of her." But when the sewing-lesson is ended and she notices one and
+ another bring to light a little dollie-daughter to hug in her arms as she walks
+ homeward, and sees the sociable interest of all the rest, she feels no further doubt
+ about the mother-love in all these little Southern bosoms and resigns all care as to
+ which one shall be hers, leaving the whole question to Mrs. Santa Claus.</p>
+ <p>Perhaps some day we may call upon her when she is fully domesticated in her new
+ home. There will not be many comforts and conveniences in that home. Possibly when we
+ ask for Susie, her mamma will draw a little old box from under the head of her bed,
+ as once when I called upon one of these little girls and asked her if she had a doll.
+ It had lost some of its limbs and it was dressed in odds and ends, tacked together by
+ the untaught little mother, but when I set the dollie on my knee and pretended to
+ drink tea out of one of the tiny toy cups set forth from the same treasure-box, you
+ could not find a more hilarious little mamma anywhere, though you should pick out one
+ with all nursery stores at her command.</p>
+ <hr class="full" />
+ <a name="young2" id="young2"></a>
+ <h4>A LETTER FROM ONE OF OUR INDIAN PUPILS IN NEBRASKA.</h4>
+ <p>SANTEE AGENCY, NEB.</p>
+ <p><i>Dear Eastern Friends</i>:&mdash;We have had five good prayer meetings during
+ two weeks, and I am very glad to tell you dear friends that some of our school-mates
+ said they will try and do as God wants them to do. And some pray who never did
+ before. No words can tell how I felt one evening <span class="pagenum"><a
+ name="page110" id="page110"></a>{110}</span> after we came home from meeting. Just
+ before I went up stairs I asked the Matron if I could talk Dakota to tell my
+ room-mate about the meeting. The subject was, "What must I do to be saved?" I told it
+ to her the best I could. After I was through talking I asked her if she understood
+ all what I meant and she said "Yes." We both were silent for one minute. I was
+ praying to God in my heart to help me to help this dear school-mate of mine. Then in
+ a little while she said, "I believe in Jesus and now I will always try and be a
+ Christian." When she said that, I couldn't do anything more, I was so glad that my
+ tears came. And before we went to sleep I ask her to pray after I did, and she did;
+ this was the first time she prayed in her own words. It was so dark and I couldn't
+ see anything but I knew she was crying by the way she spoke. After long time I
+ thought she went to sleep; but all at once she call my name and said, "I wish
+ tomorrow morning they would sing in Dakota, '<i>Ring the bells in heaven, there is
+ great joy to-day</i>.'" Dear friends we kindly ask you to remember us when you offer
+ prayer to our dear God.</p>
+ <p>Your friend,</p>
+ <p>&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+ <hr class="receipts_hr" />
+ <a name="receipts" id="receipts"></a>
+ <h3>RECEIPTS FOR FEBRUARY, 1888.</h3>
+ <h5>MAINE, $1,119.63.</h5>
+ <div class="receipts">
+ <p>Auburn. High St. Cong. Ch. (117.28 of which <i>for Indian M.</i> and 39.74
+ <i>for Chinese M.</i> <span class="rightmargin">302.85</span></p>
+ <p>Augusta. Joel Spalding, to const. HON. WM. P. FRYE L.M. <span
+ class="rightmargin">30.00</span></p>
+ <p>Bangor. Central Cong. Ch. 75; Hammond St. Cong. Ch., 2, <i>for Pleasant Hill,
+ Tenn.</i> <span class="rightmargin">77.00</span></p>
+ <p>Bridgeton. By Mrs. Hale, Pkg. Basted Work, <i>for Selma, Ala.</i></p>
+ <p>Castine. Wm. G. Sargent, <i>for Pleasant Hill, Tenn.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">5.00</span></p>
+ <p>Center Lebanon. Sab. Sch. Class., <i>for Pleasant Hill, Tenn.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">4.10</span></p>
+ <p>Denmark. Box of C., <i>for Mobile, Ala.</i></p>
+ <p>East Orrington, Sab. Sch. 2; Miss M.F. George, 1, <i>for Pleasant Hill,
+ Tenn.</i> <span class="rightmargin">3.00</span></p>
+ <p>Edgecomb. Cong. Ch. and Soc. <span class="rightmargin">13.00</span></p>
+ <p>Farmington Falls. By Miss Susan G. Crowell, <i>for Freight</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">0.65</span></p>
+ <p>Hampden. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">4.80</span></p>
+ <p>Harpswell. Mrs. John Dinsmore. <i>for Pleasant Hill, Tenn.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">7.00</span></p>
+ <p>Island Falls. Miss D. Merriman, <i>for Pleasant Hill, Tenn.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">2.50</span></p>
+ <p>Limington. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">12.50</span></p>
+ <p>Monson. Rev. R.W. Emerson, <i>for Pleasant Hill, Tenn.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">5.00</span></p>
+ <p>Newcastle. Mrs. Wm. Heath, <i>for Pleasant Hill, Tenn.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">1.00</span></p>
+ <p>New Gloucester. Ladies of Cong. Ch., Bbl. and Box of C., 1.75 <i>for Freight,
+ for Selma, Ala.</i> <span class="rightmargin">1.75</span></p>
+ <p>New Sharon, Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">3.00</span></p>
+ <p>North Bridgeton. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">2.25</span></p>
+ <p>Norway. Mrs. Amos. I. Holt, Bbl. of C., <i>for Wilmington, N.C.; &mdash;&mdash;
+ 2, for Freight</i> <span class="rightmargin">2.00</span></p>
+ <p>Orkland. H.T. and S.E. Buck, 20; Mrs. Trott, 3; "A Friend," 1 <span
+ class="rightmargin">24.00</span></p>
+ <p>Portland. "A Friend" (10 of which <i>for Rosebud Indian M.</i>) <span
+ class="rightmargin">15.00</span></p>
+ <p>Saco. First Parish Ch. and Soc., to const. MRS. ELLA C. INGALLS L.M. <span
+ class="rightmargin">30.00</span></p>
+ <p>Scarboro. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">5.16</span></p>
+ <p>Skowhegan. Ladies of Miss'y Soc., Bbl. of C., <i>for Selma, Ala.</i></p>
+ <p>South Paris. by Mrs. Austin, Pkg. Work, <i>for Selma, Ala.</i></p>
+ <p>Union. 2 Classes, little girls in Sab. Sch., by Mrs. F.V. Norcross <i>for
+ Pleasant Hill, Tenn.</i> <span class="rightmargin">5.00</span></p>
+ <p>Wells. B. Maxwell. <span class="rightmargin">25.00</span></p>
+ <p>Westbrook. Second Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">25.57</span></p>
+ <p>Wilton. Ladies of Cong. Ch., Bbl. of C., <i>for Selma, Ala.</i></p>
+ <p>Yarmouthville. Rev. Amasa Loring, <i>for Pleasant Hill, Tenn.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">2.00</span></p>
+ <p>&mdash;&mdash;. "Friend in Maine," bal. to const. MRS. JULIA A. MERRILL L.M.
+ <span class="rightmargin">10.50</span></p>
+ <p>By Mrs. C.A. Woodbury, Treas. W.A. to A.M.A., <i>for Woman's Work</i>:</p>
+ <p class="i2">Ladies of Maine <span class="rightmargin">500.00</span></p>
+ </div>
+ <h5>NEW HAMPSHIRE, $291.01.</h5>
+ <div class="receipts">
+ <p>Amherst. Rev. A.J. McGown <span class="rightmargin">10.00</span></p>
+ <p>Auburn. Benjamin Chase, <i>for Indian M.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">2.00</span></p>
+ <p>Candia. Cong. Ch. and Soc. <span class="rightmargin">17.50</span></p>
+ <p>Colebrook. "A Friend," Pkg. of Coats, Val. 16.16.</p>
+ <p>East Derry, First Ch. <span class="rightmargin">18.03</span></p>
+ <p>East Jaffrey. "A Friend" <span class="rightmargin">15.00</span></p>
+ <p>Enfield. Cong. Ch. and Soc. <span class="rightmargin">5.00</span></p>
+ <p>Epping. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">37.00</span></p>
+ <p>Goffstown. Bbl. of C., Val. 30, <i>for Greenwood, S.C.</i>, 1.40 <i>for
+ Freight</i> <span class="rightmargin">1.40</span></p>
+ <p>Great Falls. Mrs. J.A. Stickney, Bbl. and Box of C. and Christmas gifts, <i>for
+ Storrs Sch., Atlanta, Ga.</i></p>
+ <p>Greenfield. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">15.50</span></p>
+ <p>Greenfield. "Friends" <i>for Storrs Sch.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">8.50</span></p>
+ <p>Greenland. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">15.56</span></p>
+ <p>Hancock. By Miss B.D. Robertson <span class="rightmargin">5.63</span></p>
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page111" id="page111"></a>{111}</span>
+ <p>Henniker. By Miss B.D. Robertson <span class="rightmargin">5.80</span></p>
+ <p>Lyme. Cong. Ch. and Soc. <span class="rightmargin">19.81</span></p>
+ <p>Manchester. First Cong. Ch. and Soc., to const. ALLEN L. FRENCH L.M. <span
+ class="rightmargin">53.18</span></p>
+ <p>Mason. Ladies of Cong. Ch., Bbl. of C., <i>for Storrs Sch., Atlanta,
+ Ga.</i></p>
+ <p>Nashua. Miss Sarah Kendall, <i>for Greenwood, S.C.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">3.00</span></p>
+ <p>Nashua. 2 Bbls. of C., <i>for Greenwood, S.C.</i>, 2 <i>for Freight</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">2.00</span></p>
+ <p>Newport. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">40.10</span></p>
+ <p>Pittsfield. Box and Bbl. of C., etc., <i>for Marion, Ala.</i></p>
+ <p>South Newmarket. <i>For Freight</i> <span class="rightmargin">2.50</span></p>
+ <p>West Lebanon. Tilden Sem., Box of C. and Christmas Gifts, <i>for Storrs Sch.,
+ Atlanta, Ga.</i></p>
+ <div style="margin-left: 5%;">
+ <p>By George Swain:</p>
+ <p>Amherst. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">1.50</span></p>
+ <p>Greenville. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">10.00</span></p>
+ <p>Mason. Mrs. P.S. Wilson <span class="rightmargin">2.00</span></p>
+ <p>.<span class="rightmargin">&mdash;&mdash;</span></p>
+ <p>.<span class="rightmargin">13.50</span></p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <h5>VERMONT. $174.06.</h5>
+ <div class="receipts">
+ <p>Bethel. Sab. Sch. of Cong. Ch., <i>for McIntosh, Ga.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">3.43</span></p>
+ <p>East Hardwick. O. Paine <span class="rightmargin">0.50</span></p>
+ <p>Fairhaven. <i>For McIntosh, Ga.</i> <span class="rightmargin">5.35</span></p>
+ <p>Irasburg. Mrs. J.E. Chamberlin <span class="rightmargin">5.00</span></p>
+ <p>Jamaica. Ladies, <i>for McIntosh, Ga.</i> by Mrs. Ellen D. Wild <span
+ class="rightmargin">2.00</span></p>
+ <p>Lyndon. Dr. L.W. Hubbard <span class="rightmargin">2.00</span></p>
+ <p>Middlebury. Bbl. of C., and 2 <i>for McIntosh, Ga.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">2.00</span></p>
+ <p>Montpeller. Bbl. of C., <i>for Storrs Sch., Atlanta, Ga.</i></p>
+ <p>North Thetford. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">7.00</span></p>
+ <p>Norwich. Cong. Ch., 15; "A Friend," 5 <span class="rightmargin">20.00</span></p>
+ <p>Peru. Dea. Edmund Batchelder, 3; Rev. A.B. Peffers, 2. <span
+ class="rightmargin">5.00</span></p>
+ <p>Pittsford. Mrs. Nancy P. Humphrey <span class="rightmargin">10.00</span></p>
+ <p>Post Mills. Cong. Ch. (3 of which <i>for McIntosh, Ga.</i>) <span
+ class="rightmargin">8.00</span></p>
+ <p>Quechee. Bbl. of C. and 1.75 <i>for McIntosh, Ga.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">1.75</span></p>
+ <p>Saint Johnsbury East. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">6.50</span></p>
+ <p>Shoreham. R.H. Holmes <span class="rightmargin">5.00</span></p>
+ <p>Stratford. Cong, Ch. <span class="rightmargin">25.00</span></p>
+ <p>Townshend. Cong. Ch. (5 of which from Mrs. Anna Rice) <span
+ class="rightmargin">25.53</span></p>
+ <p>Wells River. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">20.00</span></p>
+ <p>West Brattleboro. Ladies of Cong. Ch., 15; A.L. Grout, 5, <i>for McIntosh,
+ Ga.</i> <span class="rightmargin">20.00</span></p>
+ </div>
+ <h5>MASSACHUSETTS, $5,925.07</h5>
+ <div class="receipts">
+ <p>Amesbury. Union Evang. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">4.03</span></p>
+ <p>Amherst. "A Friend," to const. JOHN RICHARDS L.M. <span
+ class="rightmargin">30.00</span></p>
+ <p>Andover. Rev. F.W. Greene, 20; A Friend, 10 <span
+ class="rightmargin">30.00</span></p>
+ <p>Andover. Juv. Miss'y Soc. of West Parish, <i>for Indian Student Aid</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">15.00</span></p>
+ <p>Andover. Ladies of Free Ch., Bbl. of C., <i>for Marion, Ala.</i></p>
+ <p>Ashfield. "A Friend" <span class="rightmargin">1.16</span></p>
+ <p>Auburn. Infant Class. Sab. Sch. of Cong. Ch., <i>for Conn. Ind'l Sch., Ga.</i>
+ <span class="rightmargin">7.00</span></p>
+ <p>Belchertown. Mrs. D.B. Bruce, to const. REV. CHARLES R. BRUCE L.M. <span
+ class="rightmargin">30.00</span></p>
+ <p>Beverly. Dane St. Sab. Sch., <i>for Student Aid, Fisk U.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">50.00</span></p>
+ <p>Boston. J.H. Nichols, A.A. Lawrence and S.W. Marston, Val. Sch. Books and Sch.
+ Apparatus</p>
+ <div style="margin-left: 5%;">
+ <p>Dorchester. Miss Mary A. Tutle, <i>for Marie Adlof Sch'p Fund</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">0.40</span></p>
+ <p>Jamaica Plain. Miss Nellie Riley, Pkg cards, etc., <i>for Straight U.</i>
+ <span class="rightmargin">&mdash;&mdash;</span></p>
+ <p>.<span class="rightmargin">0.40</span></p>
+ </div>
+ <p>Boxboro. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">15.00</span></p>
+ <p>Boxford. A Friend, <i>for Ch., Corbin, Ky.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">5.00</span></p>
+ <p>Brimfield. Sab. Sch. of Cong. Ch., <i>for Student Aid, Fisk U.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">10.60</span></p>
+ <p>Buckland. First Cong. Ch., <i>for Sherwood, Tenn.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">4.00</span></p>
+ <p>Cambridgeport. Miss Hannah E. Moore <span class="rightmargin">8.00</span></p>
+ <p>Chelsea. Y.P.S.C.E. of First Cong. Ch., <i>for Student Aid, Fisk U.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">7.50</span></p>
+ <p>Chelsea. Miss E. Davenport <span class="rightmargin">5.00</span></p>
+ <p>Chelsea. Mrs. Emma B. Evans, <i>for Indian M.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">5.00</span></p>
+ <p>Clinton. Young People's Mite Soc., <i>for Indian Sch'p</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">43.00</span></p>
+ <p>Cohasset. Second Cong. Ch. and Soc. <span class="rightmargin">31.33</span></p>
+ <p>Cummington. Mrs. H.M. Porter <span class="rightmargin">3.00</span></p>
+ <p>Dalton. Sab. Sch. of Cong. Ch., <i>for Student Aid, Williamsburg, Ky.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">45.00</span></p>
+ <p>Dracut. First Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">10.00</span></p>
+ <p>Dunstable. Cong. Ch. and Soc. <span class="rightmargin">30.74</span></p>
+ <p>East Douglas. Second Cong. Ch. and Soc. <span
+ class="rightmargin">49.97</span></p>
+ <p>East Weymouth. Ch. and Sab. Sch., <i>for Pleasant Hill, Tenn.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">50.00</span></p>
+ <p>Georgetown. First Cong. Ch. and Soc. <span class="rightmargin">33.50</span></p>
+ <p>Globe Village. Young Helpers of Evan. Free Ch., <i>for Student Aid, Fisk U.</i>
+ <span class="rightmargin">25.00</span></p>
+ <p>Greenwich. Daniel Parker, deceased, by Mrs. M.P. Estey <span
+ class="rightmargin">5.00</span></p>
+ <p>Groton. Ladies' Benev. Soc., by Mrs. Caroline Blood, <i>for Freight</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">2.00</span></p>
+ <p>Hampshire Co. "A Friend" <span class="rightmargin">5.00</span></p>
+ <p>Haverhill. Sab. Sch. of West Cong. Ch., <i>for Freight</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">3.00</span></p>
+ <p>Hyde Park. Woman's H.M.U. and Children's M. Soc. of First Cong. Ch., <i>for
+ Tougaloo U.</i>, and to const. MISS ALICE GRAY L.M. <span
+ class="rightmargin">30.00</span></p>
+ <p>Ipswich. South Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">20.00</span></p>
+ <p>Lakeville. Mrs. C.L. Ward <span class="rightmargin">25.00</span></p>
+ <p>Lawrence. Lawrence St. Ch. and Soc. <span class="rightmargin">150.00</span></p>
+ <p>Long Meadow. "A Friend," <i>for Indian M.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">1.00</span></p>
+ <p>Lowell. John St. Cong. Ch., 41.92; "A Friend in Elliot Ch." 5; Geo. C. Osgood,
+ M.D., 1.50 <span class="rightmargin">48.42</span></p>
+ <p>Lowell. Ladies' Benev. Soc. of First Cong. Ch., Bbl. of C., <i>for Wilmington,
+ N.C.</i></p>
+ <p>Malden. Infant Sab. Sch., <i>for Straight U.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">10.00</span></p>
+ <p>Manchester. Cong. Ch. and Soc. <span class="rightmargin">20.75</span></p>
+ <p>Mansfield. Ladies' Miss'y Soc., <i>for Wilmington, N.C.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">8.17</span></p>
+ <p>Middlefield. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">28.00</span></p>
+ <p>Monson. Mrs. Abbie G. Smith <span class="rightmargin">5.00</span></p>
+ <p>Neponset. Stone Mission Circle of Trin. Cong. Ch., <i>for Student Aid,
+ Wilmington, N.C.</i> <span class="rightmargin">10.00</span></p>
+ <p>Newburyport. "Friends," <i>for Mountain Work</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">3.00</span></p>
+ <p>Norfolk. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">2.14</span></p>
+ <p>North Abington. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">5.00</span></p>
+ <p>North Adams. "A Friend" <span class="rightmargin">10.00</span></p>
+ <p>Northhampton. "C" <span class="rightmargin">100.00</span></p>
+ <p>Northbridge. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">10.00</span></p>
+ <p>North Brookfield. Freight on Box to <i>Pleasant Hill, Tenn.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">4.60</span></p>
+ <p>North Leominister. Mrs. S.F. Houghton, to const. REV. F.A. BALCOM L.M. <span
+ class="rightmargin">30.00</span></p>
+ <p>Peabody. Sab. Sch. of South Cong. Ch., <i>for Indian M.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">50.00</span></p>
+ <p>Peabody. Sab. Sch. of First Cong. Ch., Box Books and Christmas Gifts, <i>for
+ Sherwood, Tenn.</i></p>
+ <p>Pepperell. Ladies of Cong. Soc., Bbl. of C., <i>for Greenwood, S.C.</i>, 2
+ <i>for Freight</i> <span class="rightmargin">2.00</span></p>
+ <p>Randolph. Collected by Mrs. J.C. Labaree, 30; Y.L. Miss'y Soc,. Bbl. of C.,
+ <i>for Tougaloo, U.</i> <span class="rightmargin">30.00</span></p>
+ <p>Randolph. Annie T. and Marion Belcher <span class="rightmargin">10.00</span></p>
+ <p>Reading. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">18.00</span></p>
+ <p>Royalston. "A Friend," 10; &mdash;&mdash;, Bbl. of C., <i>for Greenwood,
+ S.C.</i> <span class="rightmargin">10.00</span></p>
+ <p>Royalston. First Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">2.50</span></p>
+ <p>Somerset. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">2.00</span></p>
+ <p>Somerville. Sab. Sch. of Franklin St. Cong. Ch., <i>for Indian Student Aid</i>,
+ add'l <span class="rightmargin">40.00</span></p>
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page112" id="page112"></a>{112}</span>
+ <p>Somerville. Winter Hill Cong. Ch., 17.50; Day St. Ch., 10.50 <span
+ class="rightmargin">28.00</span></p>
+ <p>Somerville. Ladies of Cong. Ch., for Freight <span
+ class="rightmargin">3.35</span></p>
+ <p>South Amherst. South Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">6.12</span></p>
+ <p>South Braintree. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">11.00</span></p>
+ <p>Southington. Ladies' Benev.Soc., 2 Bbls. of C., <i>for Tougaloo, Miss</i></p>
+ <p>South Weymouth. Children's Soc., Bbl. of Christmas Gifts</p>
+ <p>Spencer. Mrs. G.H. Marsh's S.S. Class, <i>for Wilmington, N.C.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">7.00</span></p>
+ <p>Springfield. "H.M." <span class="rightmargin">1000.00</span></p>
+ <p>Taunton. Union Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">27.50</span></p>
+ <p>Waltham. Trin. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">15.80</span></p>
+ <p>Waltham. Sab. Sen. Class, <i>for Storrs Sch. Atlanta, Ga</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">3.00</span></p>
+ <p>Warren. Sab. Sch. of Cong. Ch., <i>for Student Aid, Tillotson C. &amp; N.
+ Inst</i> <span class="rightmargin">42.00</span></p>
+ <p>Watertown. Mrs. M. Pryor <span class="rightmargin">0.50</span></p>
+ <p>Wellesley. Cong. Ch. and Soc <span class="rightmargin">123.14</span></p>
+ <p>Wellesley. Wellesley College, to const. GEORGE W. CABLE L.M. <span
+ class="rightmargin">45.00</span></p>
+ <p>Wellesley. "Friends" in Wellesley Col., <i>for Marion, Ala</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">26.00</span></p>
+ <p>West Boylston. First Cong. Ch. and Soc. <span
+ class="rightmargin">9.00</span></p>
+ <p>Westhampton. ladies' Benev. Soc., <i>for Tougaloo U</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">10.00</span></p>
+ <p>Westminster. "Cheerful Givers," <i>for Student Aid, Fisk U</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">5.00</span></p>
+ <p>West Newton. Earnest Workers, <i>for Student Aid, Storrs Sch</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">5.00</span></p>
+ <p>West Springfield. Mrs. Lucy m. Bagg, <i>for Pleasant Hill, Tenn</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">50.00</span></p>
+ <p>Weymouth. Sab. Sch. of Cong. Ch., <i>for Pleasant Hill, Tenn</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">55.00</span></p>
+ <p>Whitman. Cong. Ch. and Soc. <span class="rightmargin">77.00</span></p>
+ <p>Winchendon. Sab. Sch. of Cong. Ch., <i>for Pleasant Hill, Tenn</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">20.00</span></p>
+ <p>Winchester. Cong. Ch. and Soc. <span class="rightmargin">19.59</span></p>
+ <p>Worchester. Old So. Ch., to const. GEO. R. BLISS and MRS. GEO. M. PIERSE L.M.'s
+ <span class="rightmargin">61.26</span></p>
+ <p>Yarmouth. Rev. John W. Dodge, <i>for Pleasant Hill, Tenn</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">25.00</span> &mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;
+ $2,925 07</p>
+ <h6>LEGACY.</h6>
+ <p>Whitinsville. Estate of Chas. P. Whitin, by Edward Whitin, Ex. <span
+ class="rightmargin">3000.00</span>
+ &mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash; $5,925 07</p>
+ <h6>CLOTHING, ETC., RECEIVED AT BOSTON OFFICE.</h6>
+ <p>Farmington Falls, Me. By Miss Susan G. Crosswell, Box, <i>for Williamsburg,
+ Ky</i></p>
+ <p>Litchfield, Me. Ladies' Aid Soc., Bbl., <i>for Williamsburg, Ky</i></p>
+ <p>Brookfield, Mass. Mrs. R.B. Montague. Bbl., <i>for Sherwood, Tenn</i></p>
+ <p>Cambridgeport, Mass. Miss Lacena Palmer, Basted Patchwork</p>
+ <p>Cambridgeport, Mass. By Mrs. R.L. Snow, Box and Bbl., <i>for Tougaloo U</i></p>
+ <p>Haverhill, Mass. West Cong. Sab. Sch., Bbl., <i>for Talladega C.</i></p>
+ <p>Hyde Park, Mass. W.H.M.U., of First Cong. Ch., Bbl., Val. 40 <i>for Tougaloo
+ U.</i></p>
+ <p>Roxbury, Mass. Mrs. Arthur W. Tuffts, Box, <i>for Sherwood, Tenn</i></p>
+ <p>Somerville, Mass. Mission Circle of Franklin St. Ch., Bbl., <i>for Santee Indian
+ M.</i></p>
+ </div>
+ <h5>RHODE ISLAND, $448.63.</h5>
+ <div class="receipts">
+ <p>East Providence. Samuel Belden, <i>for Atlanta U</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">100.00</span></p>
+ <p>Newport. United Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">34.68</span></p>
+ <p>Pawtucket. "Friends," Cong. Ch., <i>for Indian M.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">105.00</span></p>
+ <p>Providence. Sam. Sch. of Union Cong. Ch., 50 <i>for Indian M.</i> and 25 <i>for
+ Williamsburg Ky</i> <span class="rightmargin">75.00</span></p>
+ <p>Providence. Union Cong. Ch. and Soc. <span class="rightmargin">131.87</span></p>
+ <p>Riverside. Riverside Cong. Ch <span class="rightmargin">2.08</span></p>
+ </div>
+ <h5>CONNECTICUT, $2,001.63.</h5>
+ <div class="receipts">
+ <p>Berlin. "A Friend," 70; The Misses Churchill, 2, <i>for Student Aid, Tougaloo
+ U.</i> <span class="rightmargin">72.00</span></p>
+ <p>Branford. E. Davis <span class="rightmargin">1.00</span></p>
+ <p>Bridgeport. First Cong. Ch <span class="rightmargin">129.76</span></p>
+ <p>Bristol. Sab. Sch. Class, <i>for Indian Sch'p</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">14.00</span></p>
+ <p>Columbia. Ladies' Miss'y Soc., 3, and Bbl. of C., <i>for Louisville, Ky</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">3.00</span></p>
+ <p>Danbury. "A Friend," <i>for Lexington, Ky.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">50.00</span></p>
+ <p>East Canaan. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">5.00</span></p>
+ <p>East Hartford. Sab. Sch. of Cong. Ch., 29.77 and Box of Christmas Gifts, <i>for
+ Student Aid, Williamsburg, Ky</i> <span class="rightmargin">29.77</span></p>
+ <p>East Wallingford. Mrs. Benj. Hall <span class="rightmargin">3.50</span></p>
+ <p>Enfield. Sab Sch. of First Cong. Ch., <i>for Indian Sch'p Fund</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">25.00</span></p>
+ <p>Fairfield. Sab. Sch. of Cong. Ch., <i>for Tougaloo U</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">25.00</span></p>
+ <p>Gaylordsville. Miss Grace Hendricks, <i>for Tillotson C. &amp; N. Inst.</i>
+ <span class="rightmargin">10.00</span></p>
+ <p>Glastonbury. "Friends," <i>for Indian M.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">217.00</span></p>
+ <p>Hartford. Teachers and Scholars, Sab. Sch. of Asylum Hill Cong. Ch., 12.50
+ <i>for Santee Indian Sch.; 10 for Atlanta U.; 5 for Chinese Sch. Cal.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">27.50</span></p>
+ <p>Hartford. Sab. Sch. of Windsor Av. Cong. Ch., <i>for Student Aid, Fisk U</i>
+ <span class="rightmargin">20.00</span></p>
+ <p>Lakeville. Mrs. S.C. Robbins <span class="rightmargin">4.50</span></p>
+ <p>Ledyard. Cong. Ch. and Soc <span class="rightmargin">22.77</span></p>
+ <p>Mansfield Center. Ladies' Soc. of Cong. Ch., Half Bbl, of C., etc., <i>for
+ Storrs Sch., Atlanta, Ga</i></p>
+ <p>Middletown. Sab. Sch of First Cong. Ch., <i>for Indian M.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">25.00</span></p>
+ <p>Milton. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">5.00</span></p>
+ <p>Naugatuck. "Young Friends," <i>for Indian Sch'p</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">70.00</span></p>
+ <p>New Britian. Miss Mary L. Stanley, 9 <i>for Student Aid;</i> Miss Mary L.
+ Stanley and Miss Daniels, Box of C, <i>for Williamsburg, Ky</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">9.00</span></p>
+ <p>New haven. "A Friend" <span class="rightmargin">10.00</span></p>
+ <p>New Haven. Davenport Ch., <i>for Indian M</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">5.50</span></p>
+ <p>New Haven. First Ch., Miss Barnes'S.S. Class and Others.Box <i>for Jones'
+ Kindergarten, Storrs Sch</i></p>
+ <p>New London. "Member of Second Ch." <span class="rightmargin">1.00</span></p>
+ <p>Norfolk "A Friend" <span class="rightmargin">4.50</span></p>
+ <p>North Branford. Sab. Sch., <i>for Oaks, N.C.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">20.00</span></p>
+ <p>North Coventry. Sab. Sch. of Cong. Ch., <i>for Student Aid, Williamsburg, Ky</i>
+ <span class="rightmargin">24.00</span></p>
+ <p>Norwalk. Miss C.L. Marsh, <i>for Tillotson C.&amp;N. Inst</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">10.00</span></p>
+ <p>Norwich. Sab. Sch. of Second Cong. Ch., <i>for Santee Indian M.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">50.87</span></p>
+ <p>Norwich. Sab. Sch. of Second Cong. Ch <span class="rightmargin">2.08</span></p>
+ <p>Poquonock. Willing Workers of Cong. Ch.,<i>for Student Aid, Williamsburg,
+ Ky.</i> <span class="rightmargin">9.00</span></p>
+ <p>Salisbury. Sab. Sch. of Cong. Ch., <i>for Indian M</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">12.50</span></p>
+ <p>Sharon. John H. Cleaveland <span class="rightmargin">5.00</span></p>
+ <p>Simsbury. Miss'y Soc. <i>for Freight</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">3.00</span></p>
+ <p>South Coventry. Dea. and Mrs. Kingsbury, 10; Miss Louisa Lord, 5 <i>for
+ Williamsburg, Ky</i> <span class="rightmargin">15.00</span></p>
+ <p>South Glastonbury. Cong. Ch. and Sab. Sch. <span
+ class="rightmargin">10.58</span></p>
+ <p>Southington. First Cong. Ch., <i>for Thomasville, Ga</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">1.50</span></p>
+ <p>Southport. "A Friend" <span class="rightmargin">30.00</span></p>
+ <p>Southport. Sab. Sch. of Cong. Ch., <i>for Indian M</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">8.92</span></p>
+ <p>Thomaston. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">35.15</span></p>
+ <p>Thompsonville. Mrs. J.C. Simpson, 5; Miss Maggie Drigg, 5, <i>for Student Aid,
+ Straight U</i> <span class="rightmargin">10.00</span></p>
+ <p>Unionville. First Ch. of Christ <span class="rightmargin">37.92</span></p>
+ <p>Unionville. "A Friend," Communion Service, 8 pieces, <i>for Ch., Austin,
+ Tex</i></p>
+ <p>Warren. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">21.00</span></p>
+ <p>Waterbury. First Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">200.86</span></p>
+ <p>Waterbury. Ladies' Benev. Soc., First Cong. Ch., <i>for Conn. Ind'l Sch., Ga</i>
+ <span class="rightmargin">25.00</span></p>
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page113" id="page113"></a>{113}</span>
+ <p>Waterbury. "A Friend," <i>for Santee Indian M.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">50.00</span></p>
+ <p>Waterbury. Sunshine Circle, <i>for Indian M.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">5.00</span> West Hartford. "S.H.," <i>for Indian M.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">10.00</span></p>
+ <p>West Hartland. Cong. Ch., <i>for Conn. Ind'l Sch., Ga.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">6.00</span></p>
+ <p>Weston. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">10.00</span></p>
+ <p>Windham. Ladies' Soc. Cong. Ch., Box of C., etc., <i>for Thomasville.,
+ Ga.</i></p>
+ <p>Woodbridge. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">14.83</span></p>
+ <p>Woodbury. Ladies' Miss. Soc. of South Cong. Ch., <i>for Conn. Ind'l Sch.,
+ Ga.</i> <span class="rightmargin">25.00</span> Woman's Home Missionary Union of
+ Conn., by Mrs. S.M. Hotchkiss, <i>Sec.</i>:</p>
+ <p>Kent. Sab. Sch. of Cong, Ch., <i>for Mountain White Work</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">20.00</span></p>
+ <p>New Haven. Ladies' Miss'y Soc. of College St. Ch., <i>for Conn. Ind'l Sch.</i>
+ <span class="rightmargin">35.00</span></p>
+ <p>&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;- 55.00</p>
+ <p>&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;- $1,497.96</p>
+ <h6>LEGACIES.</h6>
+ <p>Durham. Estate of Dea. Gaylord Newton, by H.G. Newton, to const. HENRY G.
+ NEWTON, MISS LOIS CAMP and THOMAS R. NOBLE L.M's <span
+ class="rightmargin">100.00</span></p>
+ <p>New Haven. Estate of Mary Dutton, by Samuel D. Gilbert, Ex. <span
+ class="rightmargin">100.00</span></p>
+ <p>Woodbury. Estate of Sarah J. Deming, by Anson A. Root, Adm. <span
+ class="rightmargin">303.67</span></p>
+ <p>&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;- $2,001 63</p>
+ </div>
+ <h5>NEW YORK, $1,676.98.</h5>
+ <div class="receipts">
+ <p>Adams Basin. Mrs. H. Clark <span class="rightmargin">5.00</span></p>
+ <p>Aquebogue. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">11.00</span></p>
+ <p>Binghamton. Cong. Bible Sch., <i>for Student Aid, Fisk U.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">25.00</span></p>
+ <p>Brooklyn. Sab. Sch. of Tompkins Av. Cong. Ch., <i>for Atlanta U.</i>, to const.
+ REV. ROBERT R. MEREDITH, D.D., REV. GEO. F. PENTECOST, D.D., HENRY T. HOLT and MRS.
+ ELMA M. STEBBINS L.M's <span class="rightmargin">123.00</span></p>
+ <p>Brooklyn, Ladies' Circle, Lee Av. Cong. Ch., 22; South Bushwick Sab. Sch., 12;
+ Daughters of the King, Lee Av, Cong. Ch., 7; Penny Offering Park Av. Sab. Sch., 5;
+ Mrs. Anna Pollock, 3, <i>for Student Aid</i>. Mrs. Sarah Wilde, 10; Miss Sarah
+ Hulst, 5; Daughters or the King, Lee Av. Cong. Sab. Sch., Pkg. of C.; Flossie
+ Bringham, 1; Carrie Strong, 1, <i>for Student Aid</i>. Ladies' Circle, Lee Av.
+ Cong. Ch., 2 Boxes of C.; South Bushwick Reformed Sab. Sch., 2 Bbls. of C. and Box
+ of Books, <i>for Williamsburg, Ky.</i> <span class="rightmargin">66.00</span></p>
+ <p>Brooklyn. Sab. Sch. of Central Cong. Ch., <i>for Santee Indian M.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">37.50</span></p>
+ <p>Brooklyn. Park Cong. Ch., 16.43; A.G. Brinkckerhoff, 5 <span
+ class="rightmargin">21.43</span></p>
+ <p>Fairport. J.E. Howard <span class="rightmargin">50.00</span></p>
+ <p>Flushing. First Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">56.00</span></p>
+ <p>Gloversville. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">235.34</span></p>
+ <p>Honeoye. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">26.00</span></p>
+ <p>Kiantone. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">4.50</span></p>
+ <p>Lawrenceville. Lucius Hulburd <span class="rightmargin">5.00</span></p>
+ <p>Lima. Mrs. Orson Warner <span class="rightmargin">2.00</span></p>
+ <p>Lisbon. First Cong. Ch., 8.51; Mrs. Wm. Sheldon, 1 <span
+ class="rightmargin">9.51</span></p>
+ <p>Miller's Place. Mount Sinai Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">12.00</span></p>
+ <p>New York. Miss D.E. Emerson, <i>for Student Aid, Tougaloo U.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">25.00</span></p>
+ <p>New York. "A Friend," Christmas Gift, <i>for Williamsburg, Ky.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">5.00</span></p>
+ <p>Paris. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">24.00</span></p>
+ <p>Perry Centre. Cong. Soc., <i>for Freight</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">1.25</span></p>
+ <p>Riverhead. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">10.30</span></p>
+ <p>Rochester. Mrs. E.R. Andrews <span class="rightmargin">4.50</span></p>
+ <p>Union Valley. Wm. C. Angel <span class="rightmargin">5.00</span></p>
+ <p>Walton. First Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">69.82</span></p>
+ <p>Walton. Cong. Sab. Sch., Christmas Gifts, 33.93, and 2 Bbls. of C., etc.; H.E.
+ St. John, 9; Miss Jennie Hull, 2, <i>for Student Aid, Williamsburg, Ky.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">44.93</span></p>
+ <p>West Bloomfield. Cong. Ch. (20 of which <i>for Student Aid, Fisk U.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">41.00</span></p>
+ <p>Woodbridge. First Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">8.37</span></p>
+ <p>&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+ <p>$938.45</p>
+ <h6>LEGACY.</h6>
+ <p>Waverly. Estate of Mrs. Phebe Bepburne, Howard Elmer, Ex. <span
+ class="rightmargin">738.53</span></p>
+ <p>&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;-</p>
+ <p>$1,676.98</p>
+ </div>
+ <h5>NEW JERSEY, $36.91.</h5>
+ <div class="receipts">
+ <p>Colt's Neck. Reformed Ch. <span class="rightmargin">5.16</span></p>
+ <p>East Orange. "True Blue Card," Collected by Mary Brenner <span
+ class="rightmargin">1.00</span></p>
+ <p>Lakewood. Rev. Geo. and E.O. Langdon <span class="rightmargin">3.00</span></p>
+ <p>Newark. "X.Y." <span class="rightmargin">1.75</span></p>
+ <p>Newark. "A Sister in Christ," Box Papers, etc., <i>for Sherwood, Tenn.</i></p>
+ <p>Upper Montclair. Ladies' Aid Soc. of Cong. Ch., Bbl. Of C., <i>for Storrs Sch.,
+ Atlanta, Ga.</i></p>
+ <p>Westfield. "A Friend" <span class="rightmargin">1.00</span></p>
+ <p>&mdash;&mdash;. "Heart's Content " <span class="rightmargin">25.00</span></p>
+ </div>
+ <h5>PENNSYLVANIA, $7.00.</h5>
+ <div class="receipts">
+ <p>Braddock. Thomas Addenbrook, Box Books, etc., <i>for Sherwood, Tenn.</i></p>
+ <p>Guy's Mills. Mrs. F. Maria Guy <span class="rightmargin">2.00</span></p>
+ <p>Linesville. M.T. Donaldson <span class="rightmargin">5.00</span></p>
+ </div>
+ <h5>OHIO, $407.82.</h5>
+ <div class="receipts">
+ <p>Austinburg. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">11.00</span></p>
+ <p>Berea. First Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">6.50</span></p>
+ <p>Cleveland. Jennings Av. Cong. Ch., 75; Plymouth Cong. Ch., 72.16; John Jay Low,
+ 20 <span class="rightmargin">167.16</span></p>
+ <p>Cleveland. Mount Zion Sab. Sch., <i>for Student Aid, Fisk U.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">8.64</span></p>
+ <p>Cleveland. Sab. Sch. First Cong. Ch., Box of C., <i>for Tillotson C. &amp; N.
