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diff --git a/30459.txt b/30459.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..5d605dd --- /dev/null +++ b/30459.txt @@ -0,0 +1,3073 @@ +The Project Gutenberg EBook of The American Missionary -- Volume 39, No. +03, March, 1885, 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 -- Volume 39, No. 03, March, 1885 + +Author: Various + +Release Date: November 12, 2009 [EBook #30459] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ASCII + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK AMERICAN MISSIONARY, MARCH 1885 *** + + + + +Produced by Joshua Hutchinson, KarenD, and the Online +Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This +file was produced from images generously made available +by Cornell University Digital Collections.) + + + + + + +The American Missionary + +MARCH, 1885. + + VOL. XXXIX. + NO. 3. + + * * * * * + + +CONTENTS + + PAGE. + +EDITORIAL. + + THE FIGURES--FINANCIAL 67 + DEATH OF REV. G. D. PIKE, D. D. 68 + PARAGRAPHS 69 + TILLOTSON CHURCH--WORD TO MINISTERS 70 + THE TEST APPLIED 71 + RELIGIOUS CULTURE OF THE SLAVES BEFORE THE WAR 74 + A TEACHER'S APPEAL 75 + +ADDRESS AT ANNUAL MEETING. + + PREACHING THE MAIN FEATURE IN MISSIONARY WORK 76 + +THE SOUTH. + + ITINERARY FROM AUSTIN TO CORPUS CHRISTI 79 + VIEWS IN TEXAS 81 + WEEK OF PRAYER 82 + LETTER FROM STUDENT 84 + +THE CHINESE. + + LOU QUONG AT HIS HOME IN CHINA 84 + BRIDE AND BRIDEGROOM WORSHIPING ANCESTORS (cut) 86 + +BUREAU OF WOMAN'S WORK. + + WOMAN'S SOCIETIES 86 + LETTER FROM LADY MISSIONARY 87 + MONTHLY REPORT OF A TEACHER 88 + +CHILDREN'S PAGE. + + VIC'S LILIES 88 + +RECEIPTS 89 + + * * * * * + +NEW YORK: + +PUBLISHED BY THE AMERICAN MISSIONARY ASSOCIATION. + +Rooms, 56 Reade Street. + + * * * * * + +Price 50 Cents a Year, in Advance. + +Entered at the Post-Office at New York, N. Y., as second-class +matter. + + * * * * * + +American Missionary Association. + + * * * * * + +PRESIDENT, Hon. WM. B. WASHBURN, LL. D., Mass. + + +_Vice-Presidents._ + + Rev. C. L. GOODELL, D. D., Mo. + Rev. F. A. NOBLE, D. D., Ill. + Rev. A. J. F. BEHRENDS, D. D., N. Y. + Rev. ALEX. McKENZIE, D. D., Mass. + Rev. D. O. MEARS, D. D., Mass. + + +_Corresponding Secretary._ + + Rev. M. E. STRIEBY, D. D., _56 Reade Street, N. Y._ + + +_Assistant Corresponding Secretary._ + + Rev. JAMES POWELL, D. D., _56 Reade Street, N. Y._ + + +_Treasurer._ + + H. W. HUBBARD, Esq., _56 Reade Street, N. Y._ + + +_Auditors._ + + W. H. ROGERS, + PETER McCARTEE. + + +_Executive Committee._ + + JOHN H. WASHBURN, Chairman. + A. P. FOSTER, Secretary. + + _For Three Years._ + + LYMAN ABBOTT. + A. S. BARNES. + J. R. DANFORTH. + CLINTON B. FISK. + A. 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. L. WITHROW. + JOHN H. WASHBURN. + EDMUND L. CHAMPLIN. + + +_District Secretaries._ + + Rev. C. L. WOODWORTH, D. D., _21 Cong'l House, Boston_. + Rev. CHARLES W. SHELTON, _112 West Washington Street, Chicago_. + + +_Field Officers._ + + Rev. J. E. ROY, D. D., _Field Superintendent_. + Prof. ALBERT SALISBURY, _Superintendent of Education_. + + +_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 Secretary; those relating to the collecting fields, to +the District Secretaries; letters for the "American Missionary," to +the Editor, at the New York Office. + + +DONATIONS AND SUBSCRIPTIONS + +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 113 West 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. + + * * * * * + +_Advertisements._ + + * * * * * + +Below is a fac-simile of the Bottle of + +THE GENUINE + +BROWN'S GINGER. + +(SIZE REDUCED ONE FOURTH.) + + +SEE THAT THE STRIP OVER CORK IS UNBROKEN. + +[Illustration] + +Frederick Brown, Philadelphia----Established 1822. + + +--FOR-- + +CRAMPS, COLIC, STOMACH-ACHE, INDIGESTION, ETC. + + * * * * * + +Ayer's + +Cherry Pectoral + +Should be kept constantly at hand, for use in emergencies of the +household. Many a mother, startled in the night by the ominous sounds +of Croup, finds the little sufferer, with red and swollen face, +gasping for air. In such cases Ayer's Cherry Pectoral is invaluable. +Mrs. Emma Gedney, 159 West 128 st., New York, writes: "While in the +country, last winter, my little boy, three years old, was taken ill +with Croup; it seemed as if he would die from strangulation. Ayer's +Cherry Pectoral was tried in small and frequent doses, and, in less +than half an hour, the little patient was breathing easily. The +doctor said that the Pectoral saved my darling's life." Mrs. Chas. B. +Landon, Guilford, Conn., writes: "Ayer's Cherry Pectoral + + Saved My Life, + +and also the life of my little son. As he is troubled with Croup, I +dare not be without this remedy in the house." Mrs. J. Gregg, Lowell, +Mass., writes: "My children have repeatedly taken Ayer's