+ Inst.</i></p>
+ <p>Medina. W.H. Sipher <span class="rightmargin">2.00</span></p>
+ <p>Mount Vernon. Sab. Sch. of Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">19.37</span></p>
+ <p>North Ridgeville. Ladies' Benev. Soc., Box Canned Fruit; Cong. Sab. Sch., Bbl.
+ of Goods, <i>for Williamsburg, Ky.</i></p>
+ <p>Oberlin. Sab. Sch. of First Cong. Ch., 10; "A Friend," 12.50; Mrs. L.G.B. Hills,
+ 5 <span class="rightmargin">27.50</span></p>
+ <p>Oberlin. Sab. Sch. of Second Cong. Ch., <i>for Lexington, Ky.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">15.00</span></p>
+ <p>Oberlin. Mrs. Vance, <i>for Student Aid, Williamsburg, Ky.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">5.00</span></p>
+ <p>Oberlin. Ladies of Cong. Ch., Bbl. of C., <i>for Storrs Sch., Atlanta,
+ Ga.</i></p>
+ <p>Painesville. First Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">27.90</span></p>
+ <p>Painesville. Y.L.M. Soc., of First Cong. Ch., <i>for Fort Berthold Indian M.</i>
+ <span class="rightmargin">4.75</span></p>
+ <p>South Salem. Daniel S. Pricer <span class="rightmargin">5.00</span></p>
+ <p>Toledo. Miss A.M. Nicholas, <i>for Wilmington, N.C.</i>. <span
+ class="rightmargin">5.00</span></p>
+ <p>West Andover. "Friends," by L.L. Coleman <span
+ class="rightmargin">10.00</span></p>
+ <p>Willoughby. Lyndon Freeman <span class="rightmargin">1.50</span></p>
+ <p>Ohio Woman's Home Missionary Union, by Mrs. Phebe A. Crafts, Treas., <i>for
+ Woman's Work</i>:</p>
+ <p>Burton. Mrs. A.S. Hotchkiss <span class="rightmargin">3.00</span></p>
+ <p>Cleveland. L.H.M.S., of Euclid Av. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">20.00</span>
+ Cleveland. Euclid Av. Ch., L.M. Soc. <span class="rightmargin">20.00</span></p>
+ <p>Columbus. Eastwood Ch., Y.L.M. Soc. <span class="rightmargin">10.00</span></p>
+ <p>Columbus. Eastwood Ch., "Family Mite Box." <span
+ class="rightmargin">12.00</span></p>
+ <p>Willoughby. Mrs. Mary P. Hastings <span class="rightmargin">26.00</span></p>
+ <p>&mdash;&mdash;- 91.00</p>
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page114" id="page114"></a>{114}</span>
+ </div>
+ <h5>INDIANA, $25.00.</h5>
+ <div class="receipts">
+ <p>Bloomington, Mrs. A.B. Woodford, <i>for Student Aid, Fisk U.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">5.00</span></p>
+ <p>New Corydon. Geo. Storz <span class="rightmargin">20.00</span></p>
+ </div>
+ <h5>ILLINOIS, $468.20.</h5>
+ <div class="receipts">
+ <p>Albion. James Green <span class="rightmargin">10.00</span></p>
+ <p>Bunker Hill. D.E. Pettengill <span class="rightmargin">1.00</span></p>
+ <p>Canton. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">42.20</span></p>
+ <p>Chicago. Sedgwick St. Sab. Sch. <span class="rightmargin">25.00</span></p>
+ <p>Chicago. Major E.D. Redington, <i>for Lexington, Ky.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">17.00</span></p>
+ <p>Earlville. Mrs. Rindell, 1; Mabel Rindell, 20 cts.; Bertie Rindell, 15 cts.
+ <span class="rightmargin">1.35</span></p>
+ <p>Galesburg. Sab. Sch. of Cong. Ch., <i>for Fisk U.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">10.00</span></p>
+ <p>Geneseo. First Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">145.18</span></p>
+ <p>Greenville. Ladies' Miss'y Circle, Box of C., Val. 25</p>
+ <p>Joliet. "A Thank Offering" <span class="rightmargin">5.00</span></p>
+ <p>La Grange. W.M.S., <i>for Chinese M.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">5.00</span></p>
+ <p>Lake View. Church of the Redeemer <span class="rightmargin">22.55</span></p>
+ <p>Lyonsville. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">5.60</span></p>
+ <p>Naperville. Prof. Geo. W. Sindlinger, <i>for Pleasant Hill, Tenn.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">10.00</span></p>
+ <p>Odell. Mrs. H.E. Dana <span class="rightmargin">10.00</span></p>
+ <p>Ottawa. First Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">32.66</span></p>
+ <p>Princeton. Mrs. R.D. Harrison, <i>for Student Aid, Fisk U.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">1.00</span></p>
+ <p>Prospect Park. Cong. Ch., in part <span class="rightmargin">7.00</span></p>
+ <p>Shabbona. Woman's Miss'y Soc., 2 Boxes Papers, etc., <i>for Sherwood,
+ Tenn.</i></p>
+ <p>Turner. Mrs. R. Currier <span class="rightmargin">1.00</span></p>
+ <p>Wheaton. College Ch. of Christ, in part <span
+ class="rightmargin">28.81</span></p>
+ <p>Winnebago. Ladies' Miss'y Soc., <i>for Woman's Work</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">9.00</span></p>
+ <p>Woman's Home Missionary Union of Ill., Mrs. B.L. Leavitt, Treas., <i>for Woman's
+ Work</i>:</p>
+ <p>Chicago. L.M. Soc. of New Eng. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">30.00</span></p>
+ <p>Oak Park. Ladies' Benev. Circle <span class="rightmargin">23.00</span></p>
+ <p>Rockford. Peter Holman Fund, First Ch. <span
+ class="rightmargin">20.65</span></p>
+ <p>Sheffield. Aux. <span class="rightmargin">5.20</span></p>
+ <p>&mdash;&mdash;&mdash; 78.85</p>
+ </div>
+ <h5>MICHIGAN, $90.01</h5>
+ <div class="receipts">
+ <p>Allendale. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">2.75</span></p>
+ <p>Ann Arbor. Ladies' Miss'y Soc. of Cong. Ch., Bbl. of C., <i>for Athens,
+ Ala.</i></p>
+ <p>Banks. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">8.70</span></p>
+ <p>Cheboygan. First Cong. Ch., add'l <span class="rightmargin">0.97</span></p>
+ <p>Grand Rapids. First Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">25.50</span></p>
+ <p>Hopkins. First Ch. <span class="rightmargin">6.50</span></p>
+ <p>Laingsburg. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">4.50</span></p>
+ <p>Lansing. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">7.00</span></p>
+ <p>Northville. D. Pomeroy <span class="rightmargin">5.00</span></p>
+ <p>Salem. Miss'y Soc. of Second Cong. Ch., <i>for Athens, Ala.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">5.59</span></p>
+ <p>South Haven. First Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">14.50</span></p>
+ <p>&mdash;&mdash;. "Muskegon" <span class="rightmargin">2.00</span></p>
+ <p>Woman's Home Missionary Union of Mich., by Mrs. E.F. Grabill, Treas., <i>for
+ Woman's Work</i>:</p>
+ <p>Bay City. W.H.M.S. <span class="rightmargin">2.00</span></p>
+ <p>Cheboygan. W.H.M.S. <span class="rightmargin">5.00</span></p>
+ <p>&mdash;&mdash;&mdash; 7.00</p>
+ </div>
+ <h5>WISCONSIN, $222.03.</h5>
+ <div class="receipts">
+ <p>Baraboo. Miss'y Soc., Bbl. of C., <i>for Storrs Sch., Atlanta, Ga.</i></p>
+ <p>Boscobel. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">2.25</span></p>
+ <p>Bristol and Paris. Christian Endeavor Soc., 2.55; Ladies' Soc. of Cong. Ch.,
+ Bbl. of C., <i>for Thomasville, Ga.</i> <span class="rightmargin">2.55</span></p>
+ <p>Brodhead. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">4.27</span></p>
+ <p>Darlington. Cong. Ch. ..7.33</p>
+ <p>Fond du Lac. First Cong. Ch., 2 Bbls. C., <i>for Storrs Sch., Atlanta,
+ Ga.</i></p>
+ <p>Green Bay. Ladies' Miss'y Soc., Bbl. of C., <i>for Austin, Tex.</i></p>
+ <p>Janesville. "Friends," Box of C., <i>for Marion, Ala.</i></p>
+ <p>La Crosse. "A Friend," 25; Cong. Ch., 10 <span
+ class="rightmargin">35.00</span></p>
+ <p>Lake Geneva. Mrs. Geo. Allen <span class="rightmargin">5.00</span></p>
+ <p>Leeds. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">5.00</span></p>
+ <p>Mazo Manie. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">7.07</span></p>
+ <p>Milwaukee. Plymouth Ch. <span class="rightmargin">40.58</span></p>
+ <p>Peshtigo. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">3.22</span></p>
+ <p>Sparta. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">40.41</span></p>
+ <p>Stoughton. Miss Sewell's S.S. Class, Christmas Gifts, <i>for Austin,
+ Texas</i></p>
+ <p>Waukesha. "Friends," <i>for Student Aid, Marion Ala.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">15.00</span></p>
+ <p>Wauwatosa. Ladies' Miss'y Soc., Box of C., <i>for Austin, Texas</i></p>
+ <p>Windsor. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">18.75</span></p>
+ <p>Woman's Home Missionary Union of Wis., <i>for Woman's Work</i>:</p>
+ <p>Green Bay. W.M.S. <span class="rightmargin">9.00</span></p>
+ <p>Milwaukee. W.H.M.U., Grand Av. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">25.00</span></p>
+ <p>Stoughton. Sab. Sch. Birthday Box <span class="rightmargin">1.60</span></p>
+ <p>&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;- 35.60</p>
+ </div>
+ <h5>IOWA, $204.31</h5>
+ <div class="receipts">
+ <p>Burlington. Mercy Lewis, <i>for Chinese M.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">0.50</span></p>
+ <p>Cedar Rapids. Sab. Sch. of First Cong. Ch., Birthday Offerings <span
+ class="rightmargin">1.97</span></p>
+ <p>Cherokee. Sab. Sch. of Cong. Ch., <i>for Student Aid, Straight U.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">10.00</span></p>
+ <p>Chester Center. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">9.85</span></p>
+ <p>Danville. L. Mix <span class="rightmargin">5.00</span></p>
+ <p>Denmark. Sab. Sch. of Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">14.50</span> Farragut.
+ Mrs. L.S. Chapin, <i>for Woman's Work</i> <span class="rightmargin">2.00</span></p>
+ <p>Garnaville. Rev. G.M. Porter <span class="rightmargin">3.00</span></p>
+ <p>Hull. Mrs. E.C. Davidson, <i>for Student Aid, Williamsburg, Ky.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">6.00</span></p>
+ <p>Iowa City. Sab. Sch., <i>for Pleasant Hill, Tenn.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">15.00</span></p>
+ <p>Iowa City. Mrs. R.A. McClain <span class="rightmargin">5.00</span></p>
+ <p>McGregor. J.H. Ellsworth <span class="rightmargin">10.00</span></p>
+ <p>McGregor. S.S. Class, by Mrs. S.J. Peterson, <i>for Student Aid, Straight U.</i>
+ <span class="rightmargin">5.00</span></p>
+ <p>MeGregor. Mrs. C.E. Daniels, <i>for Freight</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">2.30</span></p>
+ <p>New Hampton. First Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">12.30</span></p>
+ <p>Newton. Wittenberg Sab. Sch. <span class="rightmargin">14.78</span></p>
+ <p>Sioux City. First Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">44.00</span></p>
+ <p>Stuart. Bbl. of C., <i>for Savannah, Ga.</i></p>
+ <p>Tabor. Cong. Ch., <i>for Tillotson C. &amp; N. Inst.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">10.00</span></p>
+ <p>Tipton. Mrs. M.D. Clapp <span class="rightmargin">3.50</span></p>
+ <p>Tyrone. Wm. Griffiths <span class="rightmargin">0.25</span></p>
+ <p>Woman's Home Missionary Union of Iowa, <i>for Woman's Work</i>:</p>
+ <p>Grinnell. W.H.M.U. <span class="rightmargin">3.68</span></p>
+ <p>Le Mars. " " <span class="rightmargin">5.73</span></p>
+ <p>McGregor. L.M.S. <span class="rightmargin">6.95</span></p>
+ <p>Osage. W.M.S. <span class="rightmargin">3.00</span></p>
+ <p>Tipton. L.M.S. <span class="rightmargin">10.00</span></p>
+ <p>&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;- 29.36</p>
+ </div>
+ <h5>MINNESOTA, $220.25.</h5>
+ <div class="receipts">
+ <p>Brainerd. First Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">12.00</span></p>
+ <p>Hancock. Sab. Sch. Miss'y Soc., <i>for Savannah, Ga.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">5.00</span></p>
+ <p>Leech Lake. C.P. Allen, M.D. <span class="rightmargin">30.00</span></p>
+ <p>Plainview. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">14.11</span></p>
+ <p>Plainview. Box of S.S. Supplies, <i>for Corbin, Ky.</i></p>
+ <p>Rochester. W.J. Eaton, 50; Cong. Ch., 40.87 <span
+ class="rightmargin">90.87</span></p>
+ <p>Sauk Center. Sab. Sch. of Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">8.00</span></p>
+ <p>Sauk Center. "Little Lights," Box Papers, etc., <i>for Jonesboro, Tenn.</i></p>
+ <p>Stillwater. Grace Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">2.92</span></p>
+ <p>Wabasha. Cong. Sab. Sch. and Y.P.S.C.E. <span
+ class="rightmargin">27.25</span></p>
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page115" id="page115"></a>{115}</span>
+ <p>Worthington. Union Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">21.55</span></p>
+ <p>Zumbrota. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">8.55</span></p>
+ </div>
+ <h5>MISSOURI, $236.60.</h5>
+ <div class="receipts">
+ <p>Bevier. Luella J. Hudelson <span class="rightmargin">2.00</span></p>
+ <p>Kansas City. Olivet Cong. Ch., in part <span class="rightmargin">9.05</span></p>
+ <p>St. Louis. Pilgrim Cong. Ch., 200; Third Cong. Ch., 10.55 <span
+ class="rightmargin">210.55</span></p>
+ <p>St. Louis. Mrs. R.H. Webb, <i>for Straight U.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">10.00</span></p>
+ <p>Webster Groves. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">5.00</span></p>
+ </div>
+ <h5>KANSAS, $85.65.</h5>
+ <div class="receipts">
+ <p>Atchison. Cong. Ch., <i>for Tillotson C. &amp; N. Inst.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">5.00</span></p>
+ <p>Dover. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">2.80</span></p>
+ <p>Lawrence. Second Cong. Ch., "Thank Offering" <span
+ class="rightmargin">1.00</span></p>
+ <p>Topeka. Woman's H.M. Soc., <i>for Storrs Sch., Atlanta, Ga.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">75.00</span></p>
+ <p>Topeka. Ladies' Miss'y Soc. 2 Bbls. of C. <i>for Storrs Sch., Atlanta,
+ Ga.</i></p>
+ <p>Wakarusa. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">1.85</span></p>
+ </div>
+ <h5>DAKOTA, $5.00.</h5>
+ <div class="receipts">
+ <p>Sioux Falls. W.M.S., by Mrs. Sue Fifield, Terr. Treas. <span
+ class="rightmargin">5.00</span></p>
+ </div>
+ <h5>NEBRASKA, $47.00.</h5>
+ <div class="receipts">
+ <p>Cowles. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">2.00</span></p>
+ <p>Omaha. First Cong. Ch. (in part) <span class="rightmargin">10.00</span></p>
+ <p>Oxford. F.A. Wood <span class="rightmargin">5.00</span></p>
+ <p>Wahoo. Cong. Ch., to const. Rev. A.A. CRESSMAN L.M. <span
+ class="rightmargin">30.00</span></p>
+ </div>
+ <h5>CALIFORNIA, $62.50.</h5>
+ <div class="receipts">
+ <p>Riverside. C.W. Herron's S.S. Class, <i>for Student Aid, Tougaloo U.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">8.00</span></p>
+ <p>San Luis Obispo. Rev. E.N. Bartlett <span class="rightmargin">4.50</span></p>
+ <p>Santa Barbara. Rev. Edward Hildreth, to const. PHILO C. HILDRETH L.M. <span
+ class="rightmargin">50.00</span></p>
+ </div>
+ <h5>DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA, $70.00.</h5>
+ <div class="receipts">
+ <p>Washington. "Two Members First Cong. Ch.," <i>for Indian M.</i>, and to const.
+ MRS. SARAH B.A. ROBINSON and MISS SARAH M. ROBINSON L.M.'s <span
+ class="rightmargin">60.00</span></p>
+ <p>Washington. Lincoln Memorial Ch. <span class="rightmargin">10.00</span></p>
+ </div>
+ <h5>MARYLAND, $393.16.</h5>
+ <div class="receipts">
+ <p>Baltimore. First Cong. Ch. (105 of which <i>for Indian M.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">393.16</span></p>
+ </div>
+ <h5>KENTUCKY, $450.86.</h5>
+ <div class="receipts">
+ <p>Lexington. Tuition <span class="rightmargin">314.21</span></p>
+ <p>Williamsburg. Tuition <span class="rightmargin">136.65</span></p>
+ </div>
+ <h5>TENNESSEE, $1,126.03.</h5>
+ <div class="receipts">
+ <p>Grand View. Tuition <span class="rightmargin">45.00</span></p>
+ <p>Jonesboro. Tuition, 22.25; County Fund, 40 <span
+ class="rightmargin">62.25</span></p>
+ <p>Memphis. Tuition <span class="rightmargin">467.20</span></p>
+ <p>Nashville. Tuition, 509.08; Rent, 6.50 <span
+ class="rightmargin">515.58</span></p>
+ <p>Pleasant Hill. Miss J.A. Calkins, 31; Mrs. Shroyer, 1; "A Friend," 1; "A
+ Friend," by Mrs. Shroyer, 1, <i>for Pleasant Hill, Tenn.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">34.00</span></p>
+ <p>Sherwood. Mrs. O.N. Alden <span class="rightmargin">2.00</span></p>
+ </div>
+ <h5>NORTH CAROLINA, $177.35.</h5>
+ <div class="receipts">
+ <p>Raleigh. First Cong. Ch., Christmas Offering <span
+ class="rightmargin">4.85</span></p>
+ <p>Troy. By S.D. Leak <span class="rightmargin">1.00</span></p>
+ <p>Wilmington. Tuition <span class="rightmargin">163.00</span></p>
+ <p>Wilmington. By Miss H.L. Fitts <span class="rightmargin">8.50</span></p>
+ </div>
+ <h5>SOUTH CAROLINA, $228.62.</h5>
+ <div class="receipts">
+ <p>Charleston. Tuition <span class="rightmargin">228.62</span></p>
+ </div>
+ <h5>GEORGIA, $882.94.</h5>
+ <div class="receipts">
+ <p>Atlanta. Storrs Sch., Tuition <span class="rightmargin">295.85</span></p>
+ <p>Atlanta. First Cong. Ch., Birthday Offerings <span
+ class="rightmargin">1.04</span></p>
+ <p>Macon. Tuition <span class="rightmargin">246.35</span></p>
+ <p>Marietta. Ch. and Sab. Sch. <span class="rightmargin">1.00</span></p>
+ <p>McIntosh. Tuition <span class="rightmargin">58.75</span></p>
+ <p>Savannah. Tuition <span class="rightmargin">207.70</span></p>
+ <p>Thomasville. Tuition <span class="rightmargin">72.25</span></p>
+ </div>
+ <h5>ALABAMA, $706.35.</h5>
+ <div class="receipts">
+ <p>Athens. Tuition <span class="rightmargin">57.75</span></p>
+ <p>Birmingham. Christmas Gift, Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">5.60</span></p>
+ <p>Ironaton. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">1.50</span></p>
+ <p>Jenifer. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">3.60</span></p>
+ <p>Marion. Tuition, 130.50; "Southern Friend " (C.W.L.). <i>for Marion, Ala.</i>,
+ 5; Cong. Ch., 3 <span class="rightmargin">138.50</span></p>
+ <p>Mobile. Tuition <span class="rightmargin">288.90</span></p>
+ <p>Selma. "Two Southern Friends," <i>for Marion, Ala.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">30.00</span></p>
+ <p>Selma. W.M. Ass'n, Cong. Ch., <i>for Indian M.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">5.00</span></p>
+ <p>Talladega. Tuition <span class="rightmargin">176.10</span></p>
+ </div>
+ <h5>FLORIDA, $80.00.</h5>
+ <div class="receipts">
+ <p>Orlando. M. Marty <span class="rightmargin">10.00</span></p>
+ <p>Saint Augustine. Pub. Sch. Fund <span class="rightmargin">70.00</span></p>
+ </div>
+ <h5>LOUISIANA, $419.75</h5>
+ <div class="receipts">
+ <p>New Orleans. Tuition <span class="rightmargin">389.75</span></p>
+ <p>New Orleans. M.L. Berger, D.D., to const himself L.M. <span
+ class="rightmargin">30.00</span></p>
+ </div>
+ <h5>MISSISSIPPI, $209.65.</h5>
+ <div class="receipts">
+ <p>Port Gibson. Mrs. M.S. Bradford, <i>for Freight</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">1.85</span></p>
+ <p>Tougaloo. Tuition <span class="rightmargin">206.30</span></p>
+ <p>Tougaloo. Rent <span class="rightmargin">2.00</span></p>
+ </div>
+ <h5>TEXAS, $127.84.</h5>
+ <div class="receipts">
+ <p>Austin. Tuition, 123.84; "Friends." 4; Mr. Blatchford, Ag't, 1 Webster's
+ Unabridged Dictionary, 1 Webster's Academic Dictionary, <i>for Tillotson C. &amp;
+ N. Inst.</i> <span class="rightmargin">127.84</span></p>
+ </div>
+ <h5>INCOMES, $29.05.</h5>
+ <div class="receipts">
+ <p>Avery Fund, <i>for Mendi M.</i> <span class="rightmargin">29.05</span></p>
+ </div>
+ <h5>CANADA, $10.00.</h5>
+ <div class="receipts">
+ <p>Montreal. Chas. Alexander <span class="rightmargin">5.00</span></p>
+ <p>Toronto. Mrs. Jane Ebbs <span class="rightmargin">5.00</span></p>
+ </div>
+ <h5>TURKEY, $10.00.</h5>
+ <div class="receipts">
+ <p>Van. Rev. Geo. C. Raynolds <span class="rightmargin">10.00</span></p>
+ <p>==========</p>
+ <p>Donations <span class="rightmargin">10,146.59</span></p>
+ <p>Legacies <span class="rightmargin">4,242.20</span></p>
+ <p>Incomes <span class="rightmargin">29.05</span></p>
+ <p>Tuition <span class="rightmargin">4,250.05</span></p>
+ <p>Rents <span class="rightmargin">8.50</span></p>
+ <p>&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+ <p>Total for February <span class="rightmargin">18,676.39</span></p>
+ <p>Total from Oct. 1 to Feb'y 29 <span class="rightmargin">110,091.90</span></p>
+ <p>==========</p>
+ <hr />
+ </div>
+ <h5>FOR THE AMERICAN MISSIONARY.</h5>
+ <div class="receipts">
+ <p>Subscriptions for February <span class="rightmargin">104.41</span></p>
+ <p>Previously acknowledged <span class="rightmargin">458.09</span></p>
+ <p>&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+ <p>Total <span class="rightmargin">562.50</span></p>
+ <p>======</p>
+ </div>
+ <p>H.W. HUBBARD, Treasurer,</p>
+ <p>56 Reade St., N.Y.</p>
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page116" id="page116"></a>{116}</span>
+ <hr class="receipts_hr" />
+ <p>JAMES McCREERY &amp; CO.</p>
+ <p>invite special attention to the</p>
+ <p>FURLEY &amp; BUTTRUM</p>
+ <p>Celebrated English Fine Merino Underwear, in all weights and grades for men, women
+ and children, for the spring and summer season.</p>
+ <p>ORDERS BY MAIL will receive prompt attention.</p>
+ <p>BROADWAY and ELEVENTH ST.,</p>
+ <p>NEW YORK.</p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>Liquid Cottage Colors.</p>
+ <p>The best MIXED PAINTS manufactured. Guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction if
+ properly applied. They are <i>heavy bodied</i>, and for work that does not require an
+ extra heavy coat, they can be thinned (with our Old Fashioned Kettle-boiled Linseed
+ Oil) and still cover better than most of the mixed paints sold in the market, many of
+ which have so little stock in them that they will not give a good solid coat.</p>
+ <p>Some manufacturers of mixed paints direct NOT to rub out the paint, but to FLOW it
+ on; the reason being that if such stuff were rubbed out there would be but little
+ left to cover, would be transparent. Our Cottage Colors have great strength or body,
+ and, like any good paint, should be worked out well under the brush. The covering
+ property of this paint is so excellent as to allow this to be done.</p>
+ <p>Put up for shipment as follows: In 3-gal. and 5-gal. bailed buckets, also barrels;
+ in cans of 1/8, 1/4, 1/2, 1-gal. and 2-gal. each.</p>
+ <p>Sample Cards of Colors, Testimonials and prices sent on application to</p>
+ <p>Chicago White Lead &amp; Oil Co.,</p>
+ <p>Cor. Green &amp; Fulton Streets,</p>
+ <p>CHICAGO, ILL.</p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>6%, 7%.</p>
+ <p>THE AMERICAN INVESTMENT CO. OF EMMETTSBURG, IOWA,</p>
+ <p>with a PAID-UP CAPITAL of $600,000, SURPLUS $75,000, offers First Mortgage Loans
+ drawing SEVEN per cent., both Principal and Interest FULLY GUARANTEED. Also 6 per
+ cent. ten-year Debenture Bonds, secured by 105 per cent. of First Mortgage Loans held
+ in trust by the MERCANTILE TRUST COMPANY, New York. 5 per cent. certificates of
+ deposit for periods under one year.</p>
+ <p>7 2/3% CAN BE REALIZED BY CHANGING 4 Per Ct. Government Bonds Into 6 Per Cent.
+ Debentures.</p>
+ <p>Write for full information and reference to the Company at</p>
+ <p>150 NASSAU STREET, NEW YORK.</p>
+ <p>A.L. ORMSBY, Vice-President and Gen. Manager</p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>MUSIC IN THE SPRING</p>
+ <p>There are yet some weeks of cool weather in which to prepare and practice music
+ for the concluding concerts and festivals of the season.</p>
+ <p>It is quite time to send for our complete and rich lists of <b>EASTER
+ MUSIC</b></p>
+ <p>Now let girls and boys begin to practice the sweet <b>CANTATAS&mdash;VOICES OF
+ NATURE</b>, or <b>FOREST JUBILEE BAND</b>, or <b>MERRY COMPANY</b>, or <b>NEW FLORA'S
+ FESTIVAL</b>; each 40 cents, or $3.60 per dozen.</p>
+ <p>Pupils of the higher schools will like <b>DRESS REHEARSAL</b> (50c., or $4.50 per
+ doz.), <b>NEW FLOWER QUEEN</b> (60c., or $5.40 per doz.), or <b>HAYMAKERS</b> ($1.00,
+ or $9.00 per doz.)</p>
+ <p>Fine Cantatas of moderate difficulty for adults are: <b>HEROES OF '76</b> ($1.00),
+ <b>HERBERT AND ELSA</b> (75c.), <b>JOSEPH'S BONDAGE</b> ($1.00), <b>REBECCA</b>
+ (65c.), <b>RUTH AND BOAZ</b> (65c.), <b>WRECK OF HESPERUS</b> (35c), <b>FAIR
+ MELUSINA</b> (75c.), <b>BATTLE OF HUNS</b> (80c.), Send for lists.</p>
+ <p><b>For Male Quartets and Choruses:</b></p>
+ <p><b>SANGERFEST</b> ($1.38), <b>MALE VOICE GLEE BOOK</b> ($1.00), <b>EMERSON'S
+ QUARTETS AND CHORUSES</b> (60 cts.), <b>EMERSON'S MALE VOICE GEMS</b> ($1.00).</p>
+ <p><i>Mailed for the Retail Price</i>.</p>
+ <p><i>Oliver Ditson &amp; Co., Boston</i>.</p>
+ <p>C.H. DITSON &amp; CO., 867 Broadway, New York.</p>
+ <hr class="full" />
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote1" name="footnote1"></a><b>Footnote 1:</b><a
+ href="#footnotetag1">(return)</a>
+ <p>Deceased.</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <div>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 12087 ***</div>
+</body>
+</html>
+
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+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
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+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #12087 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/12087)
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+<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Transitional//EN"
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The American Missionary, Vol. XLII. April,
+1888. No. 4., by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The American Missionary, Vol. XLII. April, 1888. No. 4.
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: April 20, 2004 [EBook #12087]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK AMERICAN MISSIONARY ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Joshua Hutchinson and PG Distributed Proofreaders.
+Produced from page scans provided by Cornell University.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page85" id="page85"></a>{85}</span>
+ <h1>The American Missionary</h1>
+ <hr class="full" />
+ <table width="100%" summary="Title">
+ <tr>
+ <td align="left" width="25%"><b>Vol. XLII.</b></td>
+ <td align="center" width="50%"><b>April, 1888.</b></td>
+ <td align="right" width="25%"><b>No. 4.</b></td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+ <hr class="full" />
+ <h2>CONTENTS</h2>
+ <ul>
+ <li>
+ EDITORIAL.
+ <ul>
+ <li><a href="#editorial1">FINANCIAL&mdash;PARAGRAPH</a></li>
+ <li><a href="#editorial2">MOUNTAIN WORK&mdash;ATLANTA UNIVERSITY</a></li>
+ <li><a href="#editorial3">INDIAN ORDER&mdash;FROM GEO. W. CABLE</a></li>
+ <li><a href="#editorial4">DEATH OF HON. A.S. BARNES</a></li>
+ <li><a href="#editorial5">PARAGRAPHS</a></li>
+ <li><a href="#editorial6">SPECIMENS OF SCHOOL ENDEAVOR</a></li>
+ <li><a href="#editorial7">A SERIOUS ALARM IN GEORGIA</a></li>
+ <li><a href="#editorial8">EDUCATIONAL WORK IN THE SOUTH</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li>
+ THE SOUTH.
+ <ul>
+ <li><a href="#south">LETTER FROM AN EVANGELIST</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li>
+ THE CHINESE.
+ <ul>
+ <li><a href="#chinese">RESULTS THAT ELUDE THE STATISTICIAN</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li>
+ BUREAU OF WOMAN'S WORK.
+ <ul>
+ <li><a href="#bureau">THE BLACK WOMAN OF THE SOUTH</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li>
+ YOUNG FOLKS.
+ <ul>
+ <li><a href="#young1">WHAT SUSIE FOUND AT TOUGALOO</a></li>
+ <li><a href="#young2">LETTER FROM AN INDIAN PUPIL</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li><a href="#receipts">RECEIPTS</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ <hr class="full" />
+ <table width="100%" summary="Publisher">
+ <tr>
+ <td align="left" width="25%"><b>New York.</b><br />
+ Price, 50 Cents a Year, in Advance.</td>
+ <td align="center" width="50%"><b>Published by the American Missionary
+ Association.</b><br />
+ Entered at the Post-Office at New York, N.Y., as second-class matter.</td>
+ <td align="right" width="25%"><b>Rooms, 56 Reade Street.</b></td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+ <hr class="full" />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page86" id="page86"></a>{86}</span>
+ <h2>American Missionary Association.</h2>
+ <hr class="quarter" />
+ <div class="association">
+ <p class="title">PRESIDENT,</p>
+ <p>&mdash;&mdash;&mdash; &mdash;&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+ <p class="title"><i>Vice-Presidents.</i></p>
+ <p>Rev. A.J.F. BEHRENDS, D.D., N.Y.</p>
+ <p>Rev. ALEX. MCKENZIE, D.D., Mass.</p>
+ <p>Rev. F.A. NOBLE, D.D., Ill.</p>
+ <p>Rev. D.O. MEARS, D.D., Mass.</p>
+ <p>Rev. HENRY HOPKINS, D.D., Mo.</p>
+ <p class="title"><i>Corresponding Secretaries.</i></p>
+ <p>Rev. M.E. STRIEBY, D.D., 56 Reade Street, N.Y.</p>
+ <p>Rev. A.F. BEARD, D.D., 56 Reade Street, N.Y.</p>
+ <p class="title"><i>Treasurer.</i></p>
+ <p>H.W. HUBBARD, Esq., 56 Reade Street, N.Y.</p>
+ <p class="title"><i>Auditors.</i></p>
+ <p>PETER MCCARTEE.</p>
+ <p>CHAS. P. PEIRCE.</p>
+ <p class="title"><i>Executive Committee.</i></p>
+ <p>JOHN H. WASHBURN, Chairman.</p>
+ <p>ADDISON P. FOSTER, Secretary.</p>
+ <p class="title"><i>For Three Years.</i></p>
+ <p>LYMAN ABBOTT,</p>
+ <p>A.S. BARNES,<a id="footnotetag1" name="footnotetag1"></a><a
+ href="#footnote1"><sup>1</sup></a></p>
+ <p>J.R. DANFORTH,</p>
+ <p>CLINTON B. FISK,</p>
+ <p>ADDISON P. FOSTER,</p>
+ <p class="title"><i>For Two Years.</i></p>
+ <p>S.B. HALLIDAY,</p>
+ <p>SAMUEL HOLMES,</p>
+ <p>SAMUEL S. MARPLES,</p>
+ <p>CHARLES L. MEAD,</p>
+ <p>ELBERT B. MONROE,</p>
+ <p class="title"><i>For One Year.</i></p>
+ <p>J.E. RANKIN,</p>
+ <p>WM. H. WARD,</p>
+ <p>J.W. COOPER,</p>
+ <p>JOHN H. WASHBURN,</p>
+ <p>EDMUND L. CHAMPLIN.</p>
+ <p class="title"><i>District Secretaries.</i></p>
+ <p>Rev. C.J. RYDER, <i>21 Cong'l House, Boston.</i></p>
+ <p>Rev. J.E. ROY, D.D., 151 <i>Washington Street, Chicago</i>.</p>
+ <p class="title"><i>Financial Secretary for Indian Missions.</i></p>
+ <p>Rev. CHAS. W. SHELTON,</p>
+ <p class="title"><i>Bureau of Woman's Work.</i></p>
+ <p><i>Secretary</i>, Miss D.E. EMERSON, 56 <i>Reade Street, N.Y.</i></p>
+ </div>
+ <hr class="full" />
+ <h3>COMMUNICATIONS</h3>
+ <p>Relating to the work of the Association may be addressed to the Corresponding
+ Secretaries; letters for "THE AMERICAN MISSIONARY," to the Editor, at the New York
+ Office.</p>
+ <h3>DONATIONS AND SUBSCRIPTIONS</h3>
+ <p>In drafts, checks, registered letters, or post office orders, may be sent to H.W.
+ Hubbard, Treasurer, 56 Reade Street, New York, or, when more convenient, to either of
+ the Branch Offices, 21 Congregational House, Boston, Mass., or 151 Washington Street,
+ Chicago, Ill. A payment of thirty dollars at one time constitutes a Life Member.</p>
+ <h3>FORM OF A BEQUEST.</h3>
+ <p>"I bequeath to my executor (or executors) the sum of &mdash;&mdash; dollars, in
+ trust, to pay the same in &mdash;&mdash; days after my decease to the person who,
+ when the same is payable, shall act as Treasurer of the 'American Missionary
+ Association,' of New York City, to be applied, under the direction of the Executive
+ Committee of the Association, to its charitable uses and purposes." The Will should
+ be attested by three witnesses.</p>
+ <hr class="full" />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page87" id="page87"></a>{87}</span>
+ <h2>THE AMERICAN MISSIONARY.</h2>
+ <hr />
+ <table width="50%" summary="Title" align="center">
+ <tr>
+ <td align="left" width="25%"><b>Vol. XLII.</b></td>
+ <td align="center" width="50%"><b>April, 1888.</b></td>
+ <td align="right" width="25%"><b>No. 4.</b></td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+ <hr />
+ <h4>American Missionary Association.</h4>
+ <hr class="quarter" />
+ <a name="editorial1" id="editorial1"></a>
+ <p>We acknowledge with gratitude to God and to his people the fact that our receipts
+ during the month of February are such as greatly to encourage us.</p>
+ <p>We are cheered, not only by the benevolences which are reporting themselves from
+ the churches, but also by the kind words of sympathy and helpfulness which show us
+ anew that this great and exigent work upon us was never nearer than now to the hearts
+ of our pastors and churches.</p>
+ <p>We may add that the month just past and those immediately before us are those upon
+ which we must largely depend for our fiscal year. We are coming to the summer season,
+ when contributions are less likely to be taken. We trust that those who believe that
+ God has called the American Missionary Association to this immense work in the name
+ of Christ, will not cease to pray that the hearts of men may be moved to heed the
+ appeals of those who, through us, ask for the very bread of life, and who will not
+ have it unless we carry it to them.</p>
+ <p>We are now compelled to deny more appeals for help which ought to be heard than we
+ are granting. Several schools which were begun by private enterprise with good
+ intent, are now asking us to take them from their hands upon our own, where they can
+ be perpetuated and saved. We would like to save these schools to the needy people
+ whose hope is in them, and to protect the churches from indiscriminate appeals for
+ works which they have not authorized, and which we could do with greater economy and
+ better care; but for this we need a generous increase of gifts. Our faith was in Him
+ who said, "Knock, and it shall be opened unto you," and the doors were opened. God
+ withdrew the bolts of hindrance and said, "Beloved, I have set before you an open
+ door." Our faith is in Him who also said "Ask, and ye shall receive."</p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>A friend has just sent us eighteen subscriptions to the <i>American
+ Missionary.</i> This might be repeated easily by a thousand friends. There is <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page88" id="page88"></a>{88}</span> scarcely a
+ self-sustaining church in the United States where it could not be done by one who
+ would try to do it as an act of missionary love. Some who read this, perhaps, will
+ try and will succeed.</p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>The name of Rev. Frank Cross, who was appointed to the charge of the Rosebud
+ Indian Mission, was by mistake not printed in the roll of workers. He is there,
+ however, and his work has gone on bravely and hopefully.</p>
+ <hr />
+ <a name="editorial2" id="editorial2"></a>
+ <p>We wish that the extent, and necessity, and hopefulness of our mountain work, were
+ more fully understood by our readers. Now is our opportunity and the accepted time to
+ answer the most urgent appeals from this neglected region in the heart of our
+ country. Our Congregational churches are just what are needed to uplift these people.
+ One of our earnest missionaries writes us:&mdash;</p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>"The A.M.A. has done a work here to be profoundly grateful for as a beginning,
+ but thus far it is only playing around the edge of its mountain work. This mountain
+ region is of great extent. Sober calculation from facts already gleaned, makes a
+ thousand Congregational churches in these mountains the possibility of the future,
+ if only the strategic points can now be occupied. One church and one school to a
+ county, should be our immediate aim; then we can throw upon these the work of
+ developing native teachers and preachers for the rest. There are forty counties
+ waiting for us, and all our mountain work so far is in three or four. I see this
+ place where I am, changing like magic under the influence of school and church, but
+ the necessity for our going forward oppresses me. I am ready for any additional
+ labor, and will carry any burden my strength will permit, if only the American
+ Missionary Association will take for its motto, 'One church and one school in every
+ mountain county, as fast as they can be established.' I feel, when I see the need,
+ as if I could plead the money right out of the most self-indulgent members of our
+ favored churches at home. It would not be expensive as compared with other
+ missionary work. Cannot some way be devised for making a large advance on the
+ present movement?"</p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <hr />
+ <p>Those who thought to cripple Atlanta University because it could not yield its
+ principles for the sake of a State appropriation of $8,000 made a mistake. They have
+ helped that which they meant to hinder. The university will get the money. Joseph's
+ brethren took counsel together and said, "We will see what will become of his dream,"
+ and they thought they had a sure thing when they put him in a pit, but they
+ discovered <span class="pagenum"><a name="page89" id="page89"></a>{89}</span> some
+ years after that this was but a way-station on the direct road to the Viceroyship of
+ Egypt, and they saw what became of his dream.</p>
+ <p>When Napoleon the First wished to hinder the Huguenot Church, he gave it a small
+ stipend in order to retain hold of it. He appropriated just enough to keep it a
+ cripple. When the State of Georgia thought the education of the Negro was becoming
+ too marked, it reversed the policy of the far-seeing Bonaparte and took its hands
+ off. We have never thought that Napoleon was a truly good man, but we do believe that
+ he had a larger idea of the philosophy of control than the author of the Glenn Bill.
+ If the State had held on, it might have hindered, but it has lost its hold.</p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>Would it not sound well to the American people to have it said that in the United
+ States of America, in the year 1888, our missionaries were imprisoned for reading the
+ Bible to a heathen tribe of Indians who lived remote from civilization, the crime of
+ it being that it was read in the only language which they could understand?</p>
+ <p>Yet "the orders are," writes a missionary, "that we shall hold only two services
+ on a Sunday and two during the week, and that we shall cease to read the Bible in the
+ Indian homes." This is the Government authority of the great and free United States,
+ but is there any authority greater than God?</p>
+ <hr />
+ <a name="editorial3" id="editorial3"></a>
+ <p>In an eloquent address at the Old South Church in Boston, on Sunday, March 4th,
+ George W. Cable accentuated in strong words the work in which we are engaged. "Here
+ is the mightiest, the widest, the most fruitful, the most abundant, the most
+ prolific, missionary field that was ever opened to any Christian people."</p>
+ <p>We quote from his address:</p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>The benevolence of Northern men and women, yea, and even of Northern children,
+ helped to establish in the South these missionary colleges, these educational
+ missions, wherein not the black man alone, not the black woman alone, but every one
+ who was qualified with orderly behavior and a rational intellect might come, and
+ get, not only an education, but a Christian education, and not only a Christian
+ education, but a Christian American education. These institutions, standing out in
+ the darkness when nothing else stood by them, when the land was racked and torn and
+ bled afresh under the agonies of reconstruction, these institutions began and
+ carried on the blessed work of raising up leaders, intellectual leaders, among the
+ black people, for the guidance and stimulation of the colored race toward the
+ aspirations of American citizenship and Christian intelligence.</p>
+ <p>These institutions, these missionary colleges in the South, have carried the
+ torch of liberty, these have upheld it, these have taught American citizenship,
+ these have given to the Southern States 16,000 colored teachers, when nobody else
+ would teach the poor black boy&mdash;nay, or the poor white boy either. Seven
+ millions of people concerned in the matter, and the National Bureau of Public
+ Education reporting year after year that <span class="pagenum"><a name="page90"
+ id="page90"></a>{90}</span> the reason why there are 600,000 colored youth out of
+ the public schools, is not because they don't want to go, but because there are not
+ school-houses and school teachers.</p>
+ <p>Here is the mightiest, the widest, the most fruitful, the most abundant, the
+ most prolific, missionary field that was ever opened to any Christian people. It is
+ right here at your doors. It is not across the Pacific Ocean and it is not down
+ yonder around the Cape of Good Hope. Right here at our doors is the greediest
+ people for education and the gospel there is on the face of this earth, not counted
+ among our white race. I suppose that ninety-nine one-hundredths of those who
+ generously give to this cause believe to-day that it is being given to in generous
+ proportion. Ah! you never figured on it. Why, if you knew the national value of
+ this work, to say nothing of its gospel value, you would quadruplicate it before
+ the year is out. You would not submit to it for a moment, as citizens, not merely
+ as members of Christ's Church.</p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <hr />
+ <a name="editorial4" id="editorial4"></a>
+ <p>The American Missionary Association is called again to mourn the decease of one of
+ its officers. Hon. Alfred S. Barnes, a member of its Executive Committee, after an
+ illness extending over five months, at his residence in Brooklyn, finished his
+ earthly life on Friday, February 17th, at the age of seventy-one years. Mr. Barnes
+ was elected on the Executive Board of the A.M.A. nineteen years ago, and had served
+ in that capacity continuously up to the day of his death. He was a wise counsellor,
+ large-minded in his views and honorable in his spirit, known throughout the land as
+ one of the foremost publishers in the country, largely interested in educational
+ work, and yet he found time for an earnest devotion to various enterprises in the
+ Christian church. His fidelity and helpfulness in the service of the A.M.A. are fully
+ known only to those who were associated with him. Many organizations of missionary
+ and Christian work will miss his presence and the help of his generous stewardship,
+ but none will feel his departure more truly than the American Missionary Association,
+ which has lost its President, one of its Secretaries, and this long-honored member of
+ its Executive Board within the last half-year. The greatness of his work in our
+ service will be remembered and cherished.</p>
+ <hr />
+ <a name="editorial5" id="editorial5"></a>
+ <p>We acknowledge among our exchanges, the <i>Fisk Herald</i>, published at
+ Nashville; the <i>Atlanta Bulletin</i>; the <i>Olio</i>, of Straight University; the
+ <i>Tougaloo Quarterly</i>; the <i>Head and Hand</i>, of Le Moyne Normal Institute at
+ Memphis; the <i>Helping Hand</i>, of Sherwood, Tenn.; <i>Our Work</i>, of Talladega
+ College; the <i>Howard University Reporter</i>, of Washington; the <i>Word
+ Carrier</i>, of Santee Agency, and <i>Iapi Oahe</i>, of Santee Agency; also the
+ <i>Christian Aid</i>, published by our church in Dallas; the <i>Beach Record</i>,
+ (occasional) by our school in Savannah.</p>
+ <p>Several of these papers are models of their kind, publishing original articles
+ written by the students and professors, and printed by the students with superior
+ typographical skill. As indicators of progress, they are full <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page91" id="page91"></a>{91}</span> of interest, apart from
+ the items of local school and church intelligence with which they are freighted.</p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>We commend to our readers, "The Missionary Review of the World," edited jointly by
+ Rev. J.M. Sherwood, D.D., of New York, and Rev. A.T. Pierson, D.D., of
+ Philadelphia.</p>
+ <p>One rises from its pages as if he had been breathing Christian ozone. The
+ editorials are upon living topics and issues, and are vigorously presented. The
+ "Review" sweeps its vision over the entire world and it not only sees, but knows how
+ to tell what it sees. If the high standard of literary excellence so far sustained
+ can be continuously held, we shall have a magazine of missions which will be the peer
+ of our best literary monthlies in quality and interest.</p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>We congratulate the Congregational Sunday-School and Publishing Society on the
+ acceptance of its appointment of Rev. Geo. M. Boynton as its Secretary. We have known
+ him as a member of the Executive Committee of the American Missionary Association, as
+ editor of THE AMERICAN MISSIONARY, as a pastor, as a secretary of Associations and
+ Conferences, as a wise counsellor and genial brother. We regard him as eminently
+ fitted for the place to which he has been called. To Brother Boynton we extend most
+ cordially a welcome to the honorable, the fraternity of the Secretaries.</p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>The fifth annual report of the Executive Committee of the Indian Rights
+ Association, written by Mr. James B. Harrison, is a strong and valuable contribution
+ to the literature of Indian rights and wrongs, which should be considered by every
+ friend of the Red Man. Respecting the orders of the Indian office at Washington which
+ abridge the liberty of religious teaching, this report characterizes them as
+ "unintelligent, arbitrary, despotic and unstatesmanlike, merely a blow at missionary
+ work. There is no reason to suppose that a single Indian anywhere will ever learn ten
+ words more of English by reason of these orders. There is, indeed, no provision made
+ by the Government for any increase of facilities in the study of English. The damage
+ to the missionary work produced by these orders is their sole result. The orders
+ should be distinctly and wholly revoked and withdrawn. It is not necessary that the
+ missionaries and churches should submit. If they will publish the facts fully these
+ orders will be revoked. The facts must come to light. Then the people of the country
+ will have something to say."</p>
+ <p>The above quotation will give our readers the flavor of the pages. "Plain words
+ are best," and it is time that the country should have them. <span class="pagenum"><a
+ name="page92" id="page92"></a>{92}</span> No one can read the statements in this able
+ Report without having his heart stirred with honest indignation at the condition of
+ Indian affairs, through the unfortunate unfitness of the Government Bureau.</p>
+ <hr class="full" />
+ <a name="editorial6" id="editorial6"></a>
+ <h4>SPECIMENS OF SCHOOL ENDEAVOR.</h4>
+ <h5>THREE COMPOSITIONS.</h5>
+ <h6>LETHER.</h6>
+ <p>Lether is mad from the hide of animals. They first kill the animal then the hide
+ is sent to a tan yard and there it is tan are made lether from, then to a shoemaker's
+ shop where it is made into boots shoes saddles. The finest of gloves is the kid skin
+ glove, that is all I will say about kid skin gloves. Most of the bad boots and shoes
+ we have is horse lether or mule lether, that is all I will say about mule lether and
+ horse lether. All the good boots and shoes we have is young calf lether, that is all
+ I will say about young calf lether.</p>
+ <p>All the boots shoes and every thing else we have made of lether is second thing
+ because some poor animal was rob-ed of his coat that we might have boots and many
+ other things.</p>
+ <p>&mdash;&mdash;, aged 16.</p>
+ <h6>NETELY.</h6>
+ <p>Netely are clean always and handsome to everybody. It are good in the cite of God
+ and man for it are a good thing to be netely always for it make a man look netely. If
+ we all are netely it are a good thing to be clean for it are a good thing in the time
+ of life so to be. Netely is deserving of everybody and grate with all mankind. It are
+ a good thing to be netely for it is beautiful and pretty. It are correct always and
+ never rong to nobody an it make a man feel better when he are netely an a nice
+ looking person when he are netely are clean before every body.</p>
+ <p>&mdash;&mdash;, aged 25.</p>
+ <h6>DRIVE WAGGON.</h6>
+ <p>That the kind of work I likes to do. When I drive waggon I rides a plenty. Riding
+ are a good thing because when folks is sick it are good for the helt. I likes to
+ drive it because I have been loadin it. This summer I hall fody. When I would load
+ the barn yard wagon full of fody it would be high from the groun, that is nice but
+ sometimes it would turn over, that would be truble. Truble are a bad thing.</p>
+ <p>&mdash;&mdash;, aged 17.</p>
+ <hr class="full" />
+ <h5>ANSWERS TO QUESTIONS AT AN EXAMINATION OF TEACHERS IN GEORGIA.</h5>
+ <p><i>What is writing?</i></p>
+ <p>"Writing is the Representation of the human voice on the 11th part of a noun."</p>
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page93" id="page93"></a>{93}</span>
+ <p><i>How long since writing was invented?</i></p>
+ <p>"From the creation of the world, or from the birth of Christ."</p>
+ <p><i>What are the chief products of the State of Georgia?</i></p>
+ <p>"The chief products are Agriculture, Turpentine, rail-roads, lumber and grate deel
+ of merchandice bussyness."</p>
+ <hr class="full" />
+ <a name="editorial7" id="editorial7"></a>
+ <h4>A SERIOUS ALARM IN GEORGIA.</h4>
+ <p>The American Missionary is not published for the entertainment of its readers. It
+ has a more serious purpose. It speaks for races who have suffered grievous wrongs,
+ and for peoples whose condition is exceedingly sad. It has to do with tragic facts,
+ and much of what it has to say must excite compassion, and must appeal both to the
+ consciences of our readers and to their sense of duty. To call upon those whom God
+ has blessed, to insert themselves into the woes and spiritual wants of others who
+ need their help, is grave and serious.</p>
+ <p>This is one feature. There are others. The joy of the work and the joy of the
+ worker, which we are called to record, are a relief to the stories of necessity, and
+ are like beautiful pictures painted upon the dark background. When "Our eyes have
+ seen the glory of the coming of the Lord," we can for the time forget the darkness
+ upon which the light shines, and sing our hallelujahs. If it is saddening to tell of
+ the night, it is cheering to mark the fact that the providences of God are working
+ out his promises, and are surely bringing in God's day.</p>
+ <p>Over and above the evils to which we must call earnest heed, the dangers which are
+ not far away, and the exigencies of the cause of Christ, we are sure that no one can
+ read the MISSIONARY without being cheered and quickened in gratitude to God for what
+ he is graciously doing for his needy ones through his people.</p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>With the serious duty on the part of those who are working together with God for
+ the salvation of men, there drift along in the current of his providences certain
+ incidents that are exceedingly droll.</p>
+ <p>As we have seen some very ludicrous manifestations of character and conduct in the
+ terrible struggles of a battlefield, and have brushed aside our tears at times for an
+ irrepressible <i>bon mot</i> in a hospital, so in the weighty and solemn
+ considerations which continually appeal to us, and while we are anxiously asking how
+ we can make the most bricks for the Lord's building with the least straw, incidents
+ arise which not only throw light upon our serious work, but which are irresistibly
+ amusing.</p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>We think we should share with our readers a recent one which, when <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page94" id="page94"></a>{94}</span> we read it in the
+ detail, impossible to be repeated here, made us smile. Every time we re-perused it we
+ thought it, as <i>Alice in Wonderland</i> said, "curiouser and curiouser."</p>
+ <p>Our readers are not strangers to the name and fame of the leading editor of the
+ chief paper in Georgia. They have heard of him as an eloquent orator with a brilliant
+ imagination which saw a New South in almost millennial array, and told of it with an
+ enthusiasm so contagious that to the sons of the Pilgrims after the fulness of a
+ great dinner it seemed that the "Promised day of Israel" had at last arrived. It is
+ true that when this dinner had been thoroughly digested, certain ones, removed from
+ the afflatus of the occasion began to ask, "Are these things so?" And when the Glenn
+ Bill sought the endorsement of public opinion, and substantially received it with no
+ word of reprobation from the eloquent orator and editor, some recalled the speech of
+ Sheridan in reply to Mr. Dundas, "The right honorable gentleman is indebted to his
+ imagination for his facts."</p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>In all this time no one suspected the <i>Atlanta Constitution</i> of possessing
+ the humorous character which it has lately revealed. In late issues of February it
+ has, in the garb of gravity, about two columns that are ridiculously funny.</p>
+ <p>It appears that Prof. Sumner Salter, a graduate of Amherst College, a son of an
+ honored pastor of Iowa, a musical director of exceptional gifts and a teacher of
+ eminent ability, was solicited by parties in Atlanta to take his residence there in
+ the interest of the musical cultivation of such as could secure his services. He soon
+ attracted the patronage of society, and all went smoothly until the tempter came.
+ Alas, there was a serpent in Eden, so there was a skeleton in the closet of the
+ <i>Atlanta Constitution</i>. It was a dreadful skeleton. The <i>Constitution</i>
+ seriously publishes the fact that "it was whispered about for some time," until
+ patience ceased to be a virtue, when it sent a guardian of public safety in the form
+ of a reporter to investigate. "Was it really true that a white man who was giving
+ music lessons to white people was also teaching a colored class at another time and
+ place? If so, what about the New South? The black man had no business to be black,
+ but he <i>was</i> all the same, and being so what right had Prof. Salter to teach
+ <i>colored</i> people to sing? Let the matter be thoroughly searched out. The
+ reporter departed on his mission, with a countenance more in sorrow than in anger,
+ and returned <i>vice versa</i>.</p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>"'Tis true, 'tis pity,</p>
+ <p>And pity 'tis 'tis true."</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p>The professor was actually doing this very absurd thing. He had taken charge of a
+ colored class in the church of which Rev. Evarts Kent is minister and was teaching
+ them how rightly to use the talents with which God had so richly endowed them.</p>
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page95" id="page95"></a>{95}</span>
+ <p>Accordingly, in the year of grace 1888, the <i>Atlanta Constitution</i> publishes
+ the astounding fact, and calls the world to heed it, in conspicuous head
+ lines:&mdash;</p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>"WHITE OR BLACK&mdash;A PROMINENT MUSICIAN WHO TEACHES BOTH COLORS&mdash;HIS
+ BUSINESS SAID TO BE INJURED."</p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>Then followed the whole sad story. The musician had been interviewed and
+ investigated. He did not deny the serious charge to this superintendent of public
+ proprieties. With a heart as hard as old Pharaoh's he proposed to go on and do more
+ likewise. In short, the representative of the <i>Constitution</i> could do nothing
+ with this intractable professor. Hence "he did not stand upon the order of his going,
+ but went at once," and reported that "<i>according to Mr. Suiter's own statement, he
+ is teaching a colored class</i>, and he has lost a white pupil, which shows that his
+ course is hurting his business." "Diligent inquiry has failed to bring to light any
+ proof that he has notified his <i>white</i> pupils that he is teaching <i>colored</i>
+ people."</p>
+ <p>Leaving out the meanness of this, has anyone read anything published lately more
+ ridiculous? It is not necessary to quote the professor's public reply. It simply
+ claimed the right of manhood and common sense, and doubtless left the
+ <i>Constitution</i> wondering how a man capable of making it appear so foolish could
+ yet descend to such depths of ignominy as to teach people whose ancestors came from
+ Africa, the unpardonable sin of singing praises to the Author of their being. To what
+ deeps some will descend! Why should colored people add to the criminality of being
+ born black, the fearful temptation of pay in advance to one who could teach them
+ while he had pupils who had the merit of having been born white?</p>
+ <p>This was really transpiring in the city of Atlanta several days in the month of
+ February in the year 1888, and was in successive issues of the <i>Constitution</i>,
+ which shows among other things that there is latitude, if not longitude, at a
+ Brooklyn New England dinner. Meanwhile we think we hear Uncle Rastus quoting the
+ prophecy, "The morning cometh and also the night," but he can't help laughing because
+ it is "awful funny."</p>
+ <hr class="full" />
+ <a name="editorial8" id="editorial8"></a>
+ <h4>THE EDUCATIONAL WORK IN THE SOUTH.</h4>
+ <p>BY REV. W.F. SLOCUM.</p>
+ <p>We may remember at the outset that in this matter of the education of the Negro we
+ are treating a question which must be considered, to a certain extent, ethnically. We
+ are dealing with a people with race peculiarities: but it seems to me that it is very
+ useless to ask whether we are training an inferior stock. There was a time when the
+ Anglo-Saxon stock was far inferior <span class="pagenum"><a name="page96"
+ id="page96"></a>{96}</span> to its present condition. We ourselves are not enough
+ removed from heathenism and barbarism to become very pharisaical.</p>
+ <p>Here is a race with its idiosyncrasies, and its peculiar latent possibilities,
+ which we cannot know until Christian education has unfolded them through many years.
+ We ought not to wonder that in many respects this people is yet in its moral and
+ intellectual infancy; but who dares say that it has not a future before it, with its
+ statesmen, its poets, its painters, its men of letters; that it is not to have its
+ own peculiar literature, its art, and even its own characteristic religious
+ expression, just as marked and important as those produced by any other race?
+ Certainly we have as much reason for believing it as that the Teutonic race of the
+ second century should produce its Goethe and its Schiller, its Kant and its Hegel,
+ its Luther and its Melanchthon; or that the Frank of the fifth century should develop
+ its Victor Hugo, its Lamartine, its Madam de Stael; or that out of the barbarism, the
+ cannibalism, the paganism of Norseman, Briton and Saxon, there should come
+ Shakespeare, Spencer, Macaulay, Browning and Gladstone. And we may not have to wait
+ as long; for in spite of slavery's binding chain thrice drawn round his soul, the
+ American Negro has been absorbing during the past from a civilization which has been
+ fitting him somewhat for the large Christian movement of the present. We are working
+ for a people which in all probability will form at least one-eighth of our whole
+ population; and we have the problem of lifting them as a race up into Christian
+ enlightenment. The dark skin is growing darker. There will be less and less of
+ intermixture of blood between the two races. Hence all study of this educational
+ question must have in view the large moral and intellectual enterprise of dealing
+ with a race as a race. I believe that there is nothing in all history to compare with
+ this opportunity which has come to our very doors. Here is a nation in our land and
+ with it every perplexity, every difficulty, every embarrassment, and also every
+ encouragement, every hope, and every inspiration for work, that can appeal to any
+ foreign missionary. Here is this God-given task laid at our very thresholds and with
+ all the sentiments of patriotism and Christian devotion urging us to our large
+ privilege.</p>
+ <p>What the race needs now is right leadership, and for many years to come we are to
+ equip men and women religiously and intellectually, who, in home, in church, in
+ social and business life, will be moral and social leaders. And by this power of
+ leadership I mean something far other than those foolish conceits which have taken
+ possession of a few who have touched only the surface of the new life that is coming
+ to this people.</p>
+ <p>I have rather in mind leaders who shall have that moral and intellectual fitness
+ which produces reverence, earnestness and humility, leaders who can draw their people
+ away from their foolishness, weakness and self-consciousness into the larger life
+ that is possible for them. Without a <span class="pagenum"><a name="page97"
+ id="page97"></a>{97}</span> doubt, what is needed is true leaders, and I wish to show
+ where these leaders are now demanded.</p>
+ <p>Before the war, the South knew nothing of the benefits of public schools, and the
+ private school was in harmony with its social and political conceptions; but of late,
+ and especially during the last decade, a remarkable change has taken place which is
+ doing as much to affect the whole Southern problem as anything that has occurred
+ there during half a century. It is a movement in the South, which, however
+ imperfectly it has been developed as yet, has come to remain, and will ultimately
+ affect every institution, social, political and religious, in our section of the
+ country.</p>
+ <p><i>It is now being recognized in every Southern State that free government is
+ based upon a public common-school system</i>. It has taken two decades to incorporate
+ this public school policy upon Southern institutions, but it has now the evidence of
+ permanency and it is offering to Christian philanthropy an unparalleled opportunity,
+ such as God seldom gives to any people, and one which should rally the churches as
+ never before in support of the great enterprises of the American Missionary
+ Association.</p>
+ <p>There has been forced upon the New South the conclusion that the best way to
+ increase its wealth is to increase the number of educated, intelligent producers, and
+ with this conclusion it realizes that it cannot afford to let two million colored
+ children grow up in hopeless illiteracy. It perceives that its very institutions will
+ be imperiled by such a condition. I have through personal interviews with leading
+ educators in a recent trip through the South, by correspondence and by a careful
+ examination of documents and reports from nearly all the Southern States, undertaken
+ to find just what is being done at the present time in the public colored schools of
+ the South.</p>
+ <p>The significance of this public school movement will be understood when it is
+ remembered that the acceptance of the idea that the constitution of a free State
+ rests on universal education, marks a great change in theory; that this has come
+ against the opinions of the old Bourbon party, which never forgets, and, it is to be
+ feared, never learns; whose political economy is represented by the expression, "keep
+ the negro down"; which regards his enfranchisment as a political outrage and his
+ education as a mistake and a failure; that it has risen in the face of the poverty of
+ the South and in the midst of its most intense prejudices. For when the new
+ educational movement began, the property and a large part of the intelligence
+ belonged to the opponents of the new educational policy, but now, in the words of a
+ prominent Southern gentleman: "The conviction has become very deep that in the
+ altered condition of our people the only hope left us is to do all that can be done
+ towards elevating the masses irrespective of race." This certainly represents a
+ tremendous transformation. Without stopping to trace the causes that produced it, or
+ even the large place the American Missionary Association work has in it, let me
+ simply quote from <span class="pagenum"><a name="page98" id="page98"></a>{98}</span>
+ a Southern Christian man, whose sympathies are full of prejudice against the North,
+ but who has wakened with the awakening of the New South.</p>
+ <p>Writing of the educational movement, in a recent book, he says: "Not a few of the
+ best men and women of the North have come to teach in these institutions for colored
+ youth: their motives and their work have not always been understood, but the Great
+ Day will make manifest how they have been constrained by the love of Christ, to spend
+ years in work which has had many discouragements." ('The New South' by J.C.C.
+ Newton.) A few statistics may give some general idea of the extent of this
+ movement.</p>
+ <p>The State of Alabama has 104,150 colored pupils enrolled in the public schools. It
+ pays an average of $25.97 per month to nearly 2,000 colored teachers, and expends
+ altogether $198,221 upon these colored schools. Georgia has 49 per cent. of its negro
+ school population enrolled; that is, 119,248. In 1871, this State had 6,664 only in
+ all public and private colored schools. Its teachers of this race now number 2,272.
+ 40,909 colored children are enrolled in Louisiana, with 672 negro teachers, who
+ receive an average of $23.73 per month.</p>
+ <p>Mississippi had last year 154,430 colored scholars. It employed 3,124 colored
+ teachers who receive an average of $28.73 per month. North Carolina enrolled, in
+ 1886, 117,562 colored pupils, employed 2,016 teachers of the same race, paying them
+ about the same as its white teachers, $23.38 per month. The colored school population
+ of Tennessee numbers 158,450, of whom 84,624 are enrolled in her 1,563 common
+ schools, which are taught by 1,621 teachers of the same nationality. A county
+ superintendent voluntarily adds: "I should do our colored teachers an injustice
+ not to speak of them. Most of them are earnest, zealous workers, doing all in their
+ power for their race."</p>
+ <p>Turning now to Texas we find that this State has nearly doubled its enrollment of
+ colored pupils in three years, which now number 62,040, with 1,696 licensed colored
+ teachers who receive on an average, $41.73 per month. Virginia has 111,114 out of a
+ school population of 265,249 with 1,734 colored teachers who receive $28.65 per
+ month.</p>
+ <p>That is, in eight representative States there are eight hundred thousand colored
+ pupils who are now being trained by over fifteen thousand teachers of the same race.
+ Now the simple but grave question that every Christian patriot ought to ask himself
+ is, "What kind of teachers are these, and where are they to come from in the future?"
+ I asked that question of a gentleman who of all others ought to be able to answer it
+ correctly and he replied, "Nine-tenths of these teachers come from the missionary
+ schools, and of these nine-tenths, more than one-half come from the institutions of
+ the American Missionary Association." Now we can understand the truthfulness of the
+ testimony of the Rev. J.L.M. Curry, D.D., the distinguished agent of the Peabody
+ Fund, who says: "The most that <span class="pagenum"><a name="page99"
+ id="page99"></a>{99}</span> has been done at the South fcr the education of the
+ negroes has been done by the Congregationalists. The American Missionary Association
+ and those allied to it have been the chief agency, so far as benevolent effort is
+ concerned, in diffusing right notions of religion, and in carrying education to the
+ darkened mind of the negro."</p>
+ <p>Here is the large door that God has opened for us, and through which we are
+ reaching this people, and in a still larger degree may carry the truths of the
+ Kingdom of God to them. What they need most of all is light. Give them that and the
+ question of rights will take care of itself. When I was in New Orleans last May,
+ President Hitchcock, of Straight University, pointed out to me in his office a pile
+ of letters, which, he said, were applications for teachers for these public schools,
+ and those which he showed me represented the number of applications which he was not
+ able to fill. And yet he is compelled every term to turn away scores of young men and
+ young women seeking to fit themselves for just this work, because there is not room
+ for them and because there are not funds to care for them.</p>
+ <p>As to this new movement in the South, I do not conclude that more than the first
+ step has been taken, exceedingly important as that step is. Many of the schools as
+ yet are in a wretched condition. The buildings in the rural districts are small and
+ rudely built, and many of them are positively unfit to be used as school houses.
+ There are neither maps, nor charts or other appliances for the teacher's use in his
+ work, and in fact everything about these school houses is of the most primitive type.
+ The school year often does not exceed four months, and many of these teachers are
+ altogether unfit for their tasks.</p>
+ <p>Are we to think the time has come to withhold our support and our prayers from
+ this great work? Was there ever such an opportunity offered to any land as this which
+ is presented to the Christian philanthropy of our own?</p>
+ <p>I might tell of the needs of the cabin home life as I have seen them in these
+ States, how the scholars from Christian schools are the leaven that is slowly
+ transforming this, the greatest of all human institutions; how while from one-quarter
+ to one-half of the colored population is progressing, gaining in education, property
+ and character, there is another large part of the race that is either stationary or
+ sinking into more miserable conditions. Are we seeking for paganism to battle with?
+ Here it is in our own proud land. Do we want the opportunity of Christianizing a
+ nation? Here it is; and with possibilities just as marked as those of any people that
+ ever ascended the scale of intelligence and Christian morality.</p>
+ <p>The problem of the New South is not merely one of successful railroads, of busy
+ factories or of paying plantations, but much more is it one of upright, wise,
+ Christian manhood and womanhood. This is the work to which we are most truly called
+ of the Eternal Father.</p>
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page100" id="page100"></a>{100}</span>
+ <p>Nobly has the American Missionary Association entered into these labors; but
+ believe me, there is a larger work before it than it has yet accomplished.</p>
+ <hr class="full" />
+ <h3>THE SOUTH.</h3>
+ <a name="south" id="south"></a>
+ <h4>LETTER FROM AN EVANGELIST.</h4>
+ <p>After my return from England for another winter's service in Gospel work among the
+ people of the South, I began at</p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>WASHINGTON, D.C.</p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>I had promised Rev. G.W. Moore last winter, before sailing for my home in England,
+ to assist him in special religious effort. From the very commencement of the meetings
+ a good spirit was manifest, which deepened day by day until forty or more persons
+ professed faith in Christ, young and old being reached by the power of the gospel.
+ One man sixty-one years of age surrendered to the overtures of God's love and
+ received Christ as his Saviour. Another of seventy-five years was pointed out to me
+ as a hardened sinner. When approached he was full of self and reason, "I don't
+ believe in mourner's benches and such like; do you think my going there will make me
+ a Christian or do me any good?" "No, but it will show the people you are intending to
+ make a start for Heaven, and it will enlist their sympathy and prayers," I
+ replied.</p>
+ <p>Finally he knelt with me in the aisle with his head bowed on the end of the seat
+ while I prayed. Soon the big tears were dropping from his eyes and he went home that
+ night under conviction. The following night he returned. He was again prayed for, but
+ went away undecided. The next night as soon as inquirers were given an opportunity to
+ present themselves for prayers he was the first to respond, and the sinful man of
+ seventy-five years had yielded his heart to Christ, and could sing from his heart
+ "Happy day, when Jesus washed my sins away." His wife, who was present, rushed
+ forward, and tears of joy ran down their cheeks. Scarcely a dry eye was to be seen,
+ while above all there was joy in Heaven over another sinner saved. Deacon R. came to
+ me afterwards and said, "Why, did you ever see what a change in the man in three
+ days, and at last how he 'caved in.'"</p>
+ <p>Ten persons made profession of their faith, in January. Two of these were teachers
+ in the public schools. There were four conversions in one family. Since these
+ meetings, many extra services have been held, with fruitful results. There are family
+ altars where none before existed. The work in Washington under Mr. Moore is very
+ hopeful. My next point was</p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>SELMA, ALA.</p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>which I entered full of hopes as to successful meetings, and was not disappointed.
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page101" id="page101"></a>{101}</span> During my stay
+ there, lasting three weeks, sixty professed to be converted. Most of these, through
+ the efforts of Rev. C.B. Curtis and his wife, were formed into a "Children's Band,"
+ while others joined the churches. This is a most important feature in pastoral work,
+ where the majority of the converts are children. They need to have something that
+ will help them in their spiritual and new life and which may be instrumental in
+ preserving them from temptations, snares and pitfalls, laid to entrap them by the
+ enemy of their souls.</p>
+ <p>I never before realized how easily people are led away by false teachers, nor saw
+ so manifestly brought out the fulfillment of the Scriptures, [2 Pet. ii, 1] "But
+ there were false prophets among the people, even as there shall be false teachers
+ among you, who privily shall bring in damnable heresies, even denying the Lord that
+ bought them, and bring upon themselves swift destruction. And many shall follow their
+ pernicious ways; by reason of whom the way of truth shall be evil spoken of."</p>
+ <p>A man calling himself a "prophet" and a "faith doctor" had been for some time
+ experimenting upon people, both white and black, and professed to cure them of all
+ their ailments. He had been holding meetings in a cottage weekly, and had gathered
+ many followers, who were, alas, for the most part professing Christians. He announced
+ that on the following Sunday he would hold the passover feast, burn the Bible, and,
+ in plain words, would do wonders, the like of which had not been heard of for years.
+ Accordingly, on Sunday morning, with a few of his followers, he came to the house of
+ a Negro, and during the ceremony commanded a white woman to place her head on the
+ table and offer herself as a sacrifice. She refused, upon which a Negro woman laid
+ her head upon the table. He immediately raised an old cavalry sword and, with one
+ blow, nearly severed her head from her body, and then commanded that they should
+ "drag her out at once and put her with her feet towards the East and she will rise
+ after three days."</p>
+ <p>Soon there was a cry of murder raised; the false prophet was arrested after a
+ struggle, and he, with a number of his followers, was safely lodged in the
+ penitentiary, where it is to be hoped he will at least be kept from cutting off any
+ more women's heads. Oh, how great the need of faithful men to lift up their voices
+ like a trumpet, and spare them not, and show to these needy people, so religiously
+ inclined, the way of truth!</p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>TALLADEGA COLLEGE</p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>was the next place visited. Beginning the New Year, which is usually the "week of
+ prayer," for two weeks the "old, old story" was told on every night among the
+ resident students and scholars. At other times, services would be held in the Cassidy
+ school in the morning, or in the afternoon, as school duties would permit. The
+ Theological class, as well as the teachers and faculty, interested themselves greatly
+ in seeking to win the unsaved to Jesus. Following out the teaching of the New
+ Testament, the students <span class="pagenum"><a name="page102"
+ id="page102"></a>{102}</span> went out two and two in the surrounding neighborhood,
+ calling at the homes of the people, conversing and praying in the family. They often
+ returned with great joy to tell of the success and kindness they had met wherever
+ they went. I am thankful to our blessed Lord to be able to report that not only forty
+ or more of the young people were converted but also that professing Christians were
+ strengthened in faith, all promising to do what God had required of them and to go to
+ their respective homes, some of them hundreds of miles away, to make known a
+ Saviour's love and to carry light as far as possible in the surrounding darkness.
+ While here the Macedonian cry was heard from</p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>JENIFER.</p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>I went there for a brief service. The first night the church was full, although
+ the weather was stormy. The spirit of God brooded over the meeting and five came
+ forward for prayer. The next night still was unpleasant, yet some of the congregation
+ came several miles, and at the close eleven inquirers asked for prayers. A brother in
+ the congregation rose, and, in pleading terms, his voice faltering, begged, "Oh,
+ brodder, please do stop wid us; see de mourners; see de work de Lord is doing; please
+ you brodder don't go away and leab us." After such heartfelt words I could but stay
+ all the week, when sixteen professed to have accepted Christ, or, as they put it, to
+ have "found religion."</p>
+ <p>Miss Smith, at her home for motherless girls, is doing a noble work here. Rev.
+ J.B. Grant is highly respected by all in the village and has a good name, which is
+ worth more than great riches.</p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>IRONATON</p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>was the next place visited. It was exceedingly muddy and dark, yet the people came
+ out well. At the close of the first meeting the congregation arose <i>en masse</i>
+ and asked that I would remain a day longer, which I did.</p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>MARION, ALA.</p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>I went to Marion with some doubts upon my mind as to the results. The first
+ evening after my arrival I was very sick and threatened with a severe attack of
+ chills and fever, but I was helped to strength enough to preach with difficulty.
+ Twenty-five inquirers asked for prayers. Some that night became "new creatures in
+ Christ Jesus," and every night as the meetings progressed the interest deepened and
+ spread, until other churches were reached by the influence and their services given
+ up that their members might come to our church and share in the work and blessing.
+ Every night large numbers of seekers came to Christ. On one night twelve expressed
+ their faith in a new life. Among the many inquirers was one who for twelve years had
+ been an anxiety to her friends on account of her state of mind, and her conversion
+ caused great joy in the church.</p>
+ <p>Short morning meetings were held in the various schools in the town, and in a
+ town-school seventeen seekers found the Lord Jesus precious to <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page103" id="page103"></a>{103}</span> their souls. Up to
+ this time, during two weeks, more than one hundred profess to have been
+ converted.</p>
+ <p>I am happy to report that now, with the exception of two or three of the students,
+ all in the new A.M.A. school have been reached by the gospel and are rejoicing that
+ God's love has been shed abroad in their hearts. This blessing can be traced in a
+ great measure to the faithful Scriptural teaching which Rev. A.W. Curtis and his
+ devoted wife had been giving previous to my coming among them, prayer meetings having
+ been held in the church for some time beforehand, and women's meetings at the
+ pastor's home, led by Mrs. Curtis, thus preparing the way for the nightly preaching
+ of the gospel. I go next to Mobile.</p>
+ <p>JAMES WHARTON, Evangelist.</p>
+ <hr class="full" />
+ <a name="chinese" id="chinese"></a>
+ <h3>THE CHINESE.</h3>
+ <h4>RESULTS THAT ELUDE THE STATISTICIAN.</h4>
+ <p>BY REV. C.T. WEITZEL.</p>
+ <p>There are some effects which cannot be put into statistics. A boy's progress in a
+ study is but imperfectly declared by the monthly report or the examination "stand."
+ Much of the work accomplished in a Chinese mission school, is impossible to tabulate.
+ Like the marvelous clearness of the atmosphere in Santa Barbara on a bright morning
+ after a night of rain, it quite eludes the statistician.</p>
+ <p>But effects may be felt, though we cannot represent them by figures. Go with me
+ some evening through the Chinese quarter of our city; note the faces of the loungers
+ in every door-way and at every corner. Watch the expression, or the want of
+ expression, in these stolid, brutal, repulsive faces of opium-smokers and gamblers.
+ Then step over with me to the Chinese mission-house two squares away. Before you
+ enter, look in through the half-open door and take a survey of the scene within. The
+ room is well-lighted, and contains, among other things, two long tables, a dozen
+ benches, a cabinet organ, and a few chairs. The walls are bright with Scripture texts
+ and illustrations from sacred history. About fifteen young Chinamen are seated at the
+ tables, all reading and studying aloud in true Chinese fashion. Just as you enter the
+ teacher, touches the bell. Books are closed and all take seats on the benches in
+ front of the organ. A Chinese evangelist is present, and while he makes an
+ impassioned address, accompanied by most expressive gestures, you are free to study
+ the faces upturned to listen. What a contrast to the faces you have just left in
+ Chinatown, idly staring at the passer-by, or, vacant of all interest, staring at
+ nothing! At a glance you perceive effects which must be seen to be appreciated. You
+ feel that not only is the whole atmosphere of this place essentially different <span
+ class="pagenum"><a name="page104" id="page104"></a>{104}</span> from that of the
+ Chinese quarter, but there is also an essential difference between those who frequent
+ the one and the other.</p>
+ <p>Socially, intellectually, spiritually, the Chinese mission-school does its
+ beneficent work. It must be borne in mind that the Chinaman in California is away
+ from home. He is exposed to all the temptations of a stranger in a strange land,
+ removed from the restraining influences of a community where one is known. Subject an
+ equal number of men of any other nation to this severe test, and I doubt much if they
+ would bear it as well. The mission school serves the purpose of a strong social
+ support. So far as possible it takes the place of a home. It practically separates
+ its attendants into a community by itself. It does much to keep them from contact
+ with their vicious countrymen in Chinatown. It does much to bring them into contact
+ with those whose influence upon them will be good. It does much to furnish a healthy
+ social atmosphere in which to pass the hours of the afternoon and evening, which
+ every Chinese servant is at liberty to spend as he will.</p>
+ <p>Intellectually the work in the Chinese missions is already far beyond the
+ elementary stage, and is growing more virile every year.</p>
+ <p>But everything is made but the means to the spiritual end. Not for an hour is this
+ lost sight of. The whole drift of the teaching, the songs, the pictures, the
+ Scripture text, is to make known Christ. Every evening's lesson ends with worship.
+ For a month or more the Chinese preacher to whom I have referred, has held
+ evangelistic services in the Santa Barbara mission. To-day he leaves for points
+ farther south to do the same work elsewhere.</p>
+ <p>In no year, may I add, have there been so many conversions among the Chinese on
+ this coast as in the one just past.</p>
+ <hr class="full" />
+ <a name="bureau" id="bureau"></a>
+ <h3>BUREAU OF WOMAN'S WORK.</h3>
+ <p>MISS D.E. EMERSON, SECRETARY.</p>
+ <h4>WOMAN'S STATE ORGANIZATIONS.</h4>
+ <h4>CO-OPERATING WITH THE AMERICAN MISSIONARY ASSOCIATION.</h4>
+ <p>ME.&mdash;Woman's Aid to A.M.A., Chairman of Committee, Mrs. C.A. Woodbury,
+ Woodfords, Me.</p>
+ <p>VT.&mdash;Woman's Aid to A.M.A., Chairman of Committee, Mrs. Henry Fairbanks, St.
+ Johnsbury, Vt.</p>
+ <p>CONN.&mdash;Woman's Home Miss. Union, Secretary, Mrs. S.M. Hotchkiss, 171 Capitol
+ Ave., Hartford, Conn.</p>
+ <p>N.Y.&mdash;Woman's Home Miss. Union, Secretary, Mrs. C.C. Creegan, Syracuse,
+ N.Y.</p>
+ <p>OHIO.&mdash;Woman's Home Miss. Union, Secretary, Mrs. Flora K. Regal, Oberlin,
+ Ohio.</p>
+ <p>ILL.&mdash;Woman's Home Miss. Union, Secretary, Mrs. C.H. Taintor, 151 Washington
+ St., Chicago, Ill.</p>
+ <p>MICH.&mdash;Woman's Home Miss. Union, Secretary, Mrs. Mary B. Warren, Lansing,
+ Mich.</p>
+ <p>WIS.&mdash;Woman's Home Miss. Union, Secretary, Mrs. C. Matter, Brodlhead,
+ Wis.</p>
+ <p>MINN.&mdash;Woman's Home Miss. Society, Secretary, Mrs. H.L. Chase, 2,750 Second
+ Ave., South, Minneapolis, Minn.</p>
+ <p>IOWA.&mdash;Woman's Home Miss. Union, Secretary, Miss Ella K. Marsh, Grinnell,
+ Iowa.</p>
+ <p>KANSAS.&mdash;Woman's Home Miss. Society, Secretary, Mrs. Addison Blanchard,
+ Topeka, Kan.</p>
+ <p>SOUTH DAKOTA.&mdash;Woman's Home Miss. Union, Secretary, Mrs. W.H. Thrall, Amour,
+ Dak.</p>
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page105" id="page105"></a>{105}</span>
+ <hr class="full" />
+ <h4>THE BLACK WOMAN OF THE SOUTH.</h4>
+ <p>The Rev. Alexander Crummell, D.D., formerly a missionary in Africa and now Rector
+ of St. Luke's Church in Washington, D.C., is a native of Africa, a graduate of one of
+ the leading Universities of England, who adds to the strength and graces of a sound
+ scholarship, the devotion of a noble Christian character.</p>
+ <p>From an address made by him upon the "Needs and Neglects of the Black Woman of the
+ South," we quote his plea for "Woman's Work for Woman." Referring to the Negro woman
+ in slavery days, he says:</p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>"She was a 'hewer of wood and a drawer of water.' She had to keep her place in
+ the gang from morn till eve, under the burden of a heavy task, or under the
+ stimulus or the fear of a cruel lash. She was a picker of cotton. She labored at
+ the sugar mill and in the tobacco factory. When, through weariness or sickness, she
+ had fallen behind her allotted task, then came, as punishment, the fearful stripes
+ upon her shrinking, lacerated flesh.</p>
+ <p>"Her home life was of the most degrading nature. She lived in the rudest huts,
+ and partook of the coarsest food, and dressed in the scantiest garb, and slept, in
+ multitudinous cabins, upon the hardest boards!</p>
+ <p>"There was no sanctity of family, no binding tie of marriage, none of the fine
+ felicities and the endearing affections of home. Few of these things were the lot
+ of the Southern black woman. Instead, thereof, a gross barbarism, which tended to
+ blunt the tender sensibilities, to obliterate feminine delicacy and womanly shame,
+ came down as her heritage from generation to generation; and it seems a miracle of
+ providence and grace that, notwithstanding these terrible circumstances, so much
+ struggling virtue lingered amid the rude cabins, that so much womanly worth and
+ sweetness remained, as slaveholders themselves have borne witness to.</p>
+ <p>"Freed, legally, she has been; but the act of emancipation had no talismanic
+ influence to reach to and alter and transform her degrading social life. The truth
+ is, 'Emancipation Day' found her a prostrate and degraded being; and, although it
+ has brought numerous advantages to her sons, it has produced but the simplest
+ changes in <i>her</i> social and domestic condition. She is still the crude, rude,
+ ignorant mother. Remote from cities, the dweller still in the old plantation hut,
+ neighboring to the sulky, disaffected master-class, who still think her freedom was
+ a personal robbery of themselves, none of the 'fair humanities' have visited her
+ humble home. The light of knowledge has not fallen upon her eyes. The fine
+ domesticities which give the charm to family life, and which, by the refinement and
+ delicacy of womanhood, preserve the civilization of nations, have not come to
+ <i>her</i>. She has still the rude, coarse labor of men. With her rude husband, she
+ still shares the hard service of a field-hand. Her house, which shelters, perhaps,
+ some six or eight children, embraces but two rooms. Her furniture is of the rudest
+ kind. The clothing of the household is scant and of the coarsest material; has
+ oft-times the garniture of rags, and for herself and offspring is marked, not
+ seldom, by the absense <span class="pagenum"><a name="page106"
+ id="page106"></a>{106}</span> of both hats and shoes. She has rarely been taught to
+ sew, and the field-labor of slavery times has kept her ignorant of the habitudes of
+ neatness and the requirements of order. Indeed, coarse food, coarse clothes, coarse
+ living, coarse manners, coarse companions, coarse surroundings, coarse neighbors,
+ both white and black, yea, everything coarse, down to the coarse, ignorant,
+ senseless religion, which excites her sensibilities and starts her passions, go to
+ make up the life of the masses of black women in the hamlets and villages of the
+ South. This is the state of black womanhood.</p>
+ <p>"And now look at the <i>vastness</i> of this degradation. If I had been speaking
+ of the population of a city, or town, or even a village, the tale would be a sad
+ and melancholy one. But I have brought before you the condition of <i>millions of
+ women</i>. And when you think that the masses of these women live in the rural
+ districts; that they grow up in rudeness and ignorance; that their former masters
+ are using few means to break up their hereditary degradation, you can easily take
+ in the pitiful condition of this population and forecast the inevitable future to
+ multitudes of females, unless a mighty special effort is made for the improvement
+ of the black womanhood of the South.</p>
+ <p>"I am anxious for a permanent and uplifting civilization to be engrafted on the
+ Negro race in this land. And this can only be secured through the womanhood of a
+ race. If you want the civilization of a people to reach the very best elements of
+ their being, and then, having reached them, there to abide as an indigenous
+ principle, you must imbue the <i>womanhood</i> of that people with all its elements
+ and qualities. Any movement which passes by the female sex is an ephemeral thing.
+ Without them, no true nationality, patriotism, religion, cultivation, family life,
+ or true social status, is a possibility. In this matter it takes two to make
+ one&mdash;mankind is a duality. The male may bring, as an exotic, a foreign graft,
+ say, of civilization, to a new people. But what then! Can a graft live or thrive of
+ itself? By no manner of means. It must get vitality from the stock into which it is
+ put; and it is the women who give the sap to every human organization which thrives
+ and flourishes on earth.</p>
+ <p>"I plead, therefore, for the establishment of at least one large '<i>Industrial
+ school</i>' in every Southern State for the black girls of the South. I ask for the
+ establishment of schools which may serve specially the home life of the rising
+ womanhood of my race.</p>
+ <p>"I want <i>boarding schools</i> for the <i>industrial training</i> of one
+ hundred and fifty or two hundred of the poorest girls, of the ages of twelve to
+ eighteen years.</p>
+ <p>"I wish the intellectual training to be limited to reading, writing, arithmetic
+ and geography.</p>
+ <p>"I would have these girls taught to do accurately all domestic work, such as
+ sweeping floors, dusting rooms, scrubbing, bed-making, washing and ironing, sewing,
+ mending and knitting.</p>
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page107" id="page107"></a>{107}</span>
+ <p>"I would have the trades of dress-making, millinery, straw-plating, tailoring
+ for men, and such like, taught them.</p>
+ <p>"The art of cooking should be made a specialty, and every girl should be
+ instructed in it.</p>
+ <p>"In connection with these schools, garden plats should be cultivated, and every
+ girl should be required daily, to spend at least an hour in learning the
+ cultivation of small fruits, vegetables and flowers.</p>
+ <p>"It is hardly possible to exaggerate either the personal, family or society
+ influence which would flow from these schools. Every class, yea, every girl in an
+ out-going class, would be a missionary of thrift, industry, common-sense, and
+ practicality. They would go forth, year by year, a leavening power into the houses,
+ towns and villages of the Southern black population; girls fit to be the wives of
+ the honest peasantry of the South, the worthy matrons of their numerous
+ households.</p>
+ <p>"I am looking after the domestic training of the <i>masses</i>; for the raising
+ up of women meet to be the helpers of poor men, the <i>rank and file</i> of black
+ society, all through the rural districts of the South.</p>
+ <p>"A true civilization can only be attained when the life of woman is reached, her
+ whole being permeated by noble ideas, her fine taste enriched by culture, her
+ tendencies to the beautiful gratified and developed, her singular and delicate
+ nature lifted up to its full capacity, and then, when all these qualities are fully
+ matured, cultivated and sanctified, all their sacred influences shall circle around
+ ten thousand firesides, and the cabins of the humblest freedmen shall become the
+ homes of Christian refinement through the influence of the uplifted and cultivated
+ black woman of the South."</p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>The above appeal is in the line of our American Missionary Association work. While
+ we have higher schools and institutions for more thorough education, which these
+ Negro women need as much as any women in the world, we are increasingly developing
+ this idea which Dr. Crummell eloquently pleads.</p>
+ <p>We remind our friends and those Christian women who are interested in the
+ uplifting of Negro womanhood, that the American Missionary Association, the
+ <i>ordained agency</i> of the Congregational Churches for this work, could do much
+ more of it if the means were forthcoming. The marked success of the domestic training
+ in our schools at Tougaloo, Miss., Talladega, Ala., Thomasville, Ga., Memphis, Tenn.,
+ and other points, shows the advantage gained in the twenty-five years' experience
+ which the A.M.A. has had in its work for the Negroes.</p>
+ <p>We need the co-operation of all Christian women in carrying on these Industrial
+ Schools already established, and to enable us to establish and carry forward <i>many
+ more</i>.</p>
+ <hr class="full" />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page108" id="page108"></a>{108}</span> <a
+ name="young1" id="young1"></a>
+ <h3>YOUNG FOLKS.</h3>
+ <h4>WHAT SUSIE FOUND AT TOUGALOO.</h4>
+ <p>(SEE FEBRUARY AMERICAN MISSIONARY.)</p>
+ <p>A roomful of girls of various sizes and complexions, all very much intent upon
+ their work, and no one thinking just at that moment of a traveled fairy daughter, to
+ adopt and love as her own, sent by a beneficent and tender-hearted northern "Fay." I
+ doubt if Susie ever before saw so many "little women" laboring with needles and
+ trying to set the troublesome stitches straight and even, to keep the thread from
+ tangling and the seam clean. The results are far from perfection, but they are
+ encouraging.</p>
+ <p>Some of the children <i>wear</i> thimbles, and some set them upon their desks and
+ <i>wiggle</i> the needle through without their aid. Here is a child so tiny that no
+ thimble in the box will serve her. She has a delicate face, with big brown eyes, and
+ her fingers are the slenderest of appendages to her atoms of hands. Her sister, a
+ year or so older, has a round, chubby face, with plump, dimpled, brown hands, but
+ these fat fingers also must grow to the smallest thimble. Here is a quiet, modest
+ little girl whose five baptismal names, Cynthia Ann Finetta Bloomfield Celeste,
+ furnish her nothing prettier for every day use than "Lusty." She could not thread a
+ needle or tie a knot when she joined the Hope Band, and the second year she wore one
+ of the smallest thimbles with a bit of cloth inside for "chinking" to keep it on.
+ Here Susie's sympathies are drawn out towards a thin, nervous-looking little Frances,
+ who has a hand and foot crippled. She walks painfully along to her place and holds
+ her work at a disadvantage in the poor little cramped left hand, but she likes to be
+ there with the others.</p>
+ <p>Most of the heads are covered with little tight braids, on some heads standing at
+ every angle, on some laid smoothly down, one braid tied to another. A few have their
+ curly hair cropped close, and here is a little girl with a bushy mass overshadowing
+ her lively face. She takes but a stitch or two until she goes up to the front and
+ holds her work out for her teacher's inspection. Some time elapses before that lady
+ can notice it and say, "That is pretty good, Lena; now go right on carefully." Lena
+ returns slowly to her place, takes a stitch or two more and repeats the performance.
+ When will the work be completed? O no, that is the way she used to do, but
+ <i>now</i>&mdash;</p>
+ <p>A middle-sized "Topsy" comes pushing rudely forward, tossing her head and
+ whispering disagreeable things to those she has to pass, and Susy hopes she will not
+ be brought into any closer relations with <i>her</i>, when she happens to see her
+ tenderly fondling a broken-armed, broken-legged dollie, while her work is being
+ adjusted, and thinks somewhat better of her. There are several Lilies and Roses in
+ this growing garden. The lilies are not white and the roses are not red, but more
+ attractive and interesting to their teacher's eyes than the black pansies the flower
+ gardeners <span class="pagenum"><a name="page109" id="page109"></a>{109}</span>
+ labored so long to produce. Their teacher is fond of flowers and has her windows
+ full, even in winter, but she does not smile upon them with such a heartful of
+ affection as upon these, nor can those bask in the light of her merry face more
+ freely. As her short, round figure moves down the aisle and back, and Susie gets a
+ good look at her, she says to herself, "Why surely this is Mrs. Santa Claus! How glad
+ I am!" and it is not a strange conclusion, for her figure and expression <i>are</i>
+ like the poet's description of dear Saint Nick.</p>
+ <p>Here is a girl in one of the side seats a good deal taller than her teacher.
+ Through the long, bright, warm summer she works in the cotton and the corn, alongside
+ of father, brothers, uncles, men and women, boys and girls. Her hands are enlarged
+ and roughened with toil, but she is taking pains to learn how to do this useful
+ indoor work skillfully too.</p>
+ <p>There is a goodly company of these larger girls, but Susie does not feel any more
+ afraid of them, nor of "the middle-sized bears and the wee tiny, small bears" than
+ did little Silverhair in the nursery tale. She doubts, however, if these largest ones
+ have not laid aside dollies, and thinks she must look among the "leaster" ones for
+ the little <i>step-mother</i> who will respect her own little Fay-mother's request to
+ "take good care of her." But when the sewing-lesson is ended and she notices one and
+ another bring to light a little dollie-daughter to hug in her arms as she walks
+ homeward, and sees the sociable interest of all the rest, she feels no further doubt
+ about the mother-love in all these little Southern bosoms and resigns all care as to
+ which one shall be hers, leaving the whole question to Mrs. Santa Claus.</p>
+ <p>Perhaps some day we may call upon her when she is fully domesticated in her new
+ home. There will not be many comforts and conveniences in that home. Possibly when we
+ ask for Susie, her mamma will draw a little old box from under the head of her bed,
+ as once when I called upon one of these little girls and asked her if she had a doll.
+ It had lost some of its limbs and it was dressed in odds and ends, tacked together by
+ the untaught little mother, but when I set the dollie on my knee and pretended to
+ drink tea out of one of the tiny toy cups set forth from the same treasure-box, you
+ could not find a more hilarious little mamma anywhere, though you should pick out one
+ with all nursery stores at her command.</p>
+ <hr class="full" />
+ <a name="young2" id="young2"></a>
+ <h4>A LETTER FROM ONE OF OUR INDIAN PUPILS IN NEBRASKA.</h4>
+ <p>SANTEE AGENCY, NEB.</p>
+ <p><i>Dear Eastern Friends</i>:&mdash;We have had five good prayer meetings during
+ two weeks, and I am very glad to tell you dear friends that some of our school-mates
+ said they will try and do as God wants them to do. And some pray who never did
+ before. No words can tell how I felt one evening <span class="pagenum"><a
+ name="page110" id="page110"></a>{110}</span> after we came home from meeting. Just
+ before I went up stairs I asked the Matron if I could talk Dakota to tell my
+ room-mate about the meeting. The subject was, "What must I do to be saved?" I told it
+ to her the best I could. After I was through talking I asked her if she understood
+ all what I meant and she said "Yes." We both were silent for one minute. I was
+ praying to God in my heart to help me to help this dear school-mate of mine. Then in
+ a little while she said, "I believe in Jesus and now I will always try and be a
+ Christian." When she said that, I couldn't do anything more, I was so glad that my
+ tears came. And before we went to sleep I ask her to pray after I did, and she did;
+ this was the first time she prayed in her own words. It was so dark and I couldn't
+ see anything but I knew she was crying by the way she spoke. After long time I
+ thought she went to sleep; but all at once she call my name and said, "I wish
+ tomorrow morning they would sing in Dakota, '<i>Ring the bells in heaven, there is
+ great joy to-day</i>.'" Dear friends we kindly ask you to remember us when you offer
+ prayer to our dear God.</p>
+ <p>Your friend,</p>
+ <p>&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+ <hr class="receipts_hr" />
+ <a name="receipts" id="receipts"></a>
+ <h3>RECEIPTS FOR FEBRUARY, 1888.</h3>
+ <h5>MAINE, $1,119.63.</h5>
+ <div class="receipts">
+ <p>Auburn. High St. Cong. Ch. (117.28 of which <i>for Indian M.</i> and 39.74
+ <i>for Chinese M.</i> <span class="rightmargin">302.85</span></p>
+ <p>Augusta. Joel Spalding, to const. HON. WM. P. FRYE L.M. <span
+ class="rightmargin">30.00</span></p>
+ <p>Bangor. Central Cong. Ch. 75; Hammond St. Cong. Ch., 2, <i>for Pleasant Hill,
+ Tenn.</i> <span class="rightmargin">77.00</span></p>
+ <p>Bridgeton. By Mrs. Hale, Pkg. Basted Work, <i>for Selma, Ala.</i></p>
+ <p>Castine. Wm. G. Sargent, <i>for Pleasant Hill, Tenn.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">5.00</span></p>
+ <p>Center Lebanon. Sab. Sch. Class., <i>for Pleasant Hill, Tenn.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">4.10</span></p>
+ <p>Denmark. Box of C., <i>for Mobile, Ala.</i></p>
+ <p>East Orrington, Sab. Sch. 2; Miss M.F. George, 1, <i>for Pleasant Hill,
+ Tenn.</i> <span class="rightmargin">3.00</span></p>
+ <p>Edgecomb. Cong. Ch. and Soc. <span class="rightmargin">13.00</span></p>
+ <p>Farmington Falls. By Miss Susan G. Crowell, <i>for Freight</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">0.65</span></p>
+ <p>Hampden. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">4.80</span></p>
+ <p>Harpswell. Mrs. John Dinsmore. <i>for Pleasant Hill, Tenn.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">7.00</span></p>
+ <p>Island Falls. Miss D. Merriman, <i>for Pleasant Hill, Tenn.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">2.50</span></p>
+ <p>Limington. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">12.50</span></p>
+ <p>Monson. Rev. R.W. Emerson, <i>for Pleasant Hill, Tenn.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">5.00</span></p>
+ <p>Newcastle. Mrs. Wm. Heath, <i>for Pleasant Hill, Tenn.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">1.00</span></p>
+ <p>New Gloucester. Ladies of Cong. Ch., Bbl. and Box of C., 1.75 <i>for Freight,
+ for Selma, Ala.</i> <span class="rightmargin">1.75</span></p>
+ <p>New Sharon, Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">3.00</span></p>
+ <p>North Bridgeton. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">2.25</span></p>
+ <p>Norway. Mrs. Amos. I. Holt, Bbl. of C., <i>for Wilmington, N.C.; &mdash;&mdash;
+ 2, for Freight</i> <span class="rightmargin">2.00</span></p>
+ <p>Orkland. H.T. and S.E. Buck, 20; Mrs. Trott, 3; "A Friend," 1 <span
+ class="rightmargin">24.00</span></p>
+ <p>Portland. "A Friend" (10 of which <i>for Rosebud Indian M.</i>) <span
+ class="rightmargin">15.00</span></p>
+ <p>Saco. First Parish Ch. and Soc., to const. MRS. ELLA C. INGALLS L.M. <span
+ class="rightmargin">30.00</span></p>
+ <p>Scarboro. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">5.16</span></p>
+ <p>Skowhegan. Ladies of Miss'y Soc., Bbl. of C., <i>for Selma, Ala.</i></p>
+ <p>South Paris. by Mrs. Austin, Pkg. Work, <i>for Selma, Ala.</i></p>
+ <p>Union. 2 Classes, little girls in Sab. Sch., by Mrs. F.V. Norcross <i>for
+ Pleasant Hill, Tenn.</i> <span class="rightmargin">5.00</span></p>
+ <p>Wells. B. Maxwell. <span class="rightmargin">25.00</span></p>
+ <p>Westbrook. Second Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">25.57</span></p>
+ <p>Wilton. Ladies of Cong. Ch., Bbl. of C., <i>for Selma, Ala.</i></p>
+ <p>Yarmouthville. Rev. Amasa Loring, <i>for Pleasant Hill, Tenn.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">2.00</span></p>
+ <p>&mdash;&mdash;. "Friend in Maine," bal. to const. MRS. JULIA A. MERRILL L.M.
+ <span class="rightmargin">10.50</span></p>
+ <p>By Mrs. C.A. Woodbury, Treas. W.A. to A.M.A., <i>for Woman's Work</i>:</p>
+ <p class="i2">Ladies of Maine <span class="rightmargin">500.00</span></p>
+ </div>
+ <h5>NEW HAMPSHIRE, $291.01.</h5>
+ <div class="receipts">
+ <p>Amherst. Rev. A.J. McGown <span class="rightmargin">10.00</span></p>
+ <p>Auburn. Benjamin Chase, <i>for Indian M.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">2.00</span></p>
+ <p>Candia. Cong. Ch. and Soc. <span class="rightmargin">17.50</span></p>
+ <p>Colebrook. "A Friend," Pkg. of Coats, Val. 16.16.</p>
+ <p>East Derry, First Ch. <span class="rightmargin">18.03</span></p>
+ <p>East Jaffrey. "A Friend" <span class="rightmargin">15.00</span></p>
+ <p>Enfield. Cong. Ch. and Soc. <span class="rightmargin">5.00</span></p>
+ <p>Epping. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">37.00</span></p>
+ <p>Goffstown. Bbl. of C., Val. 30, <i>for Greenwood, S.C.</i>, 1.40 <i>for
+ Freight</i> <span class="rightmargin">1.40</span></p>
+ <p>Great Falls. Mrs. J.A. Stickney, Bbl. and Box of C. and Christmas gifts, <i>for
+ Storrs Sch., Atlanta, Ga.</i></p>
+ <p>Greenfield. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">15.50</span></p>
+ <p>Greenfield. "Friends" <i>for Storrs Sch.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">8.50</span></p>
+ <p>Greenland. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">15.56</span></p>
+ <p>Hancock. By Miss B.D. Robertson <span class="rightmargin">5.63</span></p>
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page111" id="page111"></a>{111}</span>
+ <p>Henniker. By Miss B.D. Robertson <span class="rightmargin">5.80</span></p>
+ <p>Lyme. Cong. Ch. and Soc. <span class="rightmargin">19.81</span></p>
+ <p>Manchester. First Cong. Ch. and Soc., to const. ALLEN L. FRENCH L.M. <span
+ class="rightmargin">53.18</span></p>
+ <p>Mason. Ladies of Cong. Ch., Bbl. of C., <i>for Storrs Sch., Atlanta,
+ Ga.</i></p>
+ <p>Nashua. Miss Sarah Kendall, <i>for Greenwood, S.C.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">3.00</span></p>
+ <p>Nashua. 2 Bbls. of C., <i>for Greenwood, S.C.</i>, 2 <i>for Freight</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">2.00</span></p>
+ <p>Newport. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">40.10</span></p>
+ <p>Pittsfield. Box and Bbl. of C., etc., <i>for Marion, Ala.</i></p>
+ <p>South Newmarket. <i>For Freight</i> <span class="rightmargin">2.50</span></p>
+ <p>West Lebanon. Tilden Sem., Box of C. and Christmas Gifts, <i>for Storrs Sch.,
+ Atlanta, Ga.</i></p>
+ <div style="margin-left: 5%;">
+ <p>By George Swain:</p>
+ <p>Amherst. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">1.50</span></p>
+ <p>Greenville. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">10.00</span></p>
+ <p>Mason. Mrs. P.S. Wilson <span class="rightmargin">2.00</span></p>
+ <p>.<span class="rightmargin">&mdash;&mdash;</span></p>
+ <p>.<span class="rightmargin">13.50</span></p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <h5>VERMONT. $174.06.</h5>
+ <div class="receipts">
+ <p>Bethel. Sab. Sch. of Cong. Ch., <i>for McIntosh, Ga.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">3.43</span></p>
+ <p>East Hardwick. O. Paine <span class="rightmargin">0.50</span></p>
+ <p>Fairhaven. <i>For McIntosh, Ga.</i> <span class="rightmargin">5.35</span></p>
+ <p>Irasburg. Mrs. J.E. Chamberlin <span class="rightmargin">5.00</span></p>
+ <p>Jamaica. Ladies, <i>for McIntosh, Ga.</i> by Mrs. Ellen D. Wild <span
+ class="rightmargin">2.00</span></p>
+ <p>Lyndon. Dr. L.W. Hubbard <span class="rightmargin">2.00</span></p>
+ <p>Middlebury. Bbl. of C., and 2 <i>for McIntosh, Ga.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">2.00</span></p>
+ <p>Montpeller. Bbl. of C., <i>for Storrs Sch., Atlanta, Ga.</i></p>
+ <p>North Thetford. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">7.00</span></p>
+ <p>Norwich. Cong. Ch., 15; "A Friend," 5 <span class="rightmargin">20.00</span></p>
+ <p>Peru. Dea. Edmund Batchelder, 3; Rev. A.B. Peffers, 2. <span
+ class="rightmargin">5.00</span></p>
+ <p>Pittsford. Mrs. Nancy P. Humphrey <span class="rightmargin">10.00</span></p>
+ <p>Post Mills. Cong. Ch. (3 of which <i>for McIntosh, Ga.</i>) <span
+ class="rightmargin">8.00</span></p>
+ <p>Quechee. Bbl. of C. and 1.75 <i>for McIntosh, Ga.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">1.75</span></p>
+ <p>Saint Johnsbury East. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">6.50</span></p>
+ <p>Shoreham. R.H. Holmes <span class="rightmargin">5.00</span></p>
+ <p>Stratford. Cong, Ch. <span class="rightmargin">25.00</span></p>
+ <p>Townshend. Cong. Ch. (5 of which from Mrs. Anna Rice) <span
+ class="rightmargin">25.53</span></p>
+ <p>Wells River. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">20.00</span></p>
+ <p>West Brattleboro. Ladies of Cong. Ch., 15; A.L. Grout, 5, <i>for McIntosh,
+ Ga.</i> <span class="rightmargin">20.00</span></p>
+ </div>
+ <h5>MASSACHUSETTS, $5,925.07</h5>
+ <div class="receipts">
+ <p>Amesbury. Union Evang. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">4.03</span></p>
+ <p>Amherst. "A Friend," to const. JOHN RICHARDS L.M. <span
+ class="rightmargin">30.00</span></p>
+ <p>Andover. Rev. F.W. Greene, 20; A Friend, 10 <span
+ class="rightmargin">30.00</span></p>
+ <p>Andover. Juv. Miss'y Soc. of West Parish, <i>for Indian Student Aid</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">15.00</span></p>
+ <p>Andover. Ladies of Free Ch., Bbl. of C., <i>for Marion, Ala.</i></p>
+ <p>Ashfield. "A Friend" <span class="rightmargin">1.16</span></p>
+ <p>Auburn. Infant Class. Sab. Sch. of Cong. Ch., <i>for Conn. Ind'l Sch., Ga.</i>
+ <span class="rightmargin">7.00</span></p>
+ <p>Belchertown. Mrs. D.B. Bruce, to const. REV. CHARLES R. BRUCE L.M. <span
+ class="rightmargin">30.00</span></p>
+ <p>Beverly. Dane St. Sab. Sch., <i>for Student Aid, Fisk U.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">50.00</span></p>
+ <p>Boston. J.H. Nichols, A.A. Lawrence and S.W. Marston, Val. Sch. Books and Sch.
+ Apparatus</p>
+ <div style="margin-left: 5%;">
+ <p>Dorchester. Miss Mary A. Tutle, <i>for Marie Adlof Sch'p Fund</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">0.40</span></p>
+ <p>Jamaica Plain. Miss Nellie Riley, Pkg cards, etc., <i>for Straight U.</i>
+ <span class="rightmargin">&mdash;&mdash;</span></p>
+ <p>.<span class="rightmargin">0.40</span></p>
+ </div>
+ <p>Boxboro. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">15.00</span></p>
+ <p>Boxford. A Friend, <i>for Ch., Corbin, Ky.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">5.00</span></p>
+ <p>Brimfield. Sab. Sch. of Cong. Ch., <i>for Student Aid, Fisk U.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">10.60</span></p>
+ <p>Buckland. First Cong. Ch., <i>for Sherwood, Tenn.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">4.00</span></p>
+ <p>Cambridgeport. Miss Hannah E. Moore <span class="rightmargin">8.00</span></p>
+ <p>Chelsea. Y.P.S.C.E. of First Cong. Ch., <i>for Student Aid, Fisk U.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">7.50</span></p>
+ <p>Chelsea. Miss E. Davenport <span class="rightmargin">5.00</span></p>
+ <p>Chelsea. Mrs. Emma B. Evans, <i>for Indian M.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">5.00</span></p>
+ <p>Clinton. Young People's Mite Soc., <i>for Indian Sch'p</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">43.00</span></p>
+ <p>Cohasset. Second Cong. Ch. and Soc. <span class="rightmargin">31.33</span></p>
+ <p>Cummington. Mrs. H.M. Porter <span class="rightmargin">3.00</span></p>
+ <p>Dalton. Sab. Sch. of Cong. Ch., <i>for Student Aid, Williamsburg, Ky.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">45.00</span></p>
+ <p>Dracut. First Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">10.00</span></p>
+ <p>Dunstable. Cong. Ch. and Soc. <span class="rightmargin">30.74</span></p>
+ <p>East Douglas. Second Cong. Ch. and Soc. <span
+ class="rightmargin">49.97</span></p>
+ <p>East Weymouth. Ch. and Sab. Sch., <i>for Pleasant Hill, Tenn.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">50.00</span></p>
+ <p>Georgetown. First Cong. Ch. and Soc. <span class="rightmargin">33.50</span></p>
+ <p>Globe Village. Young Helpers of Evan. Free Ch., <i>for Student Aid, Fisk U.</i>
+ <span class="rightmargin">25.00</span></p>
+ <p>Greenwich. Daniel Parker, deceased, by Mrs. M.P. Estey <span
+ class="rightmargin">5.00</span></p>
+ <p>Groton. Ladies' Benev. Soc., by Mrs. Caroline Blood, <i>for Freight</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">2.00</span></p>
+ <p>Hampshire Co. "A Friend" <span class="rightmargin">5.00</span></p>
+ <p>Haverhill. Sab. Sch. of West Cong. Ch., <i>for Freight</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">3.00</span></p>
+ <p>Hyde Park. Woman's H.M.U. and Children's M. Soc. of First Cong. Ch., <i>for
+ Tougaloo U.</i>, and to const. MISS ALICE GRAY L.M. <span
+ class="rightmargin">30.00</span></p>
+ <p>Ipswich. South Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">20.00</span></p>
+ <p>Lakeville. Mrs. C.L. Ward <span class="rightmargin">25.00</span></p>
+ <p>Lawrence. Lawrence St. Ch. and Soc. <span class="rightmargin">150.00</span></p>
+ <p>Long Meadow. "A Friend," <i>for Indian M.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">1.00</span></p>
+ <p>Lowell. John St. Cong. Ch., 41.92; "A Friend in Elliot Ch." 5; Geo. C. Osgood,
+ M.D., 1.50 <span class="rightmargin">48.42</span></p>
+ <p>Lowell. Ladies' Benev. Soc. of First Cong. Ch., Bbl. of C., <i>for Wilmington,
+ N.C.</i></p>
+ <p>Malden. Infant Sab. Sch., <i>for Straight U.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">10.00</span></p>
+ <p>Manchester. Cong. Ch. and Soc. <span class="rightmargin">20.75</span></p>
+ <p>Mansfield. Ladies' Miss'y Soc., <i>for Wilmington, N.C.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">8.17</span></p>
+ <p>Middlefield. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">28.00</span></p>
+ <p>Monson. Mrs. Abbie G. Smith <span class="rightmargin">5.00</span></p>
+ <p>Neponset. Stone Mission Circle of Trin. Cong. Ch., <i>for Student Aid,
+ Wilmington, N.C.</i> <span class="rightmargin">10.00</span></p>
+ <p>Newburyport. "Friends," <i>for Mountain Work</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">3.00</span></p>
+ <p>Norfolk. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">2.14</span></p>
+ <p>North Abington. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">5.00</span></p>
+ <p>North Adams. "A Friend" <span class="rightmargin">10.00</span></p>
+ <p>Northhampton. "C" <span class="rightmargin">100.00</span></p>
+ <p>Northbridge. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">10.00</span></p>
+ <p>North Brookfield. Freight on Box to <i>Pleasant Hill, Tenn.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">4.60</span></p>
+ <p>North Leominister. Mrs. S.F. Houghton, to const. REV. F.A. BALCOM L.M. <span
+ class="rightmargin">30.00</span></p>
+ <p>Peabody. Sab. Sch. of South Cong. Ch., <i>for Indian M.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">50.00</span></p>
+ <p>Peabody. Sab. Sch. of First Cong. Ch., Box Books and Christmas Gifts, <i>for
+ Sherwood, Tenn.</i></p>
+ <p>Pepperell. Ladies of Cong. Soc., Bbl. of C., <i>for Greenwood, S.C.</i>, 2
+ <i>for Freight</i> <span class="rightmargin">2.00</span></p>
+ <p>Randolph. Collected by Mrs. J.C. Labaree, 30; Y.L. Miss'y Soc,. Bbl. of C.,
+ <i>for Tougaloo, U.</i> <span class="rightmargin">30.00</span></p>
+ <p>Randolph. Annie T. and Marion Belcher <span class="rightmargin">10.00</span></p>
+ <p>Reading. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">18.00</span></p>
+ <p>Royalston. "A Friend," 10; &mdash;&mdash;, Bbl. of C., <i>for Greenwood,
+ S.C.</i> <span class="rightmargin">10.00</span></p>
+ <p>Royalston. First Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">2.50</span></p>
+ <p>Somerset. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">2.00</span></p>
+ <p>Somerville. Sab. Sch. of Franklin St. Cong. Ch., <i>for Indian Student Aid</i>,
+ add'l <span class="rightmargin">40.00</span></p>
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page112" id="page112"></a>{112}</span>
+ <p>Somerville. Winter Hill Cong. Ch., 17.50; Day St. Ch., 10.50 <span
+ class="rightmargin">28.00</span></p>
+ <p>Somerville. Ladies of Cong. Ch., for Freight <span
+ class="rightmargin">3.35</span></p>
+ <p>South Amherst. South Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">6.12</span></p>
+ <p>South Braintree. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">11.00</span></p>
+ <p>Southington. Ladies' Benev.Soc., 2 Bbls. of C., <i>for Tougaloo, Miss</i></p>
+ <p>South Weymouth. Children's Soc., Bbl. of Christmas Gifts</p>
+ <p>Spencer. Mrs. G.H. Marsh's S.S. Class, <i>for Wilmington, N.C.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">7.00</span></p>
+ <p>Springfield. "H.M." <span class="rightmargin">1000.00</span></p>
+ <p>Taunton. Union Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">27.50</span></p>
+ <p>Waltham. Trin. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">15.80</span></p>
+ <p>Waltham. Sab. Sen. Class, <i>for Storrs Sch. Atlanta, Ga</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">3.00</span></p>
+ <p>Warren. Sab. Sch. of Cong. Ch., <i>for Student Aid, Tillotson C. &amp; N.
+ Inst</i> <span class="rightmargin">42.00</span></p>
+ <p>Watertown. Mrs. M. Pryor <span class="rightmargin">0.50</span></p>
+ <p>Wellesley. Cong. Ch. and Soc <span class="rightmargin">123.14</span></p>
+ <p>Wellesley. Wellesley College, to const. GEORGE W. CABLE L.M. <span
+ class="rightmargin">45.00</span></p>
+ <p>Wellesley. "Friends" in Wellesley Col., <i>for Marion, Ala</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">26.00</span></p>
+ <p>West Boylston. First Cong. Ch. and Soc. <span
+ class="rightmargin">9.00</span></p>
+ <p>Westhampton. ladies' Benev. Soc., <i>for Tougaloo U</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">10.00</span></p>
+ <p>Westminster. "Cheerful Givers," <i>for Student Aid, Fisk U</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">5.00</span></p>
+ <p>West Newton. Earnest Workers, <i>for Student Aid, Storrs Sch</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">5.00</span></p>
+ <p>West Springfield. Mrs. Lucy m. Bagg, <i>for Pleasant Hill, Tenn</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">50.00</span></p>
+ <p>Weymouth. Sab. Sch. of Cong. Ch., <i>for Pleasant Hill, Tenn</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">55.00</span></p>
+ <p>Whitman. Cong. Ch. and Soc. <span class="rightmargin">77.00</span></p>
+ <p>Winchendon. Sab. Sch. of Cong. Ch., <i>for Pleasant Hill, Tenn</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">20.00</span></p>
+ <p>Winchester. Cong. Ch. and Soc. <span class="rightmargin">19.59</span></p>
+ <p>Worchester. Old So. Ch., to const. GEO. R. BLISS and MRS. GEO. M. PIERSE L.M.'s
+ <span class="rightmargin">61.26</span></p>
+ <p>Yarmouth. Rev. John W. Dodge, <i>for Pleasant Hill, Tenn</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">25.00</span> &mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;
+ $2,925 07</p>
+ <h6>LEGACY.</h6>
+ <p>Whitinsville. Estate of Chas. P. Whitin, by Edward Whitin, Ex. <span
+ class="rightmargin">3000.00</span>
+ &mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash; $5,925 07</p>
+ <h6>CLOTHING, ETC., RECEIVED AT BOSTON OFFICE.</h6>
+ <p>Farmington Falls, Me. By Miss Susan G. Crosswell, Box, <i>for Williamsburg,
+ Ky</i></p>
+ <p>Litchfield, Me. Ladies' Aid Soc., Bbl., <i>for Williamsburg, Ky</i></p>
+ <p>Brookfield, Mass. Mrs. R.B. Montague. Bbl., <i>for Sherwood, Tenn</i></p>
+ <p>Cambridgeport, Mass. Miss Lacena Palmer, Basted Patchwork</p>
+ <p>Cambridgeport, Mass. By Mrs. R.L. Snow, Box and Bbl., <i>for Tougaloo U</i></p>
+ <p>Haverhill, Mass. West Cong. Sab. Sch., Bbl., <i>for Talladega C.</i></p>
+ <p>Hyde Park, Mass. W.H.M.U., of First Cong. Ch., Bbl., Val. 40 <i>for Tougaloo
+ U.</i></p>
+ <p>Roxbury, Mass. Mrs. Arthur W. Tuffts, Box, <i>for Sherwood, Tenn</i></p>
+ <p>Somerville, Mass. Mission Circle of Franklin St. Ch., Bbl., <i>for Santee Indian
+ M.</i></p>
+ </div>
+ <h5>RHODE ISLAND, $448.63.</h5>
+ <div class="receipts">
+ <p>East Providence. Samuel Belden, <i>for Atlanta U</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">100.00</span></p>
+ <p>Newport. United Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">34.68</span></p>
+ <p>Pawtucket. "Friends," Cong. Ch., <i>for Indian M.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">105.00</span></p>
+ <p>Providence. Sam. Sch. of Union Cong. Ch., 50 <i>for Indian M.</i> and 25 <i>for
+ Williamsburg Ky</i> <span class="rightmargin">75.00</span></p>
+ <p>Providence. Union Cong. Ch. and Soc. <span class="rightmargin">131.87</span></p>
+ <p>Riverside. Riverside Cong. Ch <span class="rightmargin">2.08</span></p>
+ </div>
+ <h5>CONNECTICUT, $2,001.63.</h5>
+ <div class="receipts">
+ <p>Berlin. "A Friend," 70; The Misses Churchill, 2, <i>for Student Aid, Tougaloo
+ U.</i> <span class="rightmargin">72.00</span></p>
+ <p>Branford. E. Davis <span class="rightmargin">1.00</span></p>
+ <p>Bridgeport. First Cong. Ch <span class="rightmargin">129.76</span></p>
+ <p>Bristol. Sab. Sch. Class, <i>for Indian Sch'p</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">14.00</span></p>
+ <p>Columbia. Ladies' Miss'y Soc., 3, and Bbl. of C., <i>for Louisville, Ky</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">3.00</span></p>
+ <p>Danbury. "A Friend," <i>for Lexington, Ky.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">50.00</span></p>
+ <p>East Canaan. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">5.00</span></p>
+ <p>East Hartford. Sab. Sch. of Cong. Ch., 29.77 and Box of Christmas Gifts, <i>for
+ Student Aid, Williamsburg, Ky</i> <span class="rightmargin">29.77</span></p>
+ <p>East Wallingford. Mrs. Benj. Hall <span class="rightmargin">3.50</span></p>
+ <p>Enfield. Sab Sch. of First Cong. Ch., <i>for Indian Sch'p Fund</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">25.00</span></p>
+ <p>Fairfield. Sab. Sch. of Cong. Ch., <i>for Tougaloo U</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">25.00</span></p>
+ <p>Gaylordsville. Miss Grace Hendricks, <i>for Tillotson C. &amp; N. Inst.</i>
+ <span class="rightmargin">10.00</span></p>
+ <p>Glastonbury. "Friends," <i>for Indian M.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">217.00</span></p>
+ <p>Hartford. Teachers and Scholars, Sab. Sch. of Asylum Hill Cong. Ch., 12.50
+ <i>for Santee Indian Sch.; 10 for Atlanta U.; 5 for Chinese Sch. Cal.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">27.50</span></p>
+ <p>Hartford. Sab. Sch. of Windsor Av. Cong. Ch., <i>for Student Aid, Fisk U</i>
+ <span class="rightmargin">20.00</span></p>
+ <p>Lakeville. Mrs. S.C. Robbins <span class="rightmargin">4.50</span></p>
+ <p>Ledyard. Cong. Ch. and Soc <span class="rightmargin">22.77</span></p>
+ <p>Mansfield Center. Ladies' Soc. of Cong. Ch., Half Bbl, of C., etc., <i>for
+ Storrs Sch., Atlanta, Ga</i></p>
+ <p>Middletown. Sab. Sch of First Cong. Ch., <i>for Indian M.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">25.00</span></p>
+ <p>Milton. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">5.00</span></p>
+ <p>Naugatuck. "Young Friends," <i>for Indian Sch'p</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">70.00</span></p>
+ <p>New Britian. Miss Mary L. Stanley, 9 <i>for Student Aid;</i> Miss Mary L.
+ Stanley and Miss Daniels, Box of C, <i>for Williamsburg, Ky</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">9.00</span></p>
+ <p>New haven. "A Friend" <span class="rightmargin">10.00</span></p>
+ <p>New Haven. Davenport Ch., <i>for Indian M</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">5.50</span></p>
+ <p>New Haven. First Ch., Miss Barnes'S.S. Class and Others.Box <i>for Jones'
+ Kindergarten, Storrs Sch</i></p>
+ <p>New London. "Member of Second Ch." <span class="rightmargin">1.00</span></p>
+ <p>Norfolk "A Friend" <span class="rightmargin">4.50</span></p>
+ <p>North Branford. Sab. Sch., <i>for Oaks, N.C.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">20.00</span></p>
+ <p>North Coventry. Sab. Sch. of Cong. Ch., <i>for Student Aid, Williamsburg, Ky</i>
+ <span class="rightmargin">24.00</span></p>
+ <p>Norwalk. Miss C.L. Marsh, <i>for Tillotson C.&amp;N. Inst</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">10.00</span></p>
+ <p>Norwich. Sab. Sch. of Second Cong. Ch., <i>for Santee Indian M.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">50.87</span></p>
+ <p>Norwich. Sab. Sch. of Second Cong. Ch <span class="rightmargin">2.08</span></p>
+ <p>Poquonock. Willing Workers of Cong. Ch.,<i>for Student Aid, Williamsburg,
+ Ky.</i> <span class="rightmargin">9.00</span></p>
+ <p>Salisbury. Sab. Sch. of Cong. Ch., <i>for Indian M</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">12.50</span></p>
+ <p>Sharon. John H. Cleaveland <span class="rightmargin">5.00</span></p>
+ <p>Simsbury. Miss'y Soc. <i>for Freight</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">3.00</span></p>
+ <p>South Coventry. Dea. and Mrs. Kingsbury, 10; Miss Louisa Lord, 5 <i>for
+ Williamsburg, Ky</i> <span class="rightmargin">15.00</span></p>
+ <p>South Glastonbury. Cong. Ch. and Sab. Sch. <span
+ class="rightmargin">10.58</span></p>
+ <p>Southington. First Cong. Ch., <i>for Thomasville, Ga</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">1.50</span></p>
+ <p>Southport. "A Friend" <span class="rightmargin">30.00</span></p>
+ <p>Southport. Sab. Sch. of Cong. Ch., <i>for Indian M</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">8.92</span></p>
+ <p>Thomaston. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">35.15</span></p>
+ <p>Thompsonville. Mrs. J.C. Simpson, 5; Miss Maggie Drigg, 5, <i>for Student Aid,
+ Straight U</i> <span class="rightmargin">10.00</span></p>
+ <p>Unionville. First Ch. of Christ <span class="rightmargin">37.92</span></p>
+ <p>Unionville. "A Friend," Communion Service, 8 pieces, <i>for Ch., Austin,
+ Tex</i></p>
+ <p>Warren. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">21.00</span></p>
+ <p>Waterbury. First Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">200.86</span></p>
+ <p>Waterbury. Ladies' Benev. Soc., First Cong. Ch., <i>for Conn. Ind'l Sch., Ga</i>
+ <span class="rightmargin">25.00</span></p>
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page113" id="page113"></a>{113}</span>
+ <p>Waterbury. "A Friend," <i>for Santee Indian M.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">50.00</span></p>
+ <p>Waterbury. Sunshine Circle, <i>for Indian M.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">5.00</span> West Hartford. "S.H.," <i>for Indian M.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">10.00</span></p>
+ <p>West Hartland. Cong. Ch., <i>for Conn. Ind'l Sch., Ga.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">6.00</span></p>
+ <p>Weston. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">10.00</span></p>
+ <p>Windham. Ladies' Soc. Cong. Ch., Box of C., etc., <i>for Thomasville.,
+ Ga.</i></p>
+ <p>Woodbridge. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">14.83</span></p>
+ <p>Woodbury. Ladies' Miss. Soc. of South Cong. Ch., <i>for Conn. Ind'l Sch.,
+ Ga.</i> <span class="rightmargin">25.00</span> Woman's Home Missionary Union of
+ Conn., by Mrs. S.M. Hotchkiss, <i>Sec.</i>:</p>
+ <p>Kent. Sab. Sch. of Cong, Ch., <i>for Mountain White Work</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">20.00</span></p>
+ <p>New Haven. Ladies' Miss'y Soc. of College St. Ch., <i>for Conn. Ind'l Sch.</i>
+ <span class="rightmargin">35.00</span></p>
+ <p>&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;- 55.00</p>
+ <p>&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;- $1,497.96</p>
+ <h6>LEGACIES.</h6>
+ <p>Durham. Estate of Dea. Gaylord Newton, by H.G. Newton, to const. HENRY G.
+ NEWTON, MISS LOIS CAMP and THOMAS R. NOBLE L.M's <span
+ class="rightmargin">100.00</span></p>
+ <p>New Haven. Estate of Mary Dutton, by Samuel D. Gilbert, Ex. <span
+ class="rightmargin">100.00</span></p>
+ <p>Woodbury. Estate of Sarah J. Deming, by Anson A. Root, Adm. <span
+ class="rightmargin">303.67</span></p>
+ <p>&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;- $2,001 63</p>
+ </div>
+ <h5>NEW YORK, $1,676.98.</h5>
+ <div class="receipts">
+ <p>Adams Basin. Mrs. H. Clark <span class="rightmargin">5.00</span></p>
+ <p>Aquebogue. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">11.00</span></p>
+ <p>Binghamton. Cong. Bible Sch., <i>for Student Aid, Fisk U.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">25.00</span></p>
+ <p>Brooklyn. Sab. Sch. of Tompkins Av. Cong. Ch., <i>for Atlanta U.</i>, to const.
+ REV. ROBERT R. MEREDITH, D.D., REV. GEO. F. PENTECOST, D.D., HENRY T. HOLT and MRS.
+ ELMA M. STEBBINS L.M's <span class="rightmargin">123.00</span></p>
+ <p>Brooklyn, Ladies' Circle, Lee Av. Cong. Ch., 22; South Bushwick Sab. Sch., 12;
+ Daughters of the King, Lee Av, Cong. Ch., 7; Penny Offering Park Av. Sab. Sch., 5;
+ Mrs. Anna Pollock, 3, <i>for Student Aid</i>. Mrs. Sarah Wilde, 10; Miss Sarah
+ Hulst, 5; Daughters or the King, Lee Av. Cong. Sab. Sch., Pkg. of C.; Flossie
+ Bringham, 1; Carrie Strong, 1, <i>for Student Aid</i>. Ladies' Circle, Lee Av.
+ Cong. Ch., 2 Boxes of C.; South Bushwick Reformed Sab. Sch., 2 Bbls. of C. and Box
+ of Books, <i>for Williamsburg, Ky.</i> <span class="rightmargin">66.00</span></p>
+ <p>Brooklyn. Sab. Sch. of Central Cong. Ch., <i>for Santee Indian M.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">37.50</span></p>
+ <p>Brooklyn. Park Cong. Ch., 16.43; A.G. Brinkckerhoff, 5 <span
+ class="rightmargin">21.43</span></p>
+ <p>Fairport. J.E. Howard <span class="rightmargin">50.00</span></p>
+ <p>Flushing. First Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">56.00</span></p>
+ <p>Gloversville. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">235.34</span></p>
+ <p>Honeoye. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">26.00</span></p>
+ <p>Kiantone. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">4.50</span></p>
+ <p>Lawrenceville. Lucius Hulburd <span class="rightmargin">5.00</span></p>
+ <p>Lima. Mrs. Orson Warner <span class="rightmargin">2.00</span></p>
+ <p>Lisbon. First Cong. Ch., 8.51; Mrs. Wm. Sheldon, 1 <span
+ class="rightmargin">9.51</span></p>
+ <p>Miller's Place. Mount Sinai Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">12.00</span></p>
+ <p>New York. Miss D.E. Emerson, <i>for Student Aid, Tougaloo U.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">25.00</span></p>
+ <p>New York. "A Friend," Christmas Gift, <i>for Williamsburg, Ky.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">5.00</span></p>
+ <p>Paris. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">24.00</span></p>
+ <p>Perry Centre. Cong. Soc., <i>for Freight</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">1.25</span></p>
+ <p>Riverhead. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">10.30</span></p>
+ <p>Rochester. Mrs. E.R. Andrews <span class="rightmargin">4.50</span></p>
+ <p>Union Valley. Wm. C. Angel <span class="rightmargin">5.00</span></p>
+ <p>Walton. First Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">69.82</span></p>
+ <p>Walton. Cong. Sab. Sch., Christmas Gifts, 33.93, and 2 Bbls. of C., etc.; H.E.
+ St. John, 9; Miss Jennie Hull, 2, <i>for Student Aid, Williamsburg, Ky.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">44.93</span></p>
+ <p>West Bloomfield. Cong. Ch. (20 of which <i>for Student Aid, Fisk U.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">41.00</span></p>
+ <p>Woodbridge. First Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">8.37</span></p>
+ <p>&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+ <p>$938.45</p>
+ <h6>LEGACY.</h6>
+ <p>Waverly. Estate of Mrs. Phebe Bepburne, Howard Elmer, Ex. <span
+ class="rightmargin">738.53</span></p>
+ <p>&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;-</p>
+ <p>$1,676.98</p>
+ </div>
+ <h5>NEW JERSEY, $36.91.</h5>
+ <div class="receipts">
+ <p>Colt's Neck. Reformed Ch. <span class="rightmargin">5.16</span></p>
+ <p>East Orange. "True Blue Card," Collected by Mary Brenner <span
+ class="rightmargin">1.00</span></p>
+ <p>Lakewood. Rev. Geo. and E.O. Langdon <span class="rightmargin">3.00</span></p>
+ <p>Newark. "X.Y." <span class="rightmargin">1.75</span></p>
+ <p>Newark. "A Sister in Christ," Box Papers, etc., <i>for Sherwood, Tenn.</i></p>
+ <p>Upper Montclair. Ladies' Aid Soc. of Cong. Ch., Bbl. Of C., <i>for Storrs Sch.,
+ Atlanta, Ga.</i></p>
+ <p>Westfield. "A Friend" <span class="rightmargin">1.00</span></p>
+ <p>&mdash;&mdash;. "Heart's Content " <span class="rightmargin">25.00</span></p>
+ </div>
+ <h5>PENNSYLVANIA, $7.00.</h5>
+ <div class="receipts">
+ <p>Braddock. Thomas Addenbrook, Box Books, etc., <i>for Sherwood, Tenn.</i></p>
+ <p>Guy's Mills. Mrs. F. Maria Guy <span class="rightmargin">2.00</span></p>
+ <p>Linesville. M.T. Donaldson <span class="rightmargin">5.00</span></p>
+ </div>
+ <h5>OHIO, $407.82.</h5>
+ <div class="receipts">
+ <p>Austinburg. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">11.00</span></p>
+ <p>Berea. First Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">6.50</span></p>
+ <p>Cleveland. Jennings Av. Cong. Ch., 75; Plymouth Cong. Ch., 72.16; John Jay Low,
+ 20 <span class="rightmargin">167.16</span></p>
+ <p>Cleveland. Mount Zion Sab. Sch., <i>for Student Aid, Fisk U.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">8.64</span></p>
+ <p>Cleveland. Sab. Sch. First Cong. Ch., Box of C., <i>for Tillotson C. &amp; N.
+ Inst.</i></p>
+ <p>Medina. W.H. Sipher <span class="rightmargin">2.00</span></p>
+ <p>Mount Vernon. Sab. Sch. of Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">19.37</span></p>
+ <p>North Ridgeville. Ladies' Benev. Soc., Box Canned Fruit; Cong. Sab. Sch., Bbl.
+ of Goods, <i>for Williamsburg, Ky.</i></p>
+ <p>Oberlin. Sab. Sch. of First Cong. Ch., 10; "A Friend," 12.50; Mrs. L.G.B. Hills,
+ 5 <span class="rightmargin">27.50</span></p>
+ <p>Oberlin. Sab. Sch. of Second Cong. Ch., <i>for Lexington, Ky.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">15.00</span></p>
+ <p>Oberlin. Mrs. Vance, <i>for Student Aid, Williamsburg, Ky.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">5.00</span></p>
+ <p>Oberlin. Ladies of Cong. Ch., Bbl. of C., <i>for Storrs Sch., Atlanta,
+ Ga.</i></p>
+ <p>Painesville. First Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">27.90</span></p>
+ <p>Painesville. Y.L.M. Soc., of First Cong. Ch., <i>for Fort Berthold Indian M.</i>
+ <span class="rightmargin">4.75</span></p>
+ <p>South Salem. Daniel S. Pricer <span class="rightmargin">5.00</span></p>
+ <p>Toledo. Miss A.M. Nicholas, <i>for Wilmington, N.C.</i>. <span
+ class="rightmargin">5.00</span></p>
+ <p>West Andover. "Friends," by L.L. Coleman <span
+ class="rightmargin">10.00</span></p>
+ <p>Willoughby. Lyndon Freeman <span class="rightmargin">1.50</span></p>
+ <p>Ohio Woman's Home Missionary Union, by Mrs. Phebe A. Crafts, Treas., <i>for
+ Woman's Work</i>:</p>
+ <p>Burton. Mrs. A.S. Hotchkiss <span class="rightmargin">3.00</span></p>
+ <p>Cleveland. L.H.M.S., of Euclid Av. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">20.00</span>
+ Cleveland. Euclid Av. Ch., L.M. Soc. <span class="rightmargin">20.00</span></p>
+ <p>Columbus. Eastwood Ch., Y.L.M. Soc. <span class="rightmargin">10.00</span></p>
+ <p>Columbus. Eastwood Ch., "Family Mite Box." <span
+ class="rightmargin">12.00</span></p>
+ <p>Willoughby. Mrs. Mary P. Hastings <span class="rightmargin">26.00</span></p>
+ <p>&mdash;&mdash;- 91.00</p>
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page114" id="page114"></a>{114}</span>
+ </div>
+ <h5>INDIANA, $25.00.</h5>
+ <div class="receipts">
+ <p>Bloomington, Mrs. A.B. Woodford, <i>for Student Aid, Fisk U.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">5.00</span></p>
+ <p>New Corydon. Geo. Storz <span class="rightmargin">20.00</span></p>
+ </div>
+ <h5>ILLINOIS, $468.20.</h5>
+ <div class="receipts">
+ <p>Albion. James Green <span class="rightmargin">10.00</span></p>
+ <p>Bunker Hill. D.E. Pettengill <span class="rightmargin">1.00</span></p>
+ <p>Canton. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">42.20</span></p>
+ <p>Chicago. Sedgwick St. Sab. Sch. <span class="rightmargin">25.00</span></p>
+ <p>Chicago. Major E.D. Redington, <i>for Lexington, Ky.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">17.00</span></p>
+ <p>Earlville. Mrs. Rindell, 1; Mabel Rindell, 20 cts.; Bertie Rindell, 15 cts.
+ <span class="rightmargin">1.35</span></p>
+ <p>Galesburg. Sab. Sch. of Cong. Ch., <i>for Fisk U.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">10.00</span></p>
+ <p>Geneseo. First Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">145.18</span></p>
+ <p>Greenville. Ladies' Miss'y Circle, Box of C., Val. 25</p>
+ <p>Joliet. "A Thank Offering" <span class="rightmargin">5.00</span></p>
+ <p>La Grange. W.M.S., <i>for Chinese M.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">5.00</span></p>
+ <p>Lake View. Church of the Redeemer <span class="rightmargin">22.55</span></p>
+ <p>Lyonsville. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">5.60</span></p>
+ <p>Naperville. Prof. Geo. W. Sindlinger, <i>for Pleasant Hill, Tenn.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">10.00</span></p>
+ <p>Odell. Mrs. H.E. Dana <span class="rightmargin">10.00</span></p>
+ <p>Ottawa. First Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">32.66</span></p>
+ <p>Princeton. Mrs. R.D. Harrison, <i>for Student Aid, Fisk U.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">1.00</span></p>
+ <p>Prospect Park. Cong. Ch., in part <span class="rightmargin">7.00</span></p>
+ <p>Shabbona. Woman's Miss'y Soc., 2 Boxes Papers, etc., <i>for Sherwood,
+ Tenn.</i></p>
+ <p>Turner. Mrs. R. Currier <span class="rightmargin">1.00</span></p>
+ <p>Wheaton. College Ch. of Christ, in part <span
+ class="rightmargin">28.81</span></p>
+ <p>Winnebago. Ladies' Miss'y Soc., <i>for Woman's Work</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">9.00</span></p>
+ <p>Woman's Home Missionary Union of Ill., Mrs. B.L. Leavitt, Treas., <i>for Woman's
+ Work</i>:</p>
+ <p>Chicago. L.M. Soc. of New Eng. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">30.00</span></p>
+ <p>Oak Park. Ladies' Benev. Circle <span class="rightmargin">23.00</span></p>
+ <p>Rockford. Peter Holman Fund, First Ch. <span
+ class="rightmargin">20.65</span></p>
+ <p>Sheffield. Aux. <span class="rightmargin">5.20</span></p>
+ <p>&mdash;&mdash;&mdash; 78.85</p>
+ </div>
+ <h5>MICHIGAN, $90.01</h5>
+ <div class="receipts">
+ <p>Allendale. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">2.75</span></p>
+ <p>Ann Arbor. Ladies' Miss'y Soc. of Cong. Ch., Bbl. of C., <i>for Athens,
+ Ala.</i></p>
+ <p>Banks. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">8.70</span></p>
+ <p>Cheboygan. First Cong. Ch., add'l <span class="rightmargin">0.97</span></p>
+ <p>Grand Rapids. First Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">25.50</span></p>
+ <p>Hopkins. First Ch. <span class="rightmargin">6.50</span></p>
+ <p>Laingsburg. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">4.50</span></p>
+ <p>Lansing. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">7.00</span></p>
+ <p>Northville. D. Pomeroy <span class="rightmargin">5.00</span></p>
+ <p>Salem. Miss'y Soc. of Second Cong. Ch., <i>for Athens, Ala.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">5.59</span></p>
+ <p>South Haven. First Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">14.50</span></p>
+ <p>&mdash;&mdash;. "Muskegon" <span class="rightmargin">2.00</span></p>
+ <p>Woman's Home Missionary Union of Mich., by Mrs. E.F. Grabill, Treas., <i>for
+ Woman's Work</i>:</p>
+ <p>Bay City. W.H.M.S. <span class="rightmargin">2.00</span></p>
+ <p>Cheboygan. W.H.M.S. <span class="rightmargin">5.00</span></p>
+ <p>&mdash;&mdash;&mdash; 7.00</p>
+ </div>
+ <h5>WISCONSIN, $222.03.</h5>
+ <div class="receipts">
+ <p>Baraboo. Miss'y Soc., Bbl. of C., <i>for Storrs Sch., Atlanta, Ga.</i></p>
+ <p>Boscobel. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">2.25</span></p>
+ <p>Bristol and Paris. Christian Endeavor Soc., 2.55; Ladies' Soc. of Cong. Ch.,
+ Bbl. of C., <i>for Thomasville, Ga.</i> <span class="rightmargin">2.55</span></p>
+ <p>Brodhead. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">4.27</span></p>
+ <p>Darlington. Cong. Ch. ..7.33</p>
+ <p>Fond du Lac. First Cong. Ch., 2 Bbls. C., <i>for Storrs Sch., Atlanta,
+ Ga.</i></p>
+ <p>Green Bay. Ladies' Miss'y Soc., Bbl. of C., <i>for Austin, Tex.</i></p>
+ <p>Janesville. "Friends," Box of C., <i>for Marion, Ala.</i></p>
+ <p>La Crosse. "A Friend," 25; Cong. Ch., 10 <span
+ class="rightmargin">35.00</span></p>
+ <p>Lake Geneva. Mrs. Geo. Allen <span class="rightmargin">5.00</span></p>
+ <p>Leeds. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">5.00</span></p>
+ <p>Mazo Manie. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">7.07</span></p>
+ <p>Milwaukee. Plymouth Ch. <span class="rightmargin">40.58</span></p>
+ <p>Peshtigo. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">3.22</span></p>
+ <p>Sparta. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">40.41</span></p>
+ <p>Stoughton. Miss Sewell's S.S. Class, Christmas Gifts, <i>for Austin,
+ Texas</i></p>
+ <p>Waukesha. "Friends," <i>for Student Aid, Marion Ala.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">15.00</span></p>
+ <p>Wauwatosa. Ladies' Miss'y Soc., Box of C., <i>for Austin, Texas</i></p>
+ <p>Windsor. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">18.75</span></p>
+ <p>Woman's Home Missionary Union of Wis., <i>for Woman's Work</i>:</p>
+ <p>Green Bay. W.M.S. <span class="rightmargin">9.00</span></p>
+ <p>Milwaukee. W.H.M.U., Grand Av. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">25.00</span></p>
+ <p>Stoughton. Sab. Sch. Birthday Box <span class="rightmargin">1.60</span></p>
+ <p>&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;- 35.60</p>
+ </div>
+ <h5>IOWA, $204.31</h5>
+ <div class="receipts">
+ <p>Burlington. Mercy Lewis, <i>for Chinese M.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">0.50</span></p>
+ <p>Cedar Rapids. Sab. Sch. of First Cong. Ch., Birthday Offerings <span
+ class="rightmargin">1.97</span></p>
+ <p>Cherokee. Sab. Sch. of Cong. Ch., <i>for Student Aid, Straight U.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">10.00</span></p>
+ <p>Chester Center. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">9.85</span></p>
+ <p>Danville. L. Mix <span class="rightmargin">5.00</span></p>
+ <p>Denmark. Sab. Sch. of Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">14.50</span> Farragut.
+ Mrs. L.S. Chapin, <i>for Woman's Work</i> <span class="rightmargin">2.00</span></p>
+ <p>Garnaville. Rev. G.M. Porter <span class="rightmargin">3.00</span></p>
+ <p>Hull. Mrs. E.C. Davidson, <i>for Student Aid, Williamsburg, Ky.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">6.00</span></p>
+ <p>Iowa City. Sab. Sch., <i>for Pleasant Hill, Tenn.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">15.00</span></p>
+ <p>Iowa City. Mrs. R.A. McClain <span class="rightmargin">5.00</span></p>
+ <p>McGregor. J.H. Ellsworth <span class="rightmargin">10.00</span></p>
+ <p>McGregor. S.S. Class, by Mrs. S.J. Peterson, <i>for Student Aid, Straight U.</i>
+ <span class="rightmargin">5.00</span></p>
+ <p>MeGregor. Mrs. C.E. Daniels, <i>for Freight</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">2.30</span></p>
+ <p>New Hampton. First Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">12.30</span></p>
+ <p>Newton. Wittenberg Sab. Sch. <span class="rightmargin">14.78</span></p>
+ <p>Sioux City. First Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">44.00</span></p>
+ <p>Stuart. Bbl. of C., <i>for Savannah, Ga.</i></p>
+ <p>Tabor. Cong. Ch., <i>for Tillotson C. &amp; N. Inst.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">10.00</span></p>
+ <p>Tipton. Mrs. M.D. Clapp <span class="rightmargin">3.50</span></p>
+ <p>Tyrone. Wm. Griffiths <span class="rightmargin">0.25</span></p>
+ <p>Woman's Home Missionary Union of Iowa, <i>for Woman's Work</i>:</p>
+ <p>Grinnell. W.H.M.U. <span class="rightmargin">3.68</span></p>
+ <p>Le Mars. " " <span class="rightmargin">5.73</span></p>
+ <p>McGregor. L.M.S. <span class="rightmargin">6.95</span></p>
+ <p>Osage. W.M.S. <span class="rightmargin">3.00</span></p>
+ <p>Tipton. L.M.S. <span class="rightmargin">10.00</span></p>
+ <p>&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;- 29.36</p>
+ </div>
+ <h5>MINNESOTA, $220.25.</h5>
+ <div class="receipts">
+ <p>Brainerd. First Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">12.00</span></p>
+ <p>Hancock. Sab. Sch. Miss'y Soc., <i>for Savannah, Ga.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">5.00</span></p>
+ <p>Leech Lake. C.P. Allen, M.D. <span class="rightmargin">30.00</span></p>
+ <p>Plainview. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">14.11</span></p>
+ <p>Plainview. Box of S.S. Supplies, <i>for Corbin, Ky.</i></p>
+ <p>Rochester. W.J. Eaton, 50; Cong. Ch., 40.87 <span
+ class="rightmargin">90.87</span></p>
+ <p>Sauk Center. Sab. Sch. of Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">8.00</span></p>
+ <p>Sauk Center. "Little Lights," Box Papers, etc., <i>for Jonesboro, Tenn.</i></p>
+ <p>Stillwater. Grace Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">2.92</span></p>
+ <p>Wabasha. Cong. Sab. Sch. and Y.P.S.C.E. <span
+ class="rightmargin">27.25</span></p>
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page115" id="page115"></a>{115}</span>
+ <p>Worthington. Union Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">21.55</span></p>
+ <p>Zumbrota. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">8.55</span></p>
+ </div>
+ <h5>MISSOURI, $236.60.</h5>
+ <div class="receipts">
+ <p>Bevier. Luella J. Hudelson <span class="rightmargin">2.00</span></p>
+ <p>Kansas City. Olivet Cong. Ch., in part <span class="rightmargin">9.05</span></p>
+ <p>St. Louis. Pilgrim Cong. Ch., 200; Third Cong. Ch., 10.55 <span
+ class="rightmargin">210.55</span></p>
+ <p>St. Louis. Mrs. R.H. Webb, <i>for Straight U.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">10.00</span></p>
+ <p>Webster Groves. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">5.00</span></p>
+ </div>
+ <h5>KANSAS, $85.65.</h5>
+ <div class="receipts">
+ <p>Atchison. Cong. Ch., <i>for Tillotson C. &amp; N. Inst.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">5.00</span></p>
+ <p>Dover. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">2.80</span></p>
+ <p>Lawrence. Second Cong. Ch., "Thank Offering" <span
+ class="rightmargin">1.00</span></p>
+ <p>Topeka. Woman's H.M. Soc., <i>for Storrs Sch., Atlanta, Ga.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">75.00</span></p>
+ <p>Topeka. Ladies' Miss'y Soc. 2 Bbls. of C. <i>for Storrs Sch., Atlanta,
+ Ga.</i></p>
+ <p>Wakarusa. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">1.85</span></p>
+ </div>
+ <h5>DAKOTA, $5.00.</h5>
+ <div class="receipts">
+ <p>Sioux Falls. W.M.S., by Mrs. Sue Fifield, Terr. Treas. <span
+ class="rightmargin">5.00</span></p>
+ </div>
+ <h5>NEBRASKA, $47.00.</h5>
+ <div class="receipts">
+ <p>Cowles. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">2.00</span></p>
+ <p>Omaha. First Cong. Ch. (in part) <span class="rightmargin">10.00</span></p>
+ <p>Oxford. F.A. Wood <span class="rightmargin">5.00</span></p>
+ <p>Wahoo. Cong. Ch., to const. Rev. A.A. CRESSMAN L.M. <span
+ class="rightmargin">30.00</span></p>
+ </div>
+ <h5>CALIFORNIA, $62.50.</h5>
+ <div class="receipts">
+ <p>Riverside. C.W. Herron's S.S. Class, <i>for Student Aid, Tougaloo U.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">8.00</span></p>
+ <p>San Luis Obispo. Rev. E.N. Bartlett <span class="rightmargin">4.50</span></p>
+ <p>Santa Barbara. Rev. Edward Hildreth, to const. PHILO C. HILDRETH L.M. <span
+ class="rightmargin">50.00</span></p>
+ </div>
+ <h5>DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA, $70.00.</h5>
+ <div class="receipts">
+ <p>Washington. "Two Members First Cong. Ch.," <i>for Indian M.</i>, and to const.
+ MRS. SARAH B.A. ROBINSON and MISS SARAH M. ROBINSON L.M.'s <span
+ class="rightmargin">60.00</span></p>
+ <p>Washington. Lincoln Memorial Ch. <span class="rightmargin">10.00</span></p>
+ </div>
+ <h5>MARYLAND, $393.16.</h5>
+ <div class="receipts">
+ <p>Baltimore. First Cong. Ch. (105 of which <i>for Indian M.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">393.16</span></p>
+ </div>
+ <h5>KENTUCKY, $450.86.</h5>
+ <div class="receipts">
+ <p>Lexington. Tuition <span class="rightmargin">314.21</span></p>
+ <p>Williamsburg. Tuition <span class="rightmargin">136.65</span></p>
+ </div>
+ <h5>TENNESSEE, $1,126.03.</h5>
+ <div class="receipts">
+ <p>Grand View. Tuition <span class="rightmargin">45.00</span></p>
+ <p>Jonesboro. Tuition, 22.25; County Fund, 40 <span
+ class="rightmargin">62.25</span></p>
+ <p>Memphis. Tuition <span class="rightmargin">467.20</span></p>
+ <p>Nashville. Tuition, 509.08; Rent, 6.50 <span
+ class="rightmargin">515.58</span></p>
+ <p>Pleasant Hill. Miss J.A. Calkins, 31; Mrs. Shroyer, 1; "A Friend," 1; "A
+ Friend," by Mrs. Shroyer, 1, <i>for Pleasant Hill, Tenn.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">34.00</span></p>
+ <p>Sherwood. Mrs. O.N. Alden <span class="rightmargin">2.00</span></p>
+ </div>
+ <h5>NORTH CAROLINA, $177.35.</h5>
+ <div class="receipts">
+ <p>Raleigh. First Cong. Ch., Christmas Offering <span
+ class="rightmargin">4.85</span></p>
+ <p>Troy. By S.D. Leak <span class="rightmargin">1.00</span></p>
+ <p>Wilmington. Tuition <span class="rightmargin">163.00</span></p>
+ <p>Wilmington. By Miss H.L. Fitts <span class="rightmargin">8.50</span></p>
+ </div>
+ <h5>SOUTH CAROLINA, $228.62.</h5>
+ <div class="receipts">
+ <p>Charleston. Tuition <span class="rightmargin">228.62</span></p>
+ </div>
+ <h5>GEORGIA, $882.94.</h5>
+ <div class="receipts">
+ <p>Atlanta. Storrs Sch., Tuition <span class="rightmargin">295.85</span></p>
+ <p>Atlanta. First Cong. Ch., Birthday Offerings <span
+ class="rightmargin">1.04</span></p>
+ <p>Macon. Tuition <span class="rightmargin">246.35</span></p>
+ <p>Marietta. Ch. and Sab. Sch. <span class="rightmargin">1.00</span></p>
+ <p>McIntosh. Tuition <span class="rightmargin">58.75</span></p>
+ <p>Savannah. Tuition <span class="rightmargin">207.70</span></p>
+ <p>Thomasville. Tuition <span class="rightmargin">72.25</span></p>
+ </div>
+ <h5>ALABAMA, $706.35.</h5>
+ <div class="receipts">
+ <p>Athens. Tuition <span class="rightmargin">57.75</span></p>
+ <p>Birmingham. Christmas Gift, Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">5.60</span></p>
+ <p>Ironaton. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">1.50</span></p>
+ <p>Jenifer. Cong. Ch. <span class="rightmargin">3.60</span></p>
+ <p>Marion. Tuition, 130.50; "Southern Friend " (C.W.L.). <i>for Marion, Ala.</i>,
+ 5; Cong. Ch., 3 <span class="rightmargin">138.50</span></p>
+ <p>Mobile. Tuition <span class="rightmargin">288.90</span></p>
+ <p>Selma. "Two Southern Friends," <i>for Marion, Ala.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">30.00</span></p>
+ <p>Selma. W.M. Ass'n, Cong. Ch., <i>for Indian M.</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">5.00</span></p>
+ <p>Talladega. Tuition <span class="rightmargin">176.10</span></p>
+ </div>
+ <h5>FLORIDA, $80.00.</h5>
+ <div class="receipts">
+ <p>Orlando. M. Marty <span class="rightmargin">10.00</span></p>
+ <p>Saint Augustine. Pub. Sch. Fund <span class="rightmargin">70.00</span></p>
+ </div>
+ <h5>LOUISIANA, $419.75</h5>
+ <div class="receipts">
+ <p>New Orleans. Tuition <span class="rightmargin">389.75</span></p>
+ <p>New Orleans. M.L. Berger, D.D., to const himself L.M. <span
+ class="rightmargin">30.00</span></p>
+ </div>
+ <h5>MISSISSIPPI, $209.65.</h5>
+ <div class="receipts">
+ <p>Port Gibson. Mrs. M.S. Bradford, <i>for Freight</i> <span
+ class="rightmargin">1.85</span></p>
+ <p>Tougaloo. Tuition <span class="rightmargin">206.30</span></p>
+ <p>Tougaloo. Rent <span class="rightmargin">2.00</span></p>
+ </div>
+ <h5>TEXAS, $127.84.</h5>
+ <div class="receipts">
+ <p>Austin. Tuition, 123.84; "Friends." 4; Mr. Blatchford, Ag't, 1 Webster's
+ Unabridged Dictionary, 1 Webster's Academic Dictionary, <i>for Tillotson C. &amp;
+ N. Inst.</i> <span class="rightmargin">127.84</span></p>
+ </div>
+ <h5>INCOMES, $29.05.</h5>
+ <div class="receipts">
+ <p>Avery Fund, <i>for Mendi M.</i> <span class="rightmargin">29.05</span></p>
+ </div>
+ <h5>CANADA, $10.00.</h5>
+ <div class="receipts">
+ <p>Montreal. Chas. Alexander <span class="rightmargin">5.00</span></p>
+ <p>Toronto. Mrs. Jane Ebbs <span class="rightmargin">5.00</span></p>
+ </div>
+ <h5>TURKEY, $10.00.</h5>
+ <div class="receipts">
+ <p>Van. Rev. Geo. C. Raynolds <span class="rightmargin">10.00</span></p>
+ <p>==========</p>
+ <p>Donations <span class="rightmargin">10,146.59</span></p>
+ <p>Legacies <span class="rightmargin">4,242.20</span></p>
+ <p>Incomes <span class="rightmargin">29.05</span></p>
+ <p>Tuition <span class="rightmargin">4,250.05</span></p>
+ <p>Rents <span class="rightmargin">8.50</span></p>
+ <p>&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+ <p>Total for February <span class="rightmargin">18,676.39</span></p>
+ <p>Total from Oct. 1 to Feb'y 29 <span class="rightmargin">110,091.90</span></p>
+ <p>==========</p>
+ <hr />
+ </div>
+ <h5>FOR THE AMERICAN MISSIONARY.</h5>
+ <div class="receipts">
+ <p>Subscriptions for February <span class="rightmargin">104.41</span></p>
+ <p>Previously acknowledged <span class="rightmargin">458.09</span></p>
+ <p>&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+ <p>Total <span class="rightmargin">562.50</span></p>
+ <p>======</p>
+ </div>
+ <p>H.W. HUBBARD, Treasurer,</p>
+ <p>56 Reade St., N.Y.</p>
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page116" id="page116"></a>{116}</span>
+ <hr class="receipts_hr" />
+ <p>JAMES McCREERY &amp; CO.</p>
+ <p>invite special attention to the</p>
+ <p>FURLEY &amp; BUTTRUM</p>
+ <p>Celebrated English Fine Merino Underwear, in all weights and grades for men, women
+ and children, for the spring and summer season.</p>
+ <p>ORDERS BY MAIL will receive prompt attention.</p>
+ <p>BROADWAY and ELEVENTH ST.,</p>
+ <p>NEW YORK.</p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>Liquid Cottage Colors.</p>
+ <p>The best MIXED PAINTS manufactured. Guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction if
+ properly applied. They are <i>heavy bodied</i>, and for work that does not require an
+ extra heavy coat, they can be thinned (with our Old Fashioned Kettle-boiled Linseed
+ Oil) and still cover better than most of the mixed paints sold in the market, many of
+ which have so little stock in them that they will not give a good solid coat.</p>
+ <p>Some manufacturers of mixed paints direct NOT to rub out the paint, but to FLOW it
+ on; the reason being that if such stuff were rubbed out there would be but little
+ left to cover, would be transparent. Our Cottage Colors have great strength or body,
+ and, like any good paint, should be worked out well under the brush. The covering
+ property of this paint is so excellent as to allow this to be done.</p>
+ <p>Put up for shipment as follows: In 3-gal. and 5-gal. bailed buckets, also barrels;
+ in cans of 1/8, 1/4, 1/2, 1-gal. and 2-gal. each.</p>
+ <p>Sample Cards of Colors, Testimonials and prices sent on application to</p>
+ <p>Chicago White Lead &amp; Oil Co.,</p>
+ <p>Cor. Green &amp; Fulton Streets,</p>
+ <p>CHICAGO, ILL.</p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>6%, 7%.</p>
+ <p>THE AMERICAN INVESTMENT CO. OF EMMETTSBURG, IOWA,</p>
+ <p>with a PAID-UP CAPITAL of $600,000, SURPLUS $75,000, offers First Mortgage Loans
+ drawing SEVEN per cent., both Principal and Interest FULLY GUARANTEED. Also 6 per
+ cent. ten-year Debenture Bonds, secured by 105 per cent. of First Mortgage Loans held
+ in trust by the MERCANTILE TRUST COMPANY, New York. 5 per cent. certificates of
+ deposit for periods under one year.</p>
+ <p>7 2/3% CAN BE REALIZED BY CHANGING 4 Per Ct. Government Bonds Into 6 Per Cent.
+ Debentures.</p>
+ <p>Write for full information and reference to the Company at</p>
+ <p>150 NASSAU STREET, NEW YORK.</p>
+ <p>A.L. ORMSBY, Vice-President and Gen. Manager</p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>MUSIC IN THE SPRING</p>
+ <p>There are yet some weeks of cool weather in which to prepare and practice music
+ for the concluding concerts and festivals of the season.</p>
+ <p>It is quite time to send for our complete and rich lists of <b>EASTER
+ MUSIC</b></p>
+ <p>Now let girls and boys begin to practice the sweet <b>CANTATAS&mdash;VOICES OF
+ NATURE</b>, or <b>FOREST JUBILEE BAND</b>, or <b>MERRY COMPANY</b>, or <b>NEW FLORA'S
+ FESTIVAL</b>; each 40 cents, or $3.60 per dozen.</p>
+ <p>Pupils of the higher schools will like <b>DRESS REHEARSAL</b> (50c., or $4.50 per
+ doz.), <b>NEW FLOWER QUEEN</b> (60c., or $5.40 per doz.), or <b>HAYMAKERS</b> ($1.00,
+ or $9.00 per doz.)</p>
+ <p>Fine Cantatas of moderate difficulty for adults are: <b>HEROES OF '76</b> ($1.00),
+ <b>HERBERT AND ELSA</b> (75c.), <b>JOSEPH'S BONDAGE</b> ($1.00), <b>REBECCA</b>
+ (65c.), <b>RUTH AND BOAZ</b> (65c.), <b>WRECK OF HESPERUS</b> (35c), <b>FAIR
+ MELUSINA</b> (75c.), <b>BATTLE OF HUNS</b> (80c.), Send for lists.</p>
+ <p><b>For Male Quartets and Choruses:</b></p>
+ <p><b>SANGERFEST</b> ($1.38), <b>MALE VOICE GLEE BOOK</b> ($1.00), <b>EMERSON'S
+ QUARTETS AND CHORUSES</b> (60 cts.), <b>EMERSON'S MALE VOICE GEMS</b> ($1.00).</p>
+ <p><i>Mailed for the Retail Price</i>.</p>
+ <p><i>Oliver Ditson &amp; Co., Boston</i>.</p>
+ <p>C.H. DITSON &amp; CO., 867 Broadway, New York.</p>
+ <hr class="full" />
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote1" name="footnote1"></a><b>Footnote 1:</b><a
+ href="#footnotetag1">(return)</a>
+ <p>Deceased.</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The American Missionary, Vol. XLII.
+April, 1888. No. 4., by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK AMERICAN MISSIONARY ***
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+***** This file should be named 12087-h.htm or 12087-h.zip *****
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+
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The American Missionary, Vol. XLII. April,
+1888. No. 4., by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The American Missionary, Vol. XLII. April, 1888. No. 4.
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: April 20, 2004 [EBook #12087]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK AMERICAN MISSIONARY ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Joshua Hutchinson and PG Distributed Proofreaders.
+Produced from page scans provided by Cornell University.
+
+
+
+
+
+{85}
+
+The American Missionary
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Vol. XLII. April, 1888. No. 4.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+CONTENTS
+
+ EDITORIAL.
+ FINANCIAL--PARAGRAPH
+ MOUNTAIN WORK--ATLANTA UNIVERSITY
+ INDIAN ORDER--FROM GEO. W. CABLE
+ DEATH OF HON. A.S. BARNES
+ PARAGRAPHS
+ SPECIMENS OF SCHOOL ENDEAVOR
+ A SERIOUS ALARM IN GEORGIA
+ EDUCATIONAL WORK IN THE SOUTH
+ THE SOUTH.
+ LETTER FROM AN EVANGELIST
+ THE CHINESE.
+ RESULTS THAT ELUDE THE STATISTICIAN
+ BUREAU OF WOMAN'S WORK.
+ THE BLACK WOMAN OF THE SOUTH
+ YOUNG FOLKS.
+ WHAT SUSIE FOUND AT TOUGALOO
+ LETTER FROM AN INDIAN PUPIL
+ RECEIPTS
+
+ * * * * *
+
+New York.
+Price, 50 Cents a Year, in Advance. Published by the American
+Missionary Association.
+Entered at the Post-Office at New York, N.Y., as second-class matter.
+Rooms, 56 Reade Street.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+{86}
+
+American Missionary Association.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+PRESIDENT,
+
+------ ------
+
+Vice-Presidents.
+
+Rev. A.J.F. BEHRENDS, D.D., N.Y.
+
+Rev. ALEX. MCKENZIE, D.D., Mass.
+
+Rev. F.A. NOBLE, D.D., Ill.
+
+Rev. D.O. MEARS, D.D., Mass.
+
+Rev. HENRY HOPKINS, D.D., Mo.
+
+Corresponding Secretaries.
+
+Rev. M.E. STRIEBY, D.D., 56 Reade Street, N.Y.
+
+Rev. A.F. BEARD, D.D., 56 Reade Street, N.Y.
+
+Treasurer.
+
+H.W. HUBBARD, Esq., 56 Reade Street, N.Y.
+
+Auditors.
+
+PETER MCCARTEE.
+
+CHAS. P. PEIRCE.
+
+Executive Committee.
+
+JOHN H. WASHBURN, Chairman.
+
+ADDISON P. FOSTER, Secretary.
+
+For Three Years.
+
+LYMAN ABBOTT,
+
+A.S. BARNES,[1]
+
+J.R. DANFORTH,
+
+CLINTON B. FISK,
+
+ADDISON P. FOSTER,
+
+For Two Years.
+
+S.B. HALLIDAY,
+
+SAMUEL HOLMES,
+
+SAMUEL S. MARPLES,
+
+CHARLES L. MEAD,
+
+ELBERT B. MONROE,
+
+For One Year.
+
+J.E. RANKIN,
+
+WM. H. WARD,
+
+J.W. COOPER,
+
+JOHN H. WASHBURN,
+
+EDMUND L. CHAMPLIN.
+
+District Secretaries.
+
+Rev. C.J. RYDER, 21 Cong'l House, Boston.
+
+Rev. J.E. ROY, D.D., 151 Washington Street, Chicago.
+
+Financial Secretary for Indian Missions.
+
+Rev. CHAS. W. SHELTON,
+
+Bureau of Woman's Work.
+
+Secretary, Miss D.E. EMERSON, 56 Reade Street, N.Y.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ COMMUNICATIONS
+
+Relating to the work of the Association may be addressed to the
+Corresponding Secretaries; letters for "THE AMERICAN MISSIONARY," to
+the Editor, at the New York Office.
+
+ DONATIONS AND SUBSCRIPTIONS
+
+In drafts, checks, registered letters, or post office orders, may be
+sent to H.W. Hubbard, Treasurer, 56 Reade Street, New York, or, when
+more convenient, to either of the Branch Offices, 21 Congregational
+House, Boston, Mass., or 151 Washington Street, Chicago, Ill. A
+payment of thirty dollars at one time constitutes a Life Member.
+
+ FORM OF A BEQUEST.
+
+"I bequeath to my executor (or executors) the sum of ---- dollars, in
+trust, to pay the same in ---- days after my decease to the person
+who, when the same is payable, shall act as Treasurer of the 'American
+Missionary Association,' of New York City, to be applied, under the
+direction of the Executive Committee of the Association, to its
+charitable uses and purposes." The Will should be attested by three
+witnesses.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+{87}
+
+THE AMERICAN MISSIONARY.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Vol. XLII. April, 1888. No. 4.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ American Missionary Association.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+We acknowledge with gratitude to God and to his people the fact that
+our receipts during the month of February are such as greatly to
+encourage us.
+
+We are cheered, not only by the benevolences which are reporting
+themselves from the churches, but also by the kind words of sympathy
+and helpfulness which show us anew that this great and exigent work
+upon us was never nearer than now to the hearts of our pastors and
+churches.
+
+We may add that the month just past and those immediately before us
+are those upon which we must largely depend for our fiscal year. We
+are coming to the summer season, when contributions are less likely to
+be taken. We trust that those who believe that God has called the
+American Missionary Association to this immense work in the name of
+Christ, will not cease to pray that the hearts of men may be moved to
+heed the appeals of those who, through us, ask for the very bread of
+life, and who will not have it unless we carry it to them.
+
+We are now compelled to deny more appeals for help which ought to be
+heard than we are granting. Several schools which were begun by
+private enterprise with good intent, are now asking us to take them
+from their hands upon our own, where they can be perpetuated and
+saved. We would like to save these schools to the needy people whose
+hope is in them, and to protect the churches from indiscriminate
+appeals for works which they have not authorized, and which we could
+do with greater economy and better care; but for this we need a
+generous increase of gifts. Our faith was in Him who said, "Knock, and
+it shall be opened unto you," and the doors were opened. God withdrew
+the bolts of hindrance and said, "Beloved, I have set before you an
+open door." Our faith is in Him who also said "Ask, and ye shall
+receive."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A friend has just sent us eighteen subscriptions to the _American
+Missionary_. This might be repeated easily by a thousand friends. There
+is {88} scarcely a self-sustaining church in the United States where
+it could not be done by one who would try to do it as an act of
+missionary love. Some who read this, perhaps, will try and will
+succeed.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The name of Rev. Frank Cross, who was appointed to the charge of the
+Rosebud Indian Mission, was by mistake not printed in the roll of
+workers. He is there, however, and his work has gone on bravely and
+hopefully.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+We wish that the extent, and necessity, and hopefulness of our
+mountain work, were more fully understood by our readers. Now is our
+opportunity and the accepted time to answer the most urgent appeals
+from this neglected region in the heart of our country. Our
+Congregational churches are just what are needed to uplift these
+people. One of our earnest missionaries writes us:--
+
+ "The A.M.A. has done a work here to be profoundly grateful for as a
+ beginning, but thus far it is only playing around the edge of its
+ mountain work. This mountain region is of great extent. Sober
+ calculation from facts already gleaned, makes a thousand
+ Congregational churches in these mountains the possibility of the
+ future, if only the strategic points can now be occupied. One
+ church and one school to a county, should be our immediate aim;
+ then we can throw upon these the work of developing native teachers
+ and preachers for the rest. There are forty counties waiting for
+ us, and all our mountain work so far is in three or four. I see
+ this place where I am, changing like magic under the influence of
+ school and church, but the necessity for our going forward
+ oppresses me. I am ready for any additional labor, and will carry
+ any burden my strength will permit, if only the American Missionary
+ Association will take for its motto, 'One church and one school in
+ every mountain county, as fast as they can be established.' I feel,
+ when I see the need, as if I could plead the money right out of the
+ most self-indulgent members of our favored churches at home. It
+ would not be expensive as compared with other missionary work.
+ Cannot some way be devised for making a large advance on the
+ present movement?"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Those who thought to cripple Atlanta University because it could not
+yield its principles for the sake of a State appropriation of $8,000
+made a mistake. They have helped that which they meant to hinder. The
+university will get the money. Joseph's brethren took counsel together
+and said, "We will see what will become of his dream," and they
+thought they had a sure thing when they put him in a pit, but they
+discovered {89} some years after that this was but a way-station on
+the direct road to the Viceroyship of Egypt, and they saw what became
+of his dream.
+
+When Napoleon the First wished to hinder the Huguenot Church, he gave
+it a small stipend in order to retain hold of it. He appropriated just
+enough to keep it a cripple. When the State of Georgia thought the
+education of the Negro was becoming too marked, it reversed the policy
+of the far-seeing Bonaparte and took its hands off. We have never
+thought that Napoleon was a truly good man, but we do believe that he
+had a larger idea of the philosophy of control than the author of the
+Glenn Bill. If the State had held on, it might have hindered, but it
+has lost its hold.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Would it not sound well to the American people to have it said that in
+the United States of America, in the year 1888, our missionaries were
+imprisoned for reading the Bible to a heathen tribe of Indians who
+lived remote from civilization, the crime of it being that it was read
+in the only language which they could understand?
+
+Yet "the orders are," writes a missionary, "that we shall hold only
+two services on a Sunday and two during the week, and that we shall
+cease to read the Bible in the Indian homes." This is the Government
+authority of the great and free United States, but is there any
+authority greater than God?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In an eloquent address at the Old South Church in Boston, on Sunday,
+March 4th, George W. Cable accentuated in strong words the work in
+which we are engaged. "Here is the mightiest, the widest, the most
+fruitful, the most abundant, the most prolific, missionary field that
+was ever opened to any Christian people."
+
+We quote from his address:
+
+ The benevolence of Northern men and women, yea, and even of
+ Northern children, helped to establish in the South these
+ missionary colleges, these educational missions, wherein not the
+ black man alone, not the black woman alone, but every one who was
+ qualified with orderly behavior and a rational intellect might
+ come, and get, not only an education, but a Christian education,
+ and not only a Christian education, but a Christian American
+ education. These institutions, standing out in the darkness when
+ nothing else stood by them, when the land was racked and torn and
+ bled afresh under the agonies of reconstruction, these institutions
+ began and carried on the blessed work of raising up leaders,
+ intellectual leaders, among the black people, for the guidance and
+ stimulation of the colored race toward the aspirations of American
+ citizenship and Christian intelligence.
+
+ These institutions, these missionary colleges in the South, have
+ carried the torch of liberty, these have upheld it, these have
+ taught American citizenship, these have given to the Southern
+ States 16,000 colored teachers, when nobody else would teach the
+ poor black boy--nay, or the poor white boy either. Seven millions
+ of people concerned in the matter, and the National Bureau of
+ Public Education reporting year after year that {90} the reason why
+ there are 600,000 colored youth out of the public schools, is not
+ because they don't want to go, but because there are not
+ school-houses and school teachers.
+
+ Here is the mightiest, the widest, the most fruitful, the most
+ abundant, the most prolific, missionary field that was ever opened
+ to any Christian people. It is right here at your doors. It is not
+ across the Pacific Ocean and it is not down yonder around the Cape
+ of Good Hope. Right here at our doors is the greediest people for
+ education and the gospel there is on the face of this earth, not
+ counted among our white race. I suppose that ninety-nine
+ one-hundredths of those who generously give to this cause believe
+ to-day that it is being given to in generous proportion. Ah! you
+ never figured on it. Why, if you knew the national value of this
+ work, to say nothing of its gospel value, you would quadruplicate
+ it before the year is out. You would not submit to it for a moment,
+ as citizens, not merely as members of Christ's Church.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The American Missionary Association is called again to mourn the
+decease of one of its officers. Hon. Alfred S. Barnes, a member of its
+Executive Committee, after an illness extending over five months, at
+his residence in Brooklyn, finished his earthly life on Friday,
+February 17th, at the age of seventy-one years. Mr. Barnes was elected
+on the Executive Board of the A.M.A. nineteen years ago, and had
+served in that capacity continuously up to the day of his death. He
+was a wise counsellor, large-minded in his views and honorable in his
+spirit, known throughout the land as one of the foremost publishers in
+the country, largely interested in educational work, and yet he found
+time for an earnest devotion to various enterprises in the Christian
+church. His fidelity and helpfulness in the service of the A.M.A. are
+fully known only to those who were associated with him. Many
+organizations of missionary and Christian work will miss his presence
+and the help of his generous stewardship, but none will feel his
+departure more truly than the American Missionary Association, which
+has lost its President, one of its Secretaries, and this long-honored
+member of its Executive Board within the last half-year. The greatness
+of his work in our service will be remembered and cherished.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+We acknowledge among our exchanges, the _Fisk Herald_, published at
+Nashville; the _Atlanta Bulletin_; the _Olio_, of Straight University; the
+_Tougaloo Quarterly_; the _Head and Hand_, of Le Moyne Normal Institute at
+Memphis; the _Helping Hand_, of Sherwood, Tenn.; _Our Work_, of Talladega
+College; the _Howard University Reporter_, of Washington; the _Word
+Carrier_, of Santee Agency, and _Iapi Oahe_, of Santee Agency; also the
+_Christian Aid_, published by our church in Dallas; the _Beach Record_,
+(occasional) by our school in Savannah.
+
+Several of these papers are models of their kind, publishing original
+articles written by the students and professors, and printed by the
+students with superior typographical skill. As indicators of progress,
+they are full {91} of interest, apart from the items of local school
+and church intelligence with which they are freighted.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+We commend to our readers, "The Missionary Review of the World,"
+edited jointly by Rev. J.M. Sherwood, D.D., of New York, and Rev. A.T.
+Pierson, D.D., of Philadelphia.
+
+One rises from its pages as if he had been breathing Christian ozone.
+The editorials are upon living topics and issues, and are vigorously
+presented. The "Review" sweeps its vision over the entire world and it
+not only sees, but knows how to tell what it sees. If the high
+standard of literary excellence so far sustained can be continuously
+held, we shall have a magazine of missions which will be the peer of
+our best literary monthlies in quality and interest.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+We congratulate the Congregational Sunday-School and Publishing
+Society on the acceptance of its appointment of Rev. Geo. M. Boynton
+as its Secretary. We have known him as a member of the Executive
+Committee of the American Missionary Association, as editor of THE
+AMERICAN MISSIONARY, as a pastor, as a secretary of Associations and
+Conferences, as a wise counsellor and genial brother. We regard him as
+eminently fitted for the place to which he has been called. To Brother
+Boynton we extend most cordially a welcome to the honorable, the
+fraternity of the Secretaries.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The fifth annual report of the Executive Committee of the Indian
+Rights Association, written by Mr. James B. Harrison, is a strong and
+valuable contribution to the literature of Indian rights and wrongs,
+which should be considered by every friend of the Red Man. Respecting
+the orders of the Indian office at Washington which abridge the
+liberty of religious teaching, this report characterizes them as
+"unintelligent, arbitrary, despotic and unstatesmanlike, merely a blow
+at missionary work. There is no reason to suppose that a single Indian
+anywhere will ever learn ten words more of English by reason of these
+orders. There is, indeed, no provision made by the Government for any
+increase of facilities in the study of English. The damage to the
+missionary work produced by these orders is their sole result. The
+orders should be distinctly and wholly revoked and withdrawn. It is
+not necessary that the missionaries and churches should submit. If
+they will publish the facts fully these orders will be revoked. The
+facts must come to light. Then the people of the country will have
+something to say."
+
+The above quotation will give our readers the flavor of the pages.
+"Plain words are best," and it is time that the country should have
+them. {92} No one can read the statements in this able Report without
+having his heart stirred with honest indignation at the condition of
+Indian affairs, through the unfortunate unfitness of the Government
+Bureau.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ SPECIMENS OF SCHOOL ENDEAVOR.
+
+ THREE COMPOSITIONS.
+
+ LETHER.
+
+Lether is mad from the hide of animals. They first kill the animal
+then the hide is sent to a tan yard and there it is tan are made
+lether from, then to a shoemaker's shop where it is made into boots
+shoes saddles. The finest of gloves is the kid skin glove, that is all
+I will say about kid skin gloves. Most of the bad boots and shoes we
+have is horse lether or mule lether, that is all I will say about mule
+lether and horse lether. All the good boots and shoes we have is young
+calf lether, that is all I will say about young calf lether.
+
+All the boots shoes and every thing else we have made of lether is
+second thing because some poor animal was rob-ed of his coat that we
+might have boots and many other things.
+
+----, aged 16.
+
+ NETELY.
+
+Netely are clean always and handsome to everybody. It are good in the
+cite of God and man for it are a good thing to be netely always for it
+make a man look netely. If we all are netely it are a good thing to be
+clean for it are a good thing in the time of life so to be. Netely is
+deserving of everybody and grate with all mankind. It are a good thing
+to be netely for it is beautiful and pretty. It are correct always and
+never rong to nobody an it make a man feel better when he are netely
+an a nice looking person when he are netely are clean before every
+body.
+
+----, aged 25.
+
+ DRIVE WAGGON.
+
+That the kind of work I likes to do. When I drive waggon I rides a
+plenty. Riding are a good thing because when folks is sick it are good
+for the helt. I likes to drive it because I have been loadin it. This
+summer I hall fody. When I would load the barn yard wagon full of fody
+it would be high from the groun, that is nice but sometimes it would
+turn over, that would be truble. Truble are a bad thing.
+
+----, aged 17.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ ANSWERS TO QUESTIONS AT AN EXAMINATION OF TEACHERS IN GEORGIA.
+
+_What is writing?_
+
+"Writing is the Representation of the human voice on the 11th part of
+a noun."
+{93}
+
+_How long since writing was invented?_
+
+"From the creation of the world, or from the birth of Christ."
+
+_What are the chief products of the State of Georgia?_
+
+"The chief products are Agriculture, Turpentine, rail-roads, lumber
+and grate deel of merchandice bussyness."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ A SERIOUS ALARM IN GEORGIA.
+
+The American Missionary is not published for the entertainment of its
+readers. It has a more serious purpose. It speaks for races who have
+suffered grievous wrongs, and for peoples whose condition is
+exceedingly sad. It has to do with tragic facts, and much of what it
+has to say must excite compassion, and must appeal both to the
+consciences of our readers and to their sense of duty. To call upon
+those whom God has blessed, to insert themselves into the woes and
+spiritual wants of others who need their help, is grave and serious.
+
+This is one feature. There are others. The joy of the work and the joy
+of the worker, which we are called to record, are a relief to the
+stories of necessity, and are like beautiful pictures painted upon the
+dark background. When "Our eyes have seen the glory of the coming of
+the Lord," we can for the time forget the darkness upon which the
+light shines, and sing our hallelujahs. If it is saddening to tell of
+the night, it is cheering to mark the fact that the providences of God
+are working out his promises, and are surely bringing in God's day.
+
+Over and above the evils to which we must call earnest heed, the
+dangers which are not far away, and the exigencies of the cause of
+Christ, we are sure that no one can read the MISSIONARY without being
+cheered and quickened in gratitude to God for what he is graciously
+doing for his needy ones through his people.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+With the serious duty on the part of those who are working together
+with God for the salvation of men, there drift along in the current of
+his providences certain incidents that are exceedingly droll.
+
+As we have seen some very ludicrous manifestations of character and
+conduct in the terrible struggles of a battlefield, and have brushed
+aside our tears at times for an irrepressible _bon mot_ in a hospital,
+so in the weighty and solemn considerations which continually appeal
+to us, and while we are anxiously asking how we can make the most
+bricks for the Lord's building with the least straw, incidents arise
+which not only throw light upon our serious work, but which are
+irresistibly amusing.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+We think we should share with our readers a recent one which, when
+{94} we read it in the detail, impossible to be repeated here, made us
+smile. Every time we re-perused it we thought it, as _Alice in
+Wonderland_ said, "curiouser and curiouser."
+
+Our readers are not strangers to the name and fame of the leading
+editor of the chief paper in Georgia. They have heard of him as an
+eloquent orator with a brilliant imagination which saw a New South in
+almost millennial array, and told of it with an enthusiasm so
+contagious that to the sons of the Pilgrims after the fulness of a
+great dinner it seemed that the "Promised day of Israel" had at last
+arrived. It is true that when this dinner had been thoroughly
+digested, certain ones, removed from the afflatus of the occasion
+began to ask, "Are these things so?" And when the Glenn Bill sought
+the endorsement of public opinion, and substantially received it with
+no word of reprobation from the eloquent orator and editor, some
+recalled the speech of Sheridan in reply to Mr. Dundas, "The right
+honorable gentleman is indebted to his imagination for his facts."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In all this time no one suspected the _Atlanta Constitution_ of
+possessing the humorous character which it has lately revealed. In
+late issues of February it has, in the garb of gravity, about two
+columns that are ridiculously funny.
+
+It appears that Prof. Sumner Salter, a graduate of Amherst College, a
+son of an honored pastor of Iowa, a musical director of exceptional
+gifts and a teacher of eminent ability, was solicited by parties in
+Atlanta to take his residence there in the interest of the musical
+cultivation of such as could secure his services. He soon attracted
+the patronage of society, and all went smoothly until the tempter
+came. Alas, there was a serpent in Eden, so there was a skeleton in
+the closet of the _Atlanta Constitution_. It was a dreadful skeleton.
+The _Constitution_ seriously publishes the fact that "it was whispered
+about for some time," until patience ceased to be a virtue, when it
+sent a guardian of public safety in the form of a reporter to
+investigate. "Was it really true that a white man who was giving music
+lessons to white people was also teaching a colored class at another
+time and place? If so, what about the New South? The black man had no
+business to be black, but he _was_ all the same, and being so what right
+had Prof. Salter to teach _colored_ people to sing? Let the matter be
+thoroughly searched out. The reporter departed on his mission, with a
+countenance more in sorrow than in anger, and returned _vice versa_.
+
+ "'Tis true, 'tis pity,
+ And pity 'tis 'tis true."
+
+The professor was actually doing this very absurd thing. He had taken
+charge of a colored class in the church of which Rev. Evarts Kent is
+minister and was teaching them how rightly to use the talents with
+which God had so richly endowed them.
+{95}
+
+Accordingly, in the year of grace 1888, the _Atlanta Constitution_
+publishes the astounding fact, and calls the world to heed it, in
+conspicuous head lines:--
+
+ "WHITE OR BLACK--A PROMINENT MUSICIAN WHO TEACHES BOTH COLORS--HIS
+ BUSINESS SAID TO BE INJURED."
+
+Then followed the whole sad story. The musician had been interviewed
+and investigated. He did not deny the serious charge to this
+superintendent of public proprieties. With a heart as hard as old
+Pharaoh's he proposed to go on and do more likewise. In short, the
+representative of the _Constitution_ could do nothing with this
+intractable professor. Hence "he did not stand upon the order of his
+going, but went at once," and reported that "_according to Mr. Suiter's
+own statement, he is teaching a colored class_, and he has lost a white
+pupil, which shows that his course is hurting his business." "Diligent
+inquiry has failed to bring to light any proof that he has notified
+his _white_ pupils that he is teaching _colored_ people."
+
+Leaving out the meanness of this, has anyone read anything published
+lately more ridiculous? It is not necessary to quote the professor's
+public reply. It simply claimed the right of manhood and common sense,
+and doubtless left the _Constitution_ wondering how a man capable of
+making it appear so foolish could yet descend to such depths of
+ignominy as to teach people whose ancestors came from Africa, the
+unpardonable sin of singing praises to the Author of their being. To
+what deeps some will descend! Why should colored people add to the
+criminality of being born black, the fearful temptation of pay in
+advance to one who could teach them while he had pupils who had the
+merit of having been born white?
+
+This was really transpiring in the city of Atlanta several days in the
+month of February in the year 1888, and was in successive issues of
+the _Constitution_, which shows among other things that there is
+latitude, if not longitude, at a Brooklyn New England dinner.
+Meanwhile we think we hear Uncle Rastus quoting the prophecy, "The
+morning cometh and also the night," but he can't help laughing because
+it is "awful funny."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ THE EDUCATIONAL WORK IN THE SOUTH.
+
+BY REV. W.F. SLOCUM.
+
+We may remember at the outset that in this matter of the education of
+the Negro we are treating a question which must be considered, to a
+certain extent, ethnically. We are dealing with a people with race
+peculiarities: but it seems to me that it is very useless to ask
+whether we are training an inferior stock. There was a time when the
+Anglo-Saxon stock was far inferior {96} to its present condition. We
+ourselves are not enough removed from heathenism and barbarism to
+become very pharisaical.
+
+Here is a race with its idiosyncrasies, and its peculiar latent
+possibilities, which we cannot know until Christian education has
+unfolded them through many years. We ought not to wonder that in many
+respects this people is yet in its moral and intellectual infancy; but
+who dares say that it has not a future before it, with its statesmen,
+its poets, its painters, its men of letters; that it is not to have
+its own peculiar literature, its art, and even its own characteristic
+religious expression, just as marked and important as those produced
+by any other race? Certainly we have as much reason for believing it
+as that the Teutonic race of the second century should produce its
+Goethe and its Schiller, its Kant and its Hegel, its Luther and its
+Melanchthon; or that the Frank of the fifth century should develop its
+Victor Hugo, its Lamartine, its Madam de Stael; or that out of the
+barbarism, the cannibalism, the paganism of Norseman, Briton and
+Saxon, there should come Shakespeare, Spencer, Macaulay, Browning and
+Gladstone. And we may not have to wait as long; for in spite of
+slavery's binding chain thrice drawn round his soul, the American
+Negro has been absorbing during the past from a civilization which has
+been fitting him somewhat for the large Christian movement of the
+present. We are working for a people which in all probability will
+form at least one-eighth of our whole population; and we have the
+problem of lifting them as a race up into Christian enlightenment. The
+dark skin is growing darker. There will be less and less of
+intermixture of blood between the two races. Hence all study of this
+educational question must have in view the large moral and
+intellectual enterprise of dealing with a race as a race. I believe
+that there is nothing in all history to compare with this opportunity
+which has come to our very doors. Here is a nation in our land and
+with it every perplexity, every difficulty, every embarrassment, and
+also every encouragement, every hope, and every inspiration for work,
+that can appeal to any foreign missionary. Here is this God-given task
+laid at our very thresholds and with all the sentiments of patriotism
+and Christian devotion urging us to our large privilege.
+
+What the race needs now is right leadership, and for many years to
+come we are to equip men and women religiously and intellectually,
+who, in home, in church, in social and business life, will be moral
+and social leaders. And by this power of leadership I mean something
+far other than those foolish conceits which have taken possession of a
+few who have touched only the surface of the new life that is coming
+to this people.
+
+I have rather in mind leaders who shall have that moral and
+intellectual fitness which produces reverence, earnestness and
+humility, leaders who can draw their people away from their
+foolishness, weakness and self-consciousness into the larger life that
+is possible for them. Without a {97} doubt, what is needed is true
+leaders, and I wish to show where these leaders are now demanded.
+
+Before the war, the South knew nothing of the benefits of public
+schools, and the private school was in harmony with its social and
+political conceptions; but of late, and especially during the last
+decade, a remarkable change has taken place which is doing as much to
+affect the whole Southern problem as anything that has occurred there
+during half a century. It is a movement in the South, which, however
+imperfectly it has been developed as yet, has come to remain, and will
+ultimately affect every institution, social, political and religious,
+in our section of the country.
+
+_It is now being recognized in every Southern State that free
+government is based upon a public common-school system_. It has taken
+two decades to incorporate this public school policy upon Southern
+institutions, but it has now the evidence of permanency and it is
+offering to Christian philanthropy an unparalleled opportunity, such
+as God seldom gives to any people, and one which should rally the
+churches as never before in support of the great enterprises of the
+American Missionary Association.
+
+There has been forced upon the New South the conclusion that the best
+way to increase its wealth is to increase the number of educated,
+intelligent producers, and with this conclusion it realizes that it
+cannot afford to let two million colored children grow up in hopeless
+illiteracy. It perceives that its very institutions will be imperiled
+by such a condition. I have through personal interviews with leading
+educators in a recent trip through the South, by correspondence and by
+a careful examination of documents and reports from nearly all the
+Southern States, undertaken to find just what is being done at the
+present time in the public colored schools of the South.
+
+The significance of this public school movement will be understood
+when it is remembered that the acceptance of the idea that the
+constitution of a free State rests on universal education, marks a
+great change in theory; that this has come against the opinions of the
+old Bourbon party, which never forgets, and, it is to be feared, never
+learns; whose political economy is represented by the expression,
+"keep the negro down"; which regards his enfranchisment as a political
+outrage and his education as a mistake and a failure; that it has
+risen in the face of the poverty of the South and in the midst of its
+most intense prejudices. For when the new educational movement began,
+the property and a large part of the intelligence belonged to the
+opponents of the new educational policy, but now, in the words of a
+prominent Southern gentleman: "The conviction has become very deep
+that in the altered condition of our people the only hope left us is
+to do all that can be done towards elevating the masses irrespective
+of race." This certainly represents a tremendous transformation.
+Without stopping to trace the causes that produced it, or even the
+large place the American Missionary Association work has in it, let me
+simply quote from {98} a Southern Christian man, whose sympathies are
+full of prejudice against the North, but who has wakened with the
+awakening of the New South.
+
+Writing of the educational movement, in a recent book, he says: "Not a
+few of the best men and women of the North have come to teach in these
+institutions for colored youth: their motives and their work have not
+always been understood, but the Great Day will make manifest how they
+have been constrained by the love of Christ, to spend years in work
+which has had many discouragements." ('The New South' by J.C.C.
+Newton.) A few statistics may give some general idea of the extent of
+this movement.
+
+The State of Alabama has 104,150 colored pupils enrolled in the public
+schools. It pays an average of $25.97 per month to nearly 2,000
+colored teachers, and expends altogether $198,221 upon these colored
+schools. Georgia has 49 per cent. of its negro school population
+enrolled; that is, 119,248. In 1871, this State had 6,664 only in all
+public and private colored schools. Its teachers of this race now
+number 2,272. 40,909 colored children are enrolled in Louisiana, with
+672 negro teachers, who receive an average of $23.73 per month.
+
+Mississippi had last year 154,430 colored scholars. It employed 3,124
+colored teachers who receive an average of $28.73 per month. North
+Carolina enrolled, in 1886, 117,562 colored pupils, employed 2,016
+teachers of the same race, paying them about the same as its white
+teachers, $23.38 per month. The colored school population of Tennessee
+numbers 158,450, of whom 84,624 are enrolled in her 1,563 common
+schools, which are taught by 1,621 teachers of the same nationality. A
+county superintendent voluntarily adds: "I should do our colored
+teachers an injustice not to speak of them. Most of them are earnest,
+zealous workers, doing all in their power for their race."
+
+Turning now to Texas we find that this State has nearly doubled its
+enrollment of colored pupils in three years, which now number 62,040,
+with 1,696 licensed colored teachers who receive on an average, $41.73
+per month. Virginia has 111,114 out of a school population of 265,249
+with 1,734 colored teachers who receive $28.65 per month.
+
+That is, in eight representative States there are eight hundred
+thousand colored pupils who are now being trained by over fifteen
+thousand teachers of the same race. Now the simple but grave question
+that every Christian patriot ought to ask himself is, "What kind of
+teachers are these, and where are they to come from in the future?" I
+asked that question of a gentleman who of all others ought to be able
+to answer it correctly and he replied, "Nine-tenths of these teachers
+come from the missionary schools, and of these nine-tenths, more than
+one-half come from the institutions of the American Missionary
+Association." Now we can understand the truthfulness of the testimony
+of the Rev. J.L.M. Curry, D.D., the distinguished agent of the Peabody
+Fund, who says: "The most that {99} has been done at the South for the
+education of the negroes has been done by the Congregationalists. The
+American Missionary Association and those allied to it have been the
+chief agency, so far as benevolent effort is concerned, in diffusing
+right notions of religion, and in carrying education to the darkened
+mind of the negro."
+
+Here is the large door that God has opened for us, and through which
+we are reaching this people, and in a still larger degree may carry
+the truths of the Kingdom of God to them. What they need most of all
+is light. Give them that and the question of rights will take care of
+itself. When I was in New Orleans last May, President Hitchcock, of
+Straight University, pointed out to me in his office a pile of
+letters, which, he said, were applications for teachers for these
+public schools, and those which he showed me represented the number of
+applications which he was not able to fill. And yet he is compelled
+every term to turn away scores of young men and young women seeking to
+fit themselves for just this work, because there is not room for them
+and because there are not funds to care for them.
+
+As to this new movement in the South, I do not conclude that more than
+the first step has been taken, exceedingly important as that step is.
+Many of the schools as yet are in a wretched condition. The buildings
+in the rural districts are small and rudely built, and many of them
+are positively unfit to be used as school houses. There are neither
+maps, nor charts or other appliances for the teacher's use in his
+work, and in fact everything about these school houses is of the most
+primitive type. The school year often does not exceed four months, and
+many of these teachers are altogether unfit for their tasks.
+
+Are we to think the time has come to withhold our support and our
+prayers from this great work? Was there ever such an opportunity
+offered to any land as this which is presented to the Christian
+philanthropy of our own?
+
+I might tell of the needs of the cabin home life as I have seen them
+in these States, how the scholars from Christian schools are the
+leaven that is slowly transforming this, the greatest of all human
+institutions; how while from one-quarter to one-half of the colored
+population is progressing, gaining in education, property and
+character, there is another large part of the race that is either
+stationary or sinking into more miserable conditions. Are we seeking
+for paganism to battle with? Here it is in our own proud land. Do we
+want the opportunity of Christianizing a nation? Here it is; and with
+possibilities just as marked as those of any people that ever ascended
+the scale of intelligence and Christian morality.
+
+The problem of the New South is not merely one of successful
+railroads, of busy factories or of paying plantations, but much more
+is it one of upright, wise, Christian manhood and womanhood. This is
+the work to which we are most truly called of the Eternal Father.
+{100}
+
+Nobly has the American Missionary Association entered into these
+labors; but believe me, there is a larger work before it than it has
+yet accomplished.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ THE SOUTH.
+
+ LETTER FROM AN EVANGELIST.
+
+After my return from England for another winter's service in Gospel
+work among the people of the South, I began at
+
+ WASHINGTON, D.C.
+
+I had promised Rev. G.W. Moore last winter, before sailing for my home
+in England, to assist him in special religious effort. From the very
+commencement of the meetings a good spirit was manifest, which
+deepened day by day until forty or more persons professed faith in
+Christ, young and old being reached by the power of the gospel. One
+man sixty-one years of age surrendered to the overtures of God's love
+and received Christ as his Saviour. Another of seventy-five years was
+pointed out to me as a hardened sinner. When approached he was full of
+self and reason, "I don't believe in mourner's benches and such like;
+do you think my going there will make me a Christian or do me any
+good?" "No, but it will show the people you are intending to make a
+start for Heaven, and it will enlist their sympathy and prayers," I
+replied.
+
+Finally he knelt with me in the aisle with his head bowed on the end
+of the seat while I prayed. Soon the big tears were dropping from his
+eyes and he went home that night under conviction. The following night
+he returned. He was again prayed for, but went away undecided. The
+next night as soon as inquirers were given an opportunity to present
+themselves for prayers he was the first to respond, and the sinful man
+of seventy-five years had yielded his heart to Christ, and could sing
+from his heart "Happy day, when Jesus washed my sins away." His wife,
+who was present, rushed forward, and tears of joy ran down their
+cheeks. Scarcely a dry eye was to be seen, while above all there was
+joy in Heaven over another sinner saved. Deacon R. came to me
+afterwards and said, "Why, did you ever see what a change in the man
+in three days, and at last how he 'caved in.'"
+
+Ten persons made profession of their faith, in January. Two of these
+were teachers in the public schools. There were four conversions in
+one family. Since these meetings, many extra services have been held,
+with fruitful results. There are family altars where none before
+existed. The work in Washington under Mr. Moore is very hopeful. My
+next point was
+
+ SELMA, ALA.
+
+which I entered full of hopes as to successful meetings, and was not
+disappointed. {101} During my stay there, lasting three weeks, sixty
+professed to be converted. Most of these, through the efforts of Rev.
+C.B. Curtis and his wife, were formed into a "Children's Band," while
+others joined the churches. This is a most important feature in
+pastoral work, where the majority of the converts are children. They
+need to have something that will help them in their spiritual and new
+life and which may be instrumental in preserving them from
+temptations, snares and pitfalls, laid to entrap them by the enemy of
+their souls.
+
+I never before realized how easily people are led away by false
+teachers, nor saw so manifestly brought out the fulfillment of the
+Scriptures, [2 Pet. ii, 1] "But there were false prophets among the
+people, even as there shall be false teachers among you, who privily
+shall bring in damnable heresies, even denying the Lord that bought
+them, and bring upon themselves swift destruction. And many shall
+follow their pernicious ways; by reason of whom the way of truth shall
+be evil spoken of."
+
+A man calling himself a "prophet" and a "faith doctor" had been for
+some time experimenting upon people, both white and black, and
+professed to cure them of all their ailments. He had been holding
+meetings in a cottage weekly, and had gathered many followers, who
+were, alas, for the most part professing Christians. He announced that
+on the following Sunday he would hold the passover feast, burn the
+Bible, and, in plain words, would do wonders, the like of which had
+not been heard of for years. Accordingly, on Sunday morning, with a
+few of his followers, he came to the house of a Negro, and during the
+ceremony commanded a white woman to place her head on the table and
+offer herself as a sacrifice. She refused, upon which a Negro woman
+laid her head upon the table. He immediately raised an old cavalry
+sword and, with one blow, nearly severed her head from her body, and
+then commanded that they should "drag her out at once and put her with
+her feet towards the East and she will rise after three days."
+
+Soon there was a cry of murder raised; the false prophet was arrested
+after a struggle, and he, with a number of his followers, was safely
+lodged in the penitentiary, where it is to be hoped he will at least
+be kept from cutting off any more women's heads. Oh, how great the
+need of faithful men to lift up their voices like a trumpet, and spare
+them not, and show to these needy people, so religiously inclined, the
+way of truth!
+
+ TALLADEGA COLLEGE
+
+was the next place visited. Beginning the New Year, which is usually
+the "week of prayer," for two weeks the "old, old story" was told on
+every night among the resident students and scholars. At other times,
+services would be held in the Cassidy school in the morning, or in the
+afternoon, as school duties would permit. The Theological class, as
+well as the teachers and faculty, interested themselves greatly in
+seeking to win the unsaved to Jesus. Following out the teaching of the
+New Testament, the students {102} went out two and two in the
+surrounding neighborhood, calling at the homes of the people,
+conversing and praying in the family. They often returned with great
+joy to tell of the success and kindness they had met wherever they
+went. I am thankful to our blessed Lord to be able to report that not
+only forty or more of the young people were converted but also that
+professing Christians were strengthened in faith, all promising to do
+what God had required of them and to go to their respective homes,
+some of them hundreds of miles away, to make known a Saviour's love
+and to carry light as far as possible in the surrounding darkness.
+While here the Macedonian cry was heard from
+
+ JENIFER.
+
+I went there for a brief service. The first night the church was full,
+although the weather was stormy. The spirit of God brooded over the
+meeting and five came forward for prayer. The next night still was
+unpleasant, yet some of the congregation came several miles, and at
+the close eleven inquirers asked for prayers. A brother in the
+congregation rose, and, in pleading terms, his voice faltering,
+begged, "Oh, brodder, please do stop wid us; see de mourners; see de
+work de Lord is doing; please you brodder don't go away and leab us."
+After such heartfelt words I could but stay all the week, when sixteen
+professed to have accepted Christ, or, as they put it, to have "found
+religion."
+
+Miss Smith, at her home for motherless girls, is doing a noble work
+here. Rev. J.B. Grant is highly respected by all in the village and
+has a good name, which is worth more than great riches.
+
+ IRONATON
+
+was the next place visited. It was exceedingly muddy and dark, yet the
+people came out well. At the close of the first meeting the
+congregation arose _en masse_ and asked that I would remain a day
+longer, which I did.
+
+ MARION, ALA.
+
+I went to Marion with some doubts upon my mind as to the results. The
+first evening after my arrival I was very sick and threatened with a
+severe attack of chills and fever, but I was helped to strength enough
+to preach with difficulty. Twenty-five inquirers asked for prayers.
+Some that night became "new creatures in Christ Jesus," and every
+night as the meetings progressed the interest deepened and spread,
+until other churches were reached by the influence and their services
+given up that their members might come to our church and share in the
+work and blessing. Every night large numbers of seekers came to
+Christ. On one night twelve expressed their faith in a new life. Among
+the many inquirers was one who for twelve years had been an anxiety to
+her friends on account of her state of mind, and her conversion caused
+great joy in the church.
+
+Short morning meetings were held in the various schools in the town,
+and in a town-school seventeen seekers found the Lord Jesus precious
+to {103} their souls. Up to this time, during two weeks, more than one
+hundred profess to have been converted.
+
+I am happy to report that now, with the exception of two or three of
+the students, all in the new A.M.A. school have been reached by the
+gospel and are rejoicing that God's love has been shed abroad in their
+hearts. This blessing can be traced in a great measure to the faithful
+Scriptural teaching which Rev. A.W. Curtis and his devoted wife had
+been giving previous to my coming among them, prayer meetings having
+been held in the church for some time beforehand, and women's meetings
+at the pastor's home, led by Mrs. Curtis, thus preparing the way for
+the nightly preaching of the gospel. I go next to Mobile.
+
+JAMES WHARTON, Evangelist.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ THE CHINESE.
+
+ RESULTS THAT ELUDE THE STATISTICIAN.
+
+BY REV. C.T. WEITZEL.
+
+There are some effects which cannot be put into statistics. A boy's
+progress in a study is but imperfectly declared by the monthly report
+or the examination "stand." Much of the work accomplished in a Chinese
+mission school, is impossible to tabulate. Like the marvelous
+clearness of the atmosphere in Santa Barbara on a bright morning after
+a night of rain, it quite eludes the statistician.
+
+But effects may be felt, though we cannot represent them by figures.
+Go with me some evening through the Chinese quarter of our city; note
+the faces of the loungers in every door-way and at every corner. Watch
+the expression, or the want of expression, in these stolid, brutal,
+repulsive faces of opium-smokers and gamblers. Then step over with me
+to the Chinese mission-house two squares away. Before you enter, look
+in through the half-open door and take a survey of the scene within.
+The room is well-lighted, and contains, among other things, two long
+tables, a dozen benches, a cabinet organ, and a few chairs. The walls
+are bright with Scripture texts and illustrations from sacred history.
+About fifteen young Chinamen are seated at the tables, all reading and
+studying aloud in true Chinese fashion. Just as you enter the teacher,
+touches the bell. Books are closed and all take seats on the benches
+in front of the organ. A Chinese evangelist is present, and while he
+makes an impassioned address, accompanied by most expressive gestures,
+you are free to study the faces upturned to listen. What a contrast to
+the faces you have just left in Chinatown, idly staring at the
+passer-by, or, vacant of all interest, staring at nothing! At a glance
+you perceive effects which must be seen to be appreciated. You feel
+that not only is the whole atmosphere of this place essentially
+different {104} from that of the Chinese quarter, but there is also an
+essential difference between those who frequent the one and the other.
+
+Socially, intellectually, spiritually, the Chinese mission-school does
+its beneficent work. It must be borne in mind that the Chinaman in
+California is away from home. He is exposed to all the temptations of
+a stranger in a strange land, removed from the restraining influences
+of a community where one is known. Subject an equal number of men of
+any other nation to this severe test, and I doubt much if they would
+bear it as well. The mission school serves the purpose of a strong
+social support. So far as possible it takes the place of a home. It
+practically separates its attendants into a community by itself. It
+does much to keep them from contact with their vicious countrymen in
+Chinatown. It does much to bring them into contact with those whose
+influence upon them will be good. It does much to furnish a healthy
+social atmosphere in which to pass the hours of the afternoon and
+evening, which every Chinese servant is at liberty to spend as he
+will.
+
+Intellectually the work in the Chinese missions is already far beyond
+the elementary stage, and is growing more virile every year.
+
+But everything is made but the means to the spiritual end. Not for an
+hour is this lost sight of. The whole drift of the teaching, the
+songs, the pictures, the Scripture text, is to make known Christ.
+Every evening's lesson ends with worship. For a month or more the
+Chinese preacher to whom I have referred, has held evangelistic
+services in the Santa Barbara mission. To-day he leaves for points
+farther south to do the same work elsewhere.
+
+In no year, may I add, have there been so many conversions among the
+Chinese on this coast as in the one just past.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ BUREAU OF WOMAN'S WORK.
+
+MISS D.E. EMERSON, SECRETARY.
+
+ WOMAN'S STATE ORGANIZATIONS.
+
+ CO-OPERATING WITH THE AMERICAN MISSIONARY ASSOCIATION.
+
+ME.--Woman's Aid to A.M.A., Chairman of Committee, Mrs. C.A. Woodbury,
+Woodfords, Me.
+
+VT.--Woman's Aid to A.M.A., Chairman of Committee, Mrs. Henry
+Fairbanks, St. Johnsbury, Vt.
+
+CONN.--Woman's Home Miss. Union, Secretary, Mrs. S.M. Hotchkiss, 171
+Capitol Ave., Hartford, Conn.
+
+N.Y.--Woman's Home Miss. Union, Secretary, Mrs. C.C. Creegan,
+Syracuse, N.Y.
+
+OHIO.--Woman's Home Miss. Union, Secretary, Mrs. Flora K. Regal,
+Oberlin, Ohio.
+
+ILL.--Woman's Home Miss. Union, Secretary, Mrs. C.H. Taintor, 151
+Washington St., Chicago, Ill.
+
+MICH.--Woman's Home Miss. Union, Secretary, Mrs. Mary B. Warren,
+Lansing, Mich.
+
+WIS.--Woman's Home Miss. Union, Secretary, Mrs. C. Matter, Brodlhead,
+Wis.
+
+MINN.--Woman's Home Miss. Society, Secretary, Mrs. H.L. Chase, 2,750
+Second Ave., South, Minneapolis, Minn.
+
+IOWA.--Woman's Home Miss. Union, Secretary, Miss Ella K. Marsh,
+Grinnell, Iowa.
+
+KANSAS.--Woman's Home Miss. Society, Secretary, Mrs. Addison
+Blanchard, Topeka, Kan.
+
+SOUTH DAKOTA.--Woman's Home Miss. Union, Secretary, Mrs. W.H. Thrall,
+Amour, Dak.
+{105}
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ THE BLACK WOMAN OF THE SOUTH.
+
+The Rev. Alexander Crummell, D.D., formerly a missionary in Africa and
+now Rector of St. Luke's Church in Washington, D.C., is a native of
+Africa, a graduate of one of the leading Universities of England, who
+adds to the strength and graces of a sound scholarship, the devotion
+of a noble Christian character.
+
+From an address made by him upon the "Needs and Neglects of the Black
+Woman of the South," we quote his plea for "Woman's Work for Woman."
+Referring to the Negro woman in slavery days, he says:
+
+ "She was a 'hewer of wood and a drawer of water.' She had to keep
+ her place in the gang from morn till eve, under the burden of a
+ heavy task, or under the stimulus or the fear of a cruel lash. She
+ was a picker of cotton. She labored at the sugar mill and in the
+ tobacco factory. When, through weariness or sickness, she had
+ fallen behind her allotted task, then came, as punishment, the
+ fearful stripes upon her shrinking, lacerated flesh.
+
+ "Her home life was of the most degrading nature. She lived in the
+ rudest huts, and partook of the coarsest food, and dressed in the
+ scantiest garb, and slept, in multitudinous cabins, upon the
+ hardest boards!
+
+ "There was no sanctity of family, no binding tie of marriage, none
+ of the fine felicities and the endearing affections of home. Few of
+ these things were the lot of the Southern black woman. Instead,
+ thereof, a gross barbarism, which tended to blunt the tender
+ sensibilities, to obliterate feminine delicacy and womanly shame,
+ came down as her heritage from generation to generation; and it
+ seems a miracle of providence and grace that, notwithstanding these
+ terrible circumstances, so much struggling virtue lingered amid the
+ rude cabins, that so much womanly worth and sweetness remained, as
+ slaveholders themselves have borne witness to.
+
+ "Freed, legally, she has been; but the act of emancipation had no
+ talismanic influence to reach to and alter and transform her
+ degrading social life. The truth is, 'Emancipation Day' found her a
+ prostrate and degraded being; and, although it has brought numerous
+ advantages to her sons, it has produced but the simplest changes in
+ _her_ social and domestic condition. She is still the crude, rude,
+ ignorant mother. Remote from cities, the dweller still in the old
+ plantation hut, neighboring to the sulky, disaffected master-class,
+ who still think her freedom was a personal robbery of themselves,
+ none of the 'fair humanities' have visited her humble home. The
+ light of knowledge has not fallen upon her eyes. The fine
+ domesticities which give the charm to family life, and which, by
+ the refinement and delicacy of womanhood, preserve the civilization
+ of nations, have not come to _her_. She has still the rude, coarse
+ labor of men. With her rude husband, she still shares the hard
+ service of a field-hand. Her house, which shelters, perhaps, some
+ six or eight children, embraces but two rooms. Her furniture is of
+ the rudest kind. The clothing of the household is scant and of the
+ coarsest material; has oft-times the garniture of rags, and for
+ herself and offspring is marked, not seldom, by the absense {106}
+ of both hats and shoes. She has rarely been taught to sew, and the
+ field-labor of slavery times has kept her ignorant of the habitudes
+ of neatness and the requirements of order. Indeed, coarse food,
+ coarse clothes, coarse living, coarse manners, coarse companions,
+ coarse surroundings, coarse neighbors, both white and black, yea,
+ everything coarse, down to the coarse, ignorant, senseless
+ religion, which excites her sensibilities and starts her passions,
+ go to make up the life of the masses of black women in the hamlets
+ and villages of the South. This is the state of black womanhood.
+
+ "And now look at the _vastness_ of this degradation. If I had been
+ speaking of the population of a city, or town, or even a village,
+ the tale would be a sad and melancholy one. But I have brought
+ before you the condition of _millions of women_. And when you think
+ that the masses of these women live in the rural districts; that
+ they grow up in rudeness and ignorance; that their former masters
+ are using few means to break up their hereditary degradation, you
+ can easily take in the pitiful condition of this population and
+ forecast the inevitable future to multitudes of females, unless a
+ mighty special effort is made for the improvement of the black
+ womanhood of the South.
+
+ "I am anxious for a permanent and uplifting civilization to be
+ engrafted on the Negro race in this land. And this can only be
+ secured through the womanhood of a race. If you want the
+ civilization of a people to reach the very best elements of their
+ being, and then, having reached them, there to abide as an
+ indigenous principle, you must imbue the _womanhood_ of that people
+ with all its elements and qualities. Any movement which passes by
+ the female sex is an ephemeral thing. Without them, no true
+ nationality, patriotism, religion, cultivation, family life, or
+ true social status, is a possibility. In this matter it takes two
+ to make one--mankind is a duality. The male may bring, as an
+ exotic, a foreign graft, say, of civilization, to a new people. But
+ what then! Can a graft live or thrive of itself? By no manner of
+ means. It must get vitality from the stock into which it is put;
+ and it is the women who give the sap to every human organization
+ which thrives and flourishes on earth.
+
+ "I plead, therefore, for the establishment of at least one large
+ '_Industrial school_' in every Southern State for the black girls of
+ the South. I ask for the establishment of schools which may serve
+ specially the home life of the rising womanhood of my race.
+
+ "I want _boarding schools_ for the _industrial training_ of one hundred
+ and fifty or two hundred of the poorest girls, of the ages of
+ twelve to eighteen years.
+
+ "I wish the intellectual training to be limited to reading,
+ writing, arithmetic and geography.
+
+ "I would have these girls taught to do accurately all domestic
+ work, such as sweeping floors, dusting rooms, scrubbing,
+ bed-making, washing and ironing, sewing, mending and knitting.
+ {107}
+
+ "I would have the trades of dress-making, millinery, straw-plating,
+ tailoring for men, and such like, taught them.
+
+ "The art of cooking should be made a specialty, and every girl
+ should be instructed in it.
+
+ "In connection with these schools, garden plats should be
+ cultivated, and every girl should be required daily, to spend at
+ least an hour in learning the cultivation of small fruits,
+ vegetables and flowers.
+
+ "It is hardly possible to exaggerate either the personal, family or
+ society influence which would flow from these schools. Every class,
+ yea, every girl in an out-going class, would be a missionary of
+ thrift, industry, common-sense, and practicality. They would go
+ forth, year by year, a leavening power into the houses, towns and
+ villages of the Southern black population; girls fit to be the
+ wives of the honest peasantry of the South, the worthy matrons of
+ their numerous households.
+
+ "I am looking after the domestic training of the _masses_; for the
+ raising up of women meet to be the helpers of poor men, the _rank
+ and file_ of black society, all through the rural districts of the
+ South.
+
+ "A true civilization can only be attained when the life of woman is
+ reached, her whole being permeated by noble ideas, her fine taste
+ enriched by culture, her tendencies to the beautiful gratified and
+ developed, her singular and delicate nature lifted up to its full
+ capacity, and then, when all these qualities are fully matured,
+ cultivated and sanctified, all their sacred influences shall circle
+ around ten thousand firesides, and the cabins of the humblest
+ freedmen shall become the homes of Christian refinement through the
+ influence of the uplifted and cultivated black woman of the South."
+
+The above appeal is in the line of our American Missionary Association
+work. While we have higher schools and institutions for more thorough
+education, which these Negro women need as much as any women in the
+world, we are increasingly developing this idea which Dr. Crummell
+eloquently pleads.
+
+We remind our friends and those Christian women who are interested in
+the uplifting of Negro womanhood, that the American Missionary
+Association, the _ordained agency_ of the Congregational Churches for
+this work, could do much more of it if the means were forthcoming. The
+marked success of the domestic training in our schools at Tougaloo,
+Miss., Talladega, Ala., Thomasville, Ga., Memphis, Tenn., and other
+points, shows the advantage gained in the twenty-five years'
+experience which the A.M.A. has had in its work for the Negroes.
+
+We need the co-operation of all Christian women in carrying on these
+Industrial Schools already established, and to enable us to establish
+and carry forward _many more_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+{108}
+
+ YOUNG FOLKS.
+
+ WHAT SUSIE FOUND AT TOUGALOO.
+
+(SEE FEBRUARY AMERICAN MISSIONARY.)
+
+A roomful of girls of various sizes and complexions, all very much
+intent upon their work, and no one thinking just at that moment of a
+traveled fairy daughter, to adopt and love as her own, sent by a
+beneficent and tender-hearted northern "Fay." I doubt if Susie ever
+before saw so many "little women" laboring with needles and trying to
+set the troublesome stitches straight and even, to keep the thread
+from tangling and the seam clean. The results are far from perfection,
+but they are encouraging.
+
+Some of the children _wear_ thimbles, and some set them upon their desks
+and _wiggle_ the needle through without their aid. Here is a child so
+tiny that no thimble in the box will serve her. She has a delicate
+face, with big brown eyes, and her fingers are the slenderest of
+appendages to her atoms of hands. Her sister, a year or so older, has
+a round, chubby face, with plump, dimpled, brown hands, but these fat
+fingers also must grow to the smallest thimble. Here is a quiet,
+modest little girl whose five baptismal names, Cynthia Ann Finetta
+Bloomfield Celeste, furnish her nothing prettier for every day use
+than "Lusty." She could not thread a needle or tie a knot when she
+joined the Hope Band, and the second year she wore one of the smallest
+thimbles with a bit of cloth inside for "chinking" to keep it on. Here
+Susie's sympathies are drawn out towards a thin, nervous-looking
+little Frances, who has a hand and foot crippled. She walks painfully
+along to her place and holds her work at a disadvantage in the poor
+little cramped left hand, but she likes to be there with the others.
+
+Most of the heads are covered with little tight braids, on some heads
+standing at every angle, on some laid smoothly down, one braid tied to
+another. A few have their curly hair cropped close, and here is a
+little girl with a bushy mass overshadowing her lively face. She takes
+but a stitch or two until she goes up to the front and holds her work
+out for her teacher's inspection. Some time elapses before that lady
+can notice it and say, "That is pretty good, Lena; now go right on
+carefully." Lena returns slowly to her place, takes a stitch or two
+more and repeats the performance. When will the work be completed? O
+no, that is the way she used to do, but _now_--
+
+A middle-sized "Topsy" comes pushing rudely forward, tossing her head
+and whispering disagreeable things to those she has to pass, and Susy
+hopes she will not be brought into any closer relations with _her_, when
+she happens to see her tenderly fondling a broken-armed, broken-legged
+dollie, while her work is being adjusted, and thinks somewhat better
+of her. There are several Lilies and Roses in this growing garden. The
+lilies are not white and the roses are not red, but more attractive
+and interesting to their teacher's eyes than the black pansies the
+flower gardeners {109} labored so long to produce. Their teacher is
+fond of flowers and has her windows full, even in winter, but she does
+not smile upon them with such a heartful of affection as upon these,
+nor can those bask in the light of her merry face more freely. As her
+short, round figure moves down the aisle and back, and Susie gets a
+good look at her, she says to herself, "Why surely this is Mrs. Santa
+Claus! How glad I am!" and it is not a strange conclusion, for her
+figure and expression _are_ like the poet's description of dear Saint
+Nick.
+
+Here is a girl in one of the side seats a good deal taller than her
+teacher. Through the long, bright, warm summer she works in the cotton
+and the corn, alongside of father, brothers, uncles, men and women,
+boys and girls. Her hands are enlarged and roughened with toil, but
+she is taking pains to learn how to do this useful indoor work
+skillfully too.
+
+There is a goodly company of these larger girls, but Susie does not
+feel any more afraid of them, nor of "the middle-sized bears and the
+wee tiny, small bears" than did little Silverhair in the nursery tale.
+She doubts, however, if these largest ones have not laid aside
+dollies, and thinks she must look among the "leaster" ones for the
+little _step-mother_ who will respect her own little Fay-mother's
+request to "take good care of her." But when the sewing-lesson is
+ended and she notices one and another bring to light a little
+dollie-daughter to hug in her arms as she walks homeward, and sees the
+sociable interest of all the rest, she feels no further doubt about
+the mother-love in all these little Southern bosoms and resigns all
+care as to which one shall be hers, leaving the whole question to Mrs.
+Santa Claus.
+
+Perhaps some day we may call upon her when she is fully domesticated
+in her new home. There will not be many comforts and conveniences in
+that home. Possibly when we ask for Susie, her mamma will draw a
+little old box from under the head of her bed, as once when I called
+upon one of these little girls and asked her if she had a doll. It had
+lost some of its limbs and it was dressed in odds and ends, tacked
+together by the untaught little mother, but when I set the dollie on
+my knee and pretended to drink tea out of one of the tiny toy cups set
+forth from the same treasure-box, you could not find a more hilarious
+little mamma anywhere, though you should pick out one with all nursery
+stores at her command.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ A LETTER FROM ONE OF OUR INDIAN PUPILS IN NEBRASKA.
+
+SANTEE AGENCY, NEB.
+
+_Dear Eastern Friends_:--We have had five good prayer meetings during
+two weeks, and I am very glad to tell you dear friends that some of
+our school-mates said they will try and do as God wants them to do.
+And some pray who never did before. No words can tell how I felt one
+evening {110} after we came home from meeting. Just before I went up
+stairs I asked the Matron if I could talk Dakota to tell my room-mate
+about the meeting. The subject was, "What must I do to be saved?" I
+told it to her the best I could. After I was through talking I asked
+her if she understood all what I meant and she said "Yes." We both
+were silent for one minute. I was praying to God in my heart to help
+me to help this dear school-mate of mine. Then in a little while she
+said, "I believe in Jesus and now I will always try and be a
+Christian." When she said that, I couldn't do anything more, I was so
+glad that my tears came. And before we went to sleep I ask her to pray
+after I did, and she did; this was the first time she prayed in her
+own words. It was so dark and I couldn't see anything but I knew she
+was crying by the way she spoke. After long time I thought she went to
+sleep; but all at once she call my name and said, "I wish tomorrow
+morning they would sing in Dakota, '_Ring the bells in heaven, there is
+great joy to-day_.'" Dear friends we kindly ask you to remember us when
+you offer prayer to our dear God.
+
+Your friend,
+
+----
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ RECEIPTS FOR FEBRUARY, 1888.
+
+ MAINE, $1,119.63.
+
+Auburn. High St. Cong. Ch. 117.28 of which for Indian M. and 39.74
+for Chinese M. 302.85
+
+Augusta. Joel Spalding, to const. HON. WM. P. FRYE L.M. 30.00
+
+Bangor. Central Cong. Ch. 75; Hammond St. Cong. Ch., 2, for Pleasant
+Hill, Tenn. 77.00
+
+Bridgeton. By Mrs. Hale, Pkg. Basted Work, for Selma, Ala.
+
+Castine. Wm. G. Sargent, for Pleasant Hill, Tenn. 5.00
+
+Center Lebanon. Sab. Sch. Class., for Pleasant Hill, Tenn. 4.10
+
+Denmark. Box of C., for Mobile, Ala.
+
+East Orrington, Sab. Sch. 2; Miss M.F. George, 1, for Pleasant Hill,
+Tenn. 3.00
+
+Edgecomb. Cong. Ch. and Soc. 13.00
+
+Farmington Falls. By Miss Susan G. Crowell, for Freight 0.65
+
+Hampden. Cong. Ch. 4.80
+
+Harpswell. Mrs. John Dinsmore. for Pleasant Hill, Tenn. 7.00
+
+Island Falls. Miss D. Merriman, for Pleasant Hill, Tenn. 2.50
+
+Limington. Cong. Ch. 12.50
+
+Monson. Rev. R.W. Emerson, for Pleasant Hill, Tenn. 5.00
+
+Newcastle. Mrs. Wm. Heath, for Pleasant Hill, Tenn. 1.00
+
+New Gloucester. Ladies of Cong. Ch., Bbl. and Box of C., 1.75 for
+Freight, for Selma, Ala. 1.75
+
+New Sharon, Cong. Ch. 3.00
+
+North Bridgeton. Cong. Ch. 2.25
+
+Norway. Mrs. Amos. I. Holt, Bbl. of C., for Wilmington, N.C.; ---- 2,
+for Freight 2.00
+
+Orkland. H.T. and S.E. Buck, 20; Mrs. Trott, 3; "A Friend," 1 24.00
+
+Portland. "A Friend" (10 of which for Rosebud Indian M.) 15.00
+
+Saco. First Parish Ch. and Soc., to const. MRS. ELLA C. INGALLS L.M.
+30.00
+
+Scarboro. Cong. Ch. 5.16
+
+Skowhegan. Ladies of Miss'y Soc., Bbl. of C., for Selma, Ala.
+
+South Paris. by Mrs. Austin, Pkg. Work, for Selma, Ala.
+
+Union. 2 Classes, little girls in Sab. Sch., by Mrs. F.V. Norcross for
+Pleasant Hill, Tenn. 5.00
+
+Wells. B. Maxwell. 25.00
+
+Westbrook. Second Cong. Ch. 25.57
+
+Wilton. Ladies of Cong. Ch., Bbl. of C., for Selma, Ala.
+
+Yarmouthville. Rev. Amasa Loring, for Pleasant Hill, Tenn. 2.00
+
+----. "Friend in Maine," bal. to const. MRS. JULIA A. MERRILL L.M.
+10.50
+
+By Mrs. C.A. Woodbury, Treas. W.A. to A.M.A., for Woman's Work:
+
+Ladies of Maine 500.00
+
+ NEW HAMPSHIRE, $291.01.
+
+Amherst. Rev. A.J. McGown 10.00
+
+Auburn. Benjamin Chase, for Indian M. 2.00
+
+Candia. Cong. Ch. and Soc. 17.50
+
+Colebrook. "A Friend," Pkg. of Coats, Val. 16.16.
+
+East Derry, First Ch. 18.03
+
+East Jaffrey. "A Friend" 15.00
+
+Enfield. Cong. Ch. and Soc. 5.00
+
+Epping. Cong. Ch. 37.00
+
+Goffstown. Bbl. of C., Val. 30, for Greenwood, S.C., 1.40 for Freight
+1.40
+
+Great Falls. Mrs. J.A. Stickney, Bbl. and Box of C. and Christmas
+gifts, for Storrs Sch., Atlanta, Ga.
+
+Greenfield. Cong. Ch. 15.50
+
+Greenfield. "Friends" for Storrs Sch. 8.50
+
+Greenland. Cong. Ch. 15.56
+
+Hancock. By Miss B.D. Robertson 5.63
+{111}
+
+Henniker. By Miss B.D. Robertson 5.80
+
+Lyme. Cong. Ch. and Soc. 19.81
+
+Manchester. First Cong. Ch. and Soc., to const. ALLEN L. FRENCH L.M.
+53.18
+
+Mason. Ladies of Cong. Ch., Bbl. of C., for Storrs Sch., Atlanta, Ga.
+
+Nashua. Miss Sarah Kendall, for Greenwood, S.C. 3.00
+
+Nashua. 2 Bbls. of C., for Greenwood, S.C., 2 for Freight 2.00
+
+Newport. Cong. Ch. 40.10
+
+Pittsfield. Box and Bbl. of C., etc., for Marion, Ala.
+
+South Newmarket. For Freight 2.50
+
+West Lebanon. Tilden Sem., Box of C. and Christmas Gifts, for Storrs
+Sch., Atlanta, Ga.
+
+By George Swain:
+
+Amherst. Cong. Ch. 1.50
+
+Greenville. Cong. Ch. 10.00
+
+Mason. Mrs. P.S. Wilson 2.00
+
+.----
+
+.13.50
+
+ VERMONT. $174.06.
+
+Bethel. Sab. Sch. of Cong. Ch., for McIntosh, Ga. 3.43
+
+East Hardwick. O. Paine 0.50
+
+Fairhaven. For McIntosh, Ga. 5.35
+
+Irasburg. Mrs. J.E. Chamberlin 5.00
+
+Jamaica. Ladies, for McIntosh, Ga. by Mrs. Ellen D. Wild 2.00
+
+Lyndon. Dr. L.W. Hubbard 2.00
+
+Middlebury. Bbl. of C., and 2 for McIntosh, Ga. 2.00
+
+Montpeller. Bbl. of C., for Storrs Sch., Atlanta, Ga.
+
+North Thetford. Cong. Ch. 7.00
+
+Norwich. Cong. Ch., 15; "A Friend," 5 20.00
+
+Peru. Dea. Edmund Batchelder, 3; Rev. A.B. Peffers, 2. 5.00
+
+Pittsford. Mrs. Nancy P. Humphrey 10.00
+
+Post Mills. Cong. Ch. (3 of which for McIntosh, Ga.) 8.00
+
+Quechee. Bbl. of C. and 1.75 for McIntosh, Ga. 1.75
+
+Saint Johnsbury East. Cong. Ch. 6.50
+
+Shoreham. R.H. Holmes 5.00
+
+Stratford. Cong, Ch. 25.00
+
+Townshend. Cong. Ch. (5 of which from Mrs. Anna Rice) 25.53
+
+Wells River. Cong. Ch. 20.00
+
+West Brattleboro. Ladies of Cong. Ch., 15; A.L. Grout, 5, for
+McIntosh, Ga. 20.00
+
+ MASSACHUSETTS, $5,925.07
+
+Amesbury. Union Evang. Ch. 4.03
+
+Amherst. "A Friend," to const. JOHN RICHARDS L.M. 30.00
+
+Andover. Rev. F.W. Greene, 20; A Friend, 10 30.00
+
+Andover. Juv. Miss'y Soc. of West Parish, for Indian Student Aid 15.00
+
+Andover. Ladies of Free Ch., Bbl. of C., for Marion, Ala.
+
+Ashfield. "A Friend" 1.16
+
+Auburn. Infant Class. Sab. Sch. of Cong. Ch., for Conn. Ind'l Sch.,
+Ga. 7.00
+
+Belchertown. Mrs. D.B. Bruce, to const. REV. CHARLES R. BRUCE L.M.
+30.00
+
+Beverly. Dane St. Sab. Sch., for Student Aid, Fisk U. 50.00
+
+Boston. J.H. Nichols, A.A. Lawrence and S.W. Marston, Val. Sch. Books
+and Sch. Apparatus
+
+Dorchester. Miss Mary A. Tutle, for Marie Adlof Sch'p Fund 0.40
+
+Jamaica Plain. Miss Nellie Riley, Pkg cards, etc., for Straight U.
+----
+
+.0.40
+
+Boxboro. Cong. Ch. 15.00
+
+Boxford. A Friend, for Ch., Corbin, Ky. 5.00
+
+Brimfield. Sab. Sch. of Cong. Ch., for Student Aid, Fisk U. 10.60
+
+Buckland. First Cong. Ch., for Sherwood, Tenn. 4.00
+
+Cambridgeport. Miss Hannah E. Moore 8.00
+
+Chelsea. Y.P.S.C.E. of First Cong. Ch., for Student Aid, Fisk U. 7.50
+
+Chelsea. Miss E. Davenport 5.00
+
+Chelsea. Mrs. Emma B. Evans, for Indian M. 5.00
+
+Clinton. Young People's Mite Soc., for Indian Sch'p 43.00
+
+Cohasset. Second Cong. Ch. and Soc. 31.33
+
+Cummington. Mrs. H.M. Porter 3.00
+
+Dalton. Sab. Sch. of Cong. Ch., for Student Aid, Williamsburg, Ky.
+45.00
+
+Dracut. First Cong. Ch. 10.00
+
+Dunstable. Cong. Ch. and Soc. 30.74
+
+East Douglas. Second Cong. Ch. and Soc. 49.97
+
+East Weymouth. Ch. and Sab. Sch., for Pleasant Hill, Tenn. 50.00
+
+Georgetown. First Cong. Ch. and Soc. 33.50
+
+Globe Village. Young Helpers of Evan. Free Ch., for Student Aid, Fisk
+U. 25.00
+
+Greenwich. Daniel Parker, deceased, by Mrs. M.P. Estey 5.00
+
+Groton. Ladies' Benev. Soc., by Mrs. Caroline Blood, for Freight 2.00
+
+Hampshire Co. "A Friend" 5.00
+
+Haverhill. Sab. Sch. of West Cong. Ch., for Freight 3.00
+
+Hyde Park. Woman's H.M.U. and Children's M. Soc. of First Cong. Ch.,
+for Tougaloo U., and to const. MISS ALICE GRAY L.M. 30.00
+
+Ipswich. South Cong. Ch. 20.00
+
+Lakeville. Mrs. C.L. Ward 25.00
+
+Lawrence. Lawrence St. Ch. and Soc. 150.00
+
+Long Meadow. "A Friend," for Indian M. 1.00
+
+Lowell. John St. Cong. Ch., 41.92; "A Friend in Elliot Ch." 5; Geo. C.
+Osgood, M.D., 1.50 48.42
+
+Lowell. Ladies' Benev. Soc. of First Cong. Ch., Bbl. of C., for
+Wilmington, N.C.
+
+Malden. Infant Sab. Sch., for Straight U. 10.00
+
+Manchester. Cong. Ch. and Soc. 20.75
+
+Mansfield. Ladies' Miss'y Soc., for Wilmington, N.C. 8.17
+
+Middlefield. Cong. Ch. 28.00
+
+Monson. Mrs. Abbie G. Smith 5.00
+
+Neponset. Stone Mission Circle of Trin. Cong. Ch., for Student Aid,
+Wilmington, N.C. 10.00
+
+Newburyport. "Friends," for Mountain Work 3.00
+
+Norfolk. Cong. Ch. 2.14
+
+North Abington. Cong. Ch. 5.00
+
+North Adams. "A Friend" 10.00
+
+Northhampton. "C" 100.00
+
+Northbridge. Cong. Ch. 10.00
+
+North Brookfield. Freight on Box to Pleasant Hill, Tenn. 4.60
+
+North Leominister. Mrs. S.F. Houghton, to const. REV. F.A. BALCOM L.M.
+30.00
+
+Peabody. Sab. Sch. of South Cong. Ch., for Indian M. 50.00
+
+Peabody. Sab. Sch. of First Cong. Ch., Box Books and Christmas Gifts,
+for Sherwood, Tenn.
+
+Pepperell. Ladies of Cong. Soc., Bbl. of C., for Greenwood, S.C., 2
+for Freight 2.00
+
+Randolph. Collected by Mrs. J.C. Labaree, 30; Y.L. Miss'y Soc,. Bbl.
+of C., for Tougaloo, U. 30.00
+
+Randolph. Annie T. and Marion Belcher 10.00
+
+Reading. Cong. Ch. 18.00
+
+Royalston. "A Friend," 10; ----, Bbl. of C., for Greenwood, S.C. 10.00
+
+Royalston. First Cong. Ch. 2.50
+
+Somerset. Cong. Ch. 2.00
+
+Somerville. Sab. Sch. of Franklin St. Cong. Ch., for Indian Student
+Aid, add'l 40.00
+{112}
+
+Somerville. Winter Hill Cong. Ch., 17.50; Day St. Ch., 10.50 28.00
+
+Somerville. Ladies of Cong. Ch., for Freight 3.35
+
+South Amherst. South Cong. Ch. 6.12
+
+South Braintree. Cong. Ch. 11.00
+
+Southington. Ladies' Benev. Soc., 2 Bbls. of C., for Tougaloo, Miss
+
+South Weymouth. Children's Soc., Bbl. of Christmas Gifts
+
+Spencer. Mrs. G.H. Marsh's S.S. Class, for Wilmington, N.C. 7.00
+
+Springfield. "H.M." 1000.00
+
+Taunton. Union Cong. Ch. 27.50
+
+Waltham. Trin. Cong. Ch. 15.80
+
+Waltham. Sab. Sen. Class, for Storrs Sch. Atlanta, Ga. 3.00
+
+Warren. Sab. Sch. of Cong. Ch., for Student Aid, Tillotson C. & N.
+Inst. 42.00
+
+Watertown. Mrs. M. Pryor 0.50
+
+Wellesley. Cong. Ch. and Soc 123.14
+
+Wellesley. Wellesley College, to const. GEORGE W. CABLE L.M. 45.00
+
+Wellesley. "Friends" in Wellesley Col., for Marion, Ala 26.00
+
+West Boylston. First Cong. Ch. and Soc. 9.00
+
+Westhampton. ladies' Benev. Soc., for Tougaloo U 10.00
+
+Westminster. "Cheerful Givers," for Student Aid, Fisk U 5.00
+
+West Newton. Earnest Workers, for Student Aid, Storrs Sch 5.00
+
+West Springfield. Mrs. Lucy m. Bagg, for Pleasant Hill, Tenn 50.00
+
+Weymouth. Sab. Sch. of Cong. Ch., for Pleasant Hill, Tenn 55.00
+
+Whitman. Cong. Ch. and Soc. 77.00
+
+Winchendon. Sab. Sch. of Cong. Ch., for Pleasant Hill, Tenn 20.00
+
+Winchester. Cong. Ch. and Soc. 19.59
+
+Worchester. Old So. Ch., to const. GEO. R. BLISS and MRS. GEO. M.
+PIERSE L.M.'s 61.26
+
+Yarmouth. Rev. John W. Dodge, for Pleasant Hill, Tenn 25.00
+-------------- $2,925 07
+
+LEGACY.
+
+Whitinsville. Estate of Chas. P. Whitin, by Edward Whitin, Ex. 3000.00
+-------------- $5,925 07
+
+CLOTHING, ETC., RECEIVED AT BOSTON OFFICE.
+
+Farmington Falls, Me. By Miss Susan G. Crosswell, Box, for
+Williamsburg, Ky
+
+Litchfield, Me. Ladies' Aid Soc., Bbl., for Williamsburg, Ky
+
+Brookfield, Mass. Mrs. R.B. Montague. Bbl., for Sherwood, Tenn
+
+Cambridgeport, Mass. Miss Lacena Palmer, Basted Patchwork
+
+Cambridgeport, Mass. By Mrs. R.L. Snow, Box and Bbl., for Tougaloo U
+
+Haverhill, Mass. West Cong. Sab. Sch., Bbl., for Talladega C.
+
+Hyde Park, Mass. W.H.M.U., of First Cong. Ch., Bbl., Val. 40 for
+Tougaloo U.
+
+Roxbury, Mass. Mrs. Arthur W. Tuffts, Box, for Sherwood, Tenn
+
+Somerville, Mass. Mission Circle of Franklin St. Ch., Bbl., for Santee
+Indian M.
+
+ RHODE ISLAND, $448.63.
+
+East Providence. Samuel Belden, for Atlanta U 100.00
+
+Newport. United Cong. Ch. 34.68
+
+Pawtucket. "Friends," Cong. Ch., for Indian M. 105.00
+
+Providence. Sam. Sch. of Union Cong. Ch., 50 for Indian M. and 25 for
+Williamsburg Ky 75.00
+
+Providence. Union Cong. Ch. and Soc. 131.87
+
+Riverside. Riverside Cong. Ch 2.08
+
+ CONNECTICUT, $2,001.63.
+
+Berlin. "A Friend," 70; The Misses Churchill, 2, for Student Aid,
+Tougaloo U. 72.00
+
+Branford. E. Davis 1.00
+
+Bridgeport. First Cong. Ch 129.76
+
+Bristol. Sab. Sch. Class, for Indian Sch'p 14.00
+
+Columbia. Ladies' Miss'y Soc., 3, and Bbl. of C., for Louisville, Ky
+3.00
+
+Danbury. "A Friend," for Lexington, Ky. 50.00
+
+East Canaan. Cong. Ch. 5.00
+
+East Hartford. Sab. Sch. of Cong. Ch., 29.77 and Box of Christmas
+Gifts, for Student Aid, Williamsburg, Ky 29.77
+
+East Wallingford. Mrs. Benj. Hall 3.50
+
+Enfield. Sab Sch. of First Cong. Ch., for Indian Sch'p Fund 25.00
+
+Fairfield. Sab. Sch. of Cong. Ch., for Tougaloo U 25.00
+
+Gaylordsville. Miss Grace Hendricks, for Tillotson C. & N. Inst. 10.00
+
+Glastonbury. "Friends," for Indian M. 217.00
+
+Hartford. Teachers and Scholars, Sab. Sch. of Asylum Hill Cong. Ch.,
+12.50 for Santee Indian Sch.; 10 for Atlanta U.; 5 for Chinese Sch.
+Cal. 27.50
+
+Hartford. Sab. Sch. of Windsor Av. Cong. Ch., for Student Aid, Fisk U
+20.00
+
+Lakeville. Mrs. S.C. Robbins 4.50
+
+Ledyard. Cong. Ch. and Soc 22.77
+
+Mansfield Center. Ladies' Soc. of Cong. Ch., Half Bbl, of C., etc.,
+for Storrs Sch., Atlanta, Ga
+
+Middletown. Sab. Sch of First Cong. Ch., for Indian M. 25.00
+
+Milton. Cong. Ch. 5.00
+
+Naugatuck. "Young Friends," for Indian Sch'p 70.00
+
+New Britian. Miss Mary L. Stanley, 9 for Student Aid; Miss Mary L.
+Stanley and Miss Daniels, Box of C, for Williamsburg, Ky 9.00
+
+New haven. "A Friend" 10.00
+
+New Haven. Davenport Ch., for Indian M 5.50
+
+New Haven. First Ch., Miss Barnes' S.S. Class and Others. Box for Jones'
+Kindergarten, Storrs Sch
+
+New London. "Member of Second Ch." 1.00
+
+Norfolk "A Friend" 4.50
+
+North Branford. Sab. Sch., for Oaks, N.C. 20.00
+
+North Coventry. Sab. Sch. of Cong. Ch., for Student Aid, Williamsburg,
+Ky 24.00
+
+Norwalk. Miss C.L. Marsh, for Tillotson C. & N. Inst 10.00
+
+Norwich. Sab. Sch. of Second Cong. Ch., for Santee Indian M. 50.87
+
+Norwich. Sab. Sch. of Second Cong. Ch 2.08
+
+Poquonock. Willing Workers of Cong. Ch., for Student Aid, Williamsburg,
+Ky. 9.00
+
+Salisbury. Sab. Sch. of Cong. Ch., for Indian M 12.50
+
+Sharon. John H. Cleaveland 5.00
+
+Simsbury. Miss'y Soc. for Freight 3.00
+
+South Coventry. Dea. and Mrs. Kingsbury, 10; Miss Louisa Lord, 5 for
+Williamsburg, Ky 15.00
+
+South Glastonbury. Cong. Ch. and Sab. Sch. 10.58
+
+Southington. First Cong. Ch., for Thomasville, Ga 1.50
+
+Southport. "A Friend" 30.00
+
+Southport. Sab. Sch. of Cong. Ch., for Indian M 8.92
+
+Thomaston. Cong. Ch. 35.15
+
+Thompsonville. Mrs. J.C. Simpson, 5; Miss Maggie Drigg, 5, for Student
+Aid, Straight U 10.00
+
+Unionville. First Ch. of Christ 37.92
+
+Unionville. "A Friend," Communion Service, 8 pieces, for Ch., Austin,
+Tex
+
+Warren. Cong. Ch. 21.00
+
+Waterbury. First Cong. Ch. 200.86
+
+Waterbury. Ladies' Benev. Soc., First Cong. Ch., for Conn. Ind'l Sch.,
+Ga 25.00
+{113}
+
+Waterbury. "A Friend," for Santee Indian M. 50.00
+
+Waterbury. Sunshine Circle, for Indian M. 5.00 West Hartford. "S.H.,"
+for Indian M. 10.00
+
+West Hartland. Cong. Ch., for Conn. Ind'l Sch., Ga. 6.00
+
+Weston. Cong. Ch. 10.00
+
+Windham. Ladies' Soc. Cong. Ch., Box of C., etc., for Thomasville.,
+Ga.
+
+Woodbridge. Cong. Ch. 14.83
+
+Woodbury. Ladies' Miss. Soc. of South Cong. Ch., for Conn. Ind'l Sch.,
+Ga. 25.00 Woman's Home Missionary Union of Conn., by Mrs. S.M.
+Hotchkiss, Sec.:
+
+Kent. Sab. Sch. of Cong, Ch., for Mountain White Work 20.00
+
+New Haven. Ladies' Miss'y Soc. of College St. Ch., for Conn. Ind'l
+Sch. 35.00
+
+------- 55.00
+
+--------- $1,497.96
+
+LEGACIES.
+
+Durham. Estate of Dea. Gaylord Newton, by H.G. Newton, to const. HENRY
+G. NEWTON, MISS LOIS CAMP and THOMAS R. NOBLE L.M.'s 100.00
+
+New Haven. Estate of Mary Dutton, by Samuel D. Gilbert, Ex. 100.00
+
+Woodbury. Estate of Sarah J. Deming, by Anson A. Root, Adm. 303.67
+
+--------- $2,001 63
+
+ NEW YORK, $1,676.98.
+
+Adams Basin. Mrs. H. Clark 5.00
+
+Aquebogue. Cong. Ch. 11.00
+
+Binghamton. Cong. Bible Sch., for Student Aid, Fisk U. 25.00
+
+Brooklyn. Sab. Sch. of Tompkins Av. Cong. Ch., for Atlanta U., to
+const. REV. ROBERT R. MEREDITH, D.D., REV. GEO. F. PENTECOST, D.D.,
+HENRY T. HOLT and MRS. ELMA M. STEBBINS L.M.'s 123.00
+
+Brooklyn, Ladies' Circle, Lee Av. Cong. Ch., 22; South Bushwick Sab.
+Sch., 12; Daughters of the King, Lee Av., Cong. Ch., 7; Penny Offering
+Park Av. Sab. Sch., 5; Mrs. Anna Pollock, 3, for Student Aid. Mrs.
+Sarah Wilde, 10; Miss Sarah Hulst, 5; Daughters or the King, Lee Av.
+Cong. Sab. Sch., Pkg. of C.; Flossie Bringham, 1; Carrie Strong, 1,
+for Student Aid. Ladies' Circle, Lee Av. Cong. Ch., 2 Boxes of C.;
+South Bushwick Reformed Sab. Sch., 2 Bbls. of C. and Box of Books, for
+Williamsburg, Ky. 66.00
+
+Brooklyn. Sab. Sch. of Central Cong. Ch., for Santee Indian M. 37.50
+
+Brooklyn. Park Cong. Ch., 16.43; A.G. Brinkckerhoff, 5 21.43
+
+Fairport. J.E. Howard 50.00
+
+Flushing. First Cong. Ch. 56.00
+
+Gloversville. Cong. Ch. 235.34
+
+Honeoye. Cong. Ch. 26.00
+
+Kiantone. Cong. Ch. 4.50
+
+Lawrenceville. Lucius Hulburd 5.00
+
+Lima. Mrs. Orson Warner 2.00
+
+Lisbon. First Cong. Ch., 8.51; Mrs. Wm. Sheldon, 1 9.51
+
+Miller's Place. Mount Sinai Cong. Ch. 12.00
+
+New York. Miss D.E. Emerson, for Student Aid, Tougaloo U. 25.00
+
+New York. "A Friend," Christmas Gift, for Williamsburg, Ky. 5.00
+
+Paris. Cong. Ch. 24.00
+
+Perry Centre. Cong. Soc., for Freight 1.25
+
+Riverhead. Cong. Ch. 10.30
+
+Rochester. Mrs. E.R. Andrews 4.50
+
+Union Valley. Wm. C. Angel 5.00
+
+Walton. First Cong. Ch. 69.82
+
+Walton. Cong. Sab. Sch., Christmas Gifts, 33.93, and 2 Bbls. of C.,
+etc.; H.E. St. John, 9; Miss Jennie Hull, 2, for Student Aid,
+Williamsburg, Ky. 44.93
+
+West Bloomfield. Cong. Ch. 20 of which for Student Aid, Fisk U. 41.00
+
+Woodbridge. First Cong. Ch. 8.37
+
+--------
+
+$938.45
+
+LEGACY.
+
+Waverly. Estate of Mrs. Phebe Bepburne, Howard Elmer, Ex. 738.53
+
+---------
+
+$1,676.98
+
+ NEW JERSEY, $36.91.
+
+Colt's Neck. Reformed Ch. 5.16
+
+East Orange. "True Blue Card," Collected by Mary Brenner 1.00
+
+Lakewood. Rev. Geo. and E.O. Langdon 3.00
+
+Newark. "X.Y." 1.75
+
+Newark. "A Sister in Christ," Box Papers, etc., for Sherwood, Tenn.
+
+Upper Montclair. Ladies' Aid Soc. of Cong. Ch., Bbl. Of C., for Storrs
+Sch., Atlanta, Ga.
+
+Westfield. "A Friend" 1.00
+
+----. "Heart's Content" 25.00
+
+ PENNSYLVANIA, $7.00.
+
+Braddock. Thomas Addenbrook, Box Books, etc., for Sherwood, Tenn.
+
+Guy's Mills. Mrs. F. Maria Guy 2.00
+
+Linesville. M.T. Donaldson 5.00
+
+ OHIO, $407.82.
+
+Austinburg. Cong. Ch. 11.00
+
+Berea. First Cong. Ch. 6.50
+
+Cleveland. Jennings Av. Cong. Ch., 75; Plymouth Cong. Ch., 72.16; John
+Jay Low, 20 167.16
+
+Cleveland. Mount Zion Sab. Sch., for Student Aid, Fisk U. 8.64
+
+Cleveland. Sab. Sch. First Cong. Ch., Box of C., for Tillotson C. & N.
+Inst.
+
+Medina. W.H. Sipher 2.00
+
+Mount Vernon. Sab. Sch. of Cong. Ch. 19.37
+
+North Ridgeville. Ladies' Benev. Soc., Box Canned Fruit; Cong. Sab.
+Sch., Bbl. of Goods, for Williamsburg, Ky.
+
+Oberlin. Sab. Sch. of First Cong. Ch., 10; "A Friend," 12.50; Mrs.
+L.G.B. Hills, 5 27.50
+
+Oberlin. Sab. Sch. of Second Cong. Ch., for Lexington, Ky. 15.00
+
+Oberlin. Mrs. Vance, for Student Aid, Williamsburg, Ky. 5.00
+
+Oberlin. Ladies of Cong. Ch., Bbl. of C., for Storrs Sch., Atlanta,
+Ga.
+
+Painesville. First Cong. Ch. 27.90
+
+Painesville. Y.L.M. Soc., of First Cong. Ch., for Fort Berthold Indian
+M. 4.75
+
+South Salem. Daniel S. Pricer 5.00
+
+Toledo. Miss A.M. Nicholas, for Wilmington, N.C.. 5.00
+
+West Andover. "Friends," by L.L. Coleman 10.00
+
+Willoughby. Lyndon Freeman 1.50
+
+Ohio Woman's Home Missionary Union, by Mrs. Phebe A. Crafts, Treas.,
+for Woman's Work:
+
+Burton. Mrs. A.S. Hotchkiss 3.00
+
+Cleveland. L.H.M.S., of Euclid Av. Ch. 20.00 Cleveland. Euclid Av.
+Ch., L.M. Soc. 20.00
+
+Columbus. Eastwood Ch., Y.L.M. Soc. 10.00
+
+Columbus. Eastwood Ch., "Family Mite Box." 12.00
+
+Willoughby. Mrs. Mary P. Hastings 26.00
+
+----- 91.00
+{114}
+
+ INDIANA, $25.00.
+
+Bloomington, Mrs. A.B. Woodford, for Student Aid, Fisk U. 5.00
+
+New Corydon. Geo. Storz 20.00
+
+ ILLINOIS, $468.20.
+
+Albion. James Green 10.00
+
+Bunker Hill. D.E. Pettengill 1.00
+
+Canton. Cong. Ch. 42.20
+
+Chicago. Sedgwick St. Sab. Sch. 25.00
+
+Chicago. Major E.D. Redington, for Lexington, Ky. 17.00
+
+Earlville. Mrs. Rindell, 1; Mabel Rindell, 20 cts.; Bertie Rindell, 15
+cts. 1.35
+
+Galesburg. Sab. Sch. of Cong. Ch., for Fisk U. 10.00
+
+Geneseo. First Cong. Ch. 145.18
+
+Greenville. Ladies' Miss'y Circle, Box of C., Val. 25
+
+Joliet. "A Thank Offering" 5.00
+
+La Grange. W.M.S., for Chinese M. 5.00
+
+Lake View. Church of the Redeemer 22.55
+
+Lyonsville. Cong. Ch. 5.60
+
+Naperville. Prof. Geo. W. Sindlinger, for Pleasant Hill, Tenn. 10.00
+
+Odell. Mrs. H.E. Dana 10.00
+
+Ottawa. First Cong. Ch. 32.66
+
+Princeton. Mrs. R.D. Harrison, for Student Aid, Fisk U. 1.00
+
+Prospect Park. Cong. Ch., in part 7.00
+
+Shabbona. Woman's Miss'y Soc., 2 Boxes Papers, etc., for Sherwood,
+Tenn.
+
+Turner. Mrs. R. Currier 1.00
+
+Wheaton. College Ch. of Christ, in part 28.81
+
+Winnebago. Ladies' Miss'y Soc., for Woman's Work 9.00
+
+Woman's Home Missionary Union of Ill., Mrs. B.L. Leavitt, Treas., for
+Woman's Work:
+
+Chicago. L.M. Soc. of New Eng. Ch. 30.00
+
+Oak Park. Ladies' Benev. Circle 23.00
+
+Rockford. Peter Holman Fund, First Ch. 20.65
+
+Sheffield. Aux. 5.20
+
+------ 78.85
+
+ MICHIGAN, $90.01
+
+Allendale. Cong. Ch. 2.75
+
+Ann Arbor. Ladies' Miss'y Soc. of Cong. Ch., Bbl. of C., for Athens,
+Ala.
+
+Banks. Cong. Ch. 8.70
+
+Cheboygan. First Cong. Ch., add'l 0.97
+
+Grand Rapids. First Cong. Ch. 25.50
+
+Hopkins. First Ch. 6.50
+
+Laingsburg. Cong. Ch. 4.50
+
+Lansing. Cong. Ch. 7.00
+
+Northville. D. Pomeroy 5.00
+
+Salem. Miss'y Soc. of Second Cong. Ch., for Athens, Ala. 5.59
+
+South Haven. First Cong. Ch. 14.50
+
+----. "Muskegon" 2.00
+
+Woman's Home Missionary Union of Mich., by Mrs. E.F. Grabill, Treas.,
+for Woman's Work:
+
+Bay City. W.H.M.S. 2.00
+
+Cheboygan. W.H.M.S. 5.00
+
+------ 7.00
+
+ WISCONSIN, $222.03.
+
+Baraboo. Miss'y Soc., Bbl. of C., for Storrs Sch., Atlanta, Ga.
+
+Boscobel. Cong. Ch. 2.25
+
+Bristol and Paris. Christian Endeavor Soc., 2.55; Ladies' Soc. of
+Cong. Ch., Bbl. of C., for Thomasville, Ga. 2.55
+
+Brodhead. Cong. Ch. 4.27
+
+Darlington. Cong. Ch. ..7.33
+
+Fond du Lac. First Cong. Ch., 2 Bbls. C., for Storrs Sch., Atlanta,
+Ga.
+
+Green Bay. Ladies' Miss'y Soc., Bbl. of C., for Austin, Tex.
+
+Janesville. "Friends," Box of C., for Marion, Ala.
+
+La Crosse. "A Friend," 25; Cong. Ch., 10 35.00
+
+Lake Geneva. Mrs. Geo. Allen 5.00
+
+Leeds. Cong. Ch. 5.00
+
+Mazo Manie. Cong. Ch. 7.07
+
+Milwaukee. Plymouth Ch. 40.58
+
+Peshtigo. Cong. Ch. 3.22
+
+Sparta. Cong. Ch. 40.41
+
+Stoughton. Miss Sewell's S.S. Class, Christmas Gifts, for Austin,
+Texas
+
+Waukesha. "Friends," for Student Aid, Marion Ala. 15.00
+
+Wauwatosa. Ladies' Miss'y Soc., Box of C., for Austin, Texas
+
+Windsor. Cong. Ch. 18.75
+
+Woman's Home Missionary Union of Wis., for Woman's Work:
+
+Green Bay. W.M.S. 9.00
+
+Milwaukee. W.H.M.U., Grand Av. Ch. 25.00
+
+Stoughton. Sab. Sch. Birthday Box 1.60
+
+------- 35.60
+
+ IOWA, $204.31
+
+Burlington. Mercy Lewis, for Chinese M. 0.50
+
+Cedar Rapids. Sab. Sch. of First Cong. Ch., Birthday Offerings 1.97
+
+Cherokee. Sab. Sch. of Cong. Ch., for Student Aid, Straight U. 10.00
+
+Chester Center. Cong. Ch. 9.85
+
+Danville. L. Mix 5.00
+
+Denmark. Sab. Sch. of Cong. Ch. 14.50 Farragut. Mrs. L.S. Chapin, for
+Woman's Work 2.00
+
+Garnaville. Rev. G.M. Porter 3.00
+
+Hull. Mrs. E.C. Davidson, for Student Aid, Williamsburg, Ky. 6.00
+
+Iowa City. Sab. Sch., for Pleasant Hill, Tenn. 15.00
+
+Iowa City. Mrs. R.A. McClain 5.00
+
+McGregor. J.H. Ellsworth 10.00
+
+McGregor. S.S. Class, by Mrs. S.J. Peterson, for Student Aid, Straight
+U. 5.00
+
+McGregor. Mrs. C.E. Daniels, for Freight 2.30
+
+New Hampton. First Cong. Ch. 12.30
+
+Newton. Wittenberg Sab. Sch. 14.78
+
+Sioux City. First Cong. Ch. 44.00
+
+Stuart. Bbl. of C., for Savannah, Ga.
+
+Tabor. Cong. Ch., for Tillotson C. & N. Inst. 10.00
+
+Tipton. Mrs. M.D. Clapp 3.50
+
+Tyrone. Wm. Griffiths 0.25
+
+Woman's Home Missionary Union of Iowa, for Woman's Work:
+
+Grinnell. W.H.M.U. 3.68
+
+Le Mars. " " 5.73
+
+McGregor. L.M.S. 6.95
+
+Osage. W.M.S. 3.00
+
+Tipton. L.M.S. 10.00
+
+------- 29.36
+
+ MINNESOTA, $220.25.
+
+Brainerd. First Cong. Ch. 12.00
+
+Hancock. Sab. Sch. Miss'y Soc., for Savannah, Ga. 5.00
+
+Leech Lake. C.P. Allen, M.D. 30.00
+
+Plainview. Cong. Ch. 14.11
+
+Plainview. Box of S.S. Supplies, for Corbin, Ky.
+
+Rochester. W.J. Eaton, 50; Cong. Ch., 40.87 90.87
+
+Sauk Center. Sab. Sch. of Cong. Ch. 8.00
+
+Sauk Center. "Little Lights," Box Papers, etc., for Jonesboro, Tenn.
+
+Stillwater. Grace Cong. Ch. 2.92
+
+Wabasha. Cong. Sab. Sch. and Y.P.S.C.E. 27.25
+{115}
+
+Worthington. Union Cong. Ch. 21.55
+
+Zumbrota. Cong. Ch. 8.55
+
+ MISSOURI, $236.60.
+
+Bevier. Luella J. Hudelson 2.00
+
+Kansas City. Olivet Cong. Ch., in part 9.05
+
+St. Louis. Pilgrim Cong. Ch., 200; Third Cong. Ch., 10.55 210.55
+
+St. Louis. Mrs. R.H. Webb, for Straight U. 10.00
+
+Webster Groves. Cong. Ch. 5.00
+
+ KANSAS, $85.65.
+
+Atchison. Cong. Ch., for Tillotson C. & N. Inst. 5.00
+
+Dover. Cong. Ch. 2.80
+
+Lawrence. Second Cong. Ch., "Thank Offering" 1.00
+
+Topeka. Woman's H.M. Soc., for Storrs Sch., Atlanta, Ga. 75.00
+
+Topeka. Ladies' Miss'y Soc. 2 Bbls. of C. for Storrs Sch., Atlanta,
+Ga.
+
+Wakarusa. Cong. Ch. 1.85
+
+ DAKOTA, $5.00.
+
+Sioux Falls. W.M.S., by Mrs. Sue Fifield, Terr. Treas. 5.00
+
+ NEBRASKA, $47.00.
+
+Cowles. Cong. Ch. 2.00
+
+Omaha. First Cong. Ch. (in part) 10.00
+
+Oxford. F.A. Wood 5.00
+
+Wahoo. Cong. Ch., to const. Rev. A.A. CRESSMAN L.M. 30.00
+
+ CALIFORNIA, $62.50.
+
+Riverside. C.W. Herron's S.S. Class, for Student Aid, Tougaloo U. 8.00
+
+San Luis Obispo. Rev. E.N. Bartlett 4.50
+
+Santa Barbara. Rev. Edward Hildreth, to const. PHILO C. HILDRETH L.M.
+50.00
+
+ DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA, $70.00.
+
+Washington. "Two Members First Cong. Ch.," for Indian M., and to
+const. MRS. SARAH B.A. ROBINSON and MISS SARAH M. ROBINSON L.M.'s
+60.00
+
+Washington. Lincoln Memorial Ch. 10.00
+
+ MARYLAND, $393.16.
+
+Baltimore. First Cong. Ch. 105 of which for Indian M. 393.16
+
+ KENTUCKY, $450.86.
+
+Lexington. Tuition 314.21
+
+Williamsburg. Tuition 136.65
+
+ TENNESSEE, $1,126.03.
+
+Grand View. Tuition 45.00
+
+Jonesboro. Tuition, 22.25; County Fund, 40 62.25
+
+Memphis. Tuition 467.20
+
+Nashville. Tuition, 509.08; Rent, 6.50 515.58
+
+Pleasant Hill. Miss J.A. Calkins, 31; Mrs. Shroyer, 1; "A Friend," 1;
+"A Friend," by Mrs. Shroyer, 1, for Pleasant Hill, Tenn. 34.00
+
+Sherwood. Mrs. O.N. Alden 2.00
+
+ NORTH CAROLINA, $177.35.
+
+Raleigh. First Cong. Ch., Christmas Offering 4.85
+
+Troy. By S.D. Leak 1.00
+
+Wilmington. Tuition 163.00
+
+Wilmington. By Miss H.L. Fitts 8.50
+
+ SOUTH CAROLINA, $228.62.
+
+Charleston. Tuition 228.62
+
+ GEORGIA, $882.94.
+
+Atlanta. Storrs Sch., Tuition 295.85
+
+Atlanta. First Cong. Ch., Birthday Offerings 1.04
+
+Macon. Tuition 246.35
+
+Marietta. Ch. and Sab. Sch. 1.00
+
+McIntosh. Tuition 58.75
+
+Savannah. Tuition 207.70
+
+Thomasville. Tuition 72.25
+
+ ALABAMA, $706.35.
+
+Athens. Tuition 57.75
+
+Birmingham. Christmas Gift, Cong. Ch. 5.60
+
+Ironaton. Cong. Ch. 1.50
+
+Jenifer. Cong. Ch. 3.60
+
+Marion. Tuition, 130.50; "Southern Friend" (C.W.L.). for Marion,
+Ala., 5; Cong. Ch., 3 138.50
+
+Mobile. Tuition 288.90
+
+Selma. "Two Southern Friends," for Marion, Ala. 30.00
+
+Selma. W.M. Ass'n, Cong. Ch., for Indian M. 5.00
+
+Talladega. Tuition 176.10
+
+ FLORIDA, $80.00.
+
+Orlando. M. Marty 10.00
+
+Saint Augustine. Pub. Sch. Fund 70.00
+
+ LOUISIANA, $419.75
+
+New Orleans. Tuition 389.75
+
+New Orleans. M.L. Berger, D.D., to const himself L.M. 30.00
+
+ MISSISSIPPI, $209.65.
+
+Port Gibson. Mrs. M.S. Bradford, for Freight 1.85
+
+Tougaloo. Tuition 206.30
+
+Tougaloo. Rent 2.00
+
+ TEXAS, $127.84.
+
+Austin. Tuition, 123.84; "Friends." 4; Mr. Blatchford, Ag't, 1
+Webster's Unabridged Dictionary, 1 Webster's Academic Dictionary, for
+Tillotson C. & N. Inst. 127.84
+
+ INCOMES, $29.05.
+
+Avery Fund, for Mendi M. 29.05
+
+ CANADA, $10.00.
+
+Montreal. Chas. Alexander 5.00
+
+Toronto. Mrs. Jane Ebbs 5.00
+
+ TURKEY, $10.00.
+
+Van. Rev. Geo. C. Raynolds 10.00
+
+==========
+
+Donations 10,146.59
+
+Legacies 4,242.20
+
+Incomes 29.05
+
+Tuition 4,250.05
+
+Rents 8.50
+
+----------
+
+Total for February 18,676.39
+
+Total from Oct. 1 to Feb'y 29 110,091.90
+
+==========
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ FOR THE AMERICAN MISSIONARY.
+
+Subscriptions for February 104.41
+
+Previously acknowledged 458.09
+
+------
+
+Total 562.50
+
+======
+
+H.W. HUBBARD, Treasurer,
+
+56 Reade St., N.Y.
+{116}
+
+ * * * * *
+
+JAMES McCREERY & CO.
+
+invite special attention to the
+
+FURLEY & BUTTRUM
+
+Celebrated English Fine Merino Underwear, in all weights and grades
+for men, women and children, for the spring and summer season.
+
+ORDERS BY MAIL will receive prompt attention.
+
+BROADWAY and ELEVENTH ST.,
+
+NEW YORK.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Liquid Cottage Colors.
+
+The best MIXED PAINTS manufactured. Guaranteed to give perfect
+satisfaction if properly applied. They are heavy bodied, and for work
+that does not require an extra heavy coat, they can be thinned (with
+our Old Fashioned Kettle-boiled Linseed Oil) and still cover better
+than most of the mixed paints sold in the market, many of which have
+so little stock in them that they will not give a good solid coat.
+
+Some manufacturers of mixed paints direct NOT to rub out the paint,
+but to FLOW it on; the reason being that if such stuff were rubbed out
+there would be but little left to cover, would be transparent. Our
+Cottage Colors have great strength or body, and, like any good paint,
+should be worked out well under the brush. The covering property of
+this paint is so excellent as to allow this to be done.
+
+Put up for shipment as follows: In 3-gal. and 5-gal. bailed buckets,
+also barrels; in cans of 1/8, 1/4, 1/2, 1-gal. and 2-gal. each.
+
+Sample Cards of Colors, Testimonials and prices sent on application to
+
+Chicago White Lead & Oil Co.,
+
+Cor. Green & Fulton Streets,
+
+CHICAGO, ILL.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+6%, 7%.
+
+THE AMERICAN INVESTMENT CO. OF EMMETTSBURG, IOWA,
+
+with a PAID-UP CAPITAL of $600,000, SURPLUS $75,000, offers First
+Mortgage Loans drawing SEVEN per cent., both Principal and Interest
+FULLY GUARANTEED. Also 6 per cent. ten-year Debenture Bonds, secured
+by 105 per cent. of First Mortgage Loans held in trust by the
+MERCANTILE TRUST COMPANY, New York. 5 per cent. certificates of
+deposit for periods under one year.
+
+7 2/3% CAN BE REALIZED BY CHANGING 4 Per Ct. Government Bonds Into 6
+Per Cent. Debentures.
+
+Write for full information and reference to the Company at
+
+150 NASSAU STREET, NEW YORK.
+
+A.L. ORMSBY, Vice-President and Gen. Manager
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MUSIC IN THE SPRING
+
+There are yet some weeks of cool weather in which to prepare and
+practice music for the concluding concerts and festivals of the
+season.
+
+It is quite time to send for our complete and rich lists of EASTER
+MUSIC
+
+Now let girls and boys begin to practice the sweet CANTATAS--VOICES OF
+NATURE, or FOREST JUBILEE BAND, or MERRY COMPANY, or NEW FLORA'S
+FESTIVAL; each 40 cents, or $3.60 per dozen.
+
+Pupils of the higher schools will like DRESS REHEARSAL (50c., or $4.50
+per doz.), NEW FLOWER QUEEN (60c., or $5.40 per doz.), or HAYMAKERS
+($1.00, or $9.00 per doz.)
+
+Fine Cantatas of moderate difficulty for adults are: HEROES OF '76
+($1.00), HERBERT AND ELSA (75c.), JOSEPH'S BONDAGE ($1.00), REBECCA
+(65c.), RUTH AND BOAZ (65c.), WRECK OF HESPERUS (35c), FAIR MELUSINA
+(75c.), BATTLE OF HUNS (80c.), Send for lists.
+
+For Male Quartets and Choruses:
+
+SANGERFEST ($1.38), MALE VOICE GLEE BOOK ($1.00), EMERSON'S QUARTETS
+AND CHORUSES (60 cts.), EMERSON'S MALE VOICE GEMS ($1.00).
+
+Mailed for the Retail Price.
+
+Oliver Ditson & Co., Boston.
+
+C.H. DITSON & CO., 867 Broadway, New York.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Footnote 1: Deceased.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The American Missionary, Vol. XLII.
+April, 1888. No. 4., by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK AMERICAN MISSIONARY ***
+
+***** This file should be named 12087.txt or 12087.zip *****
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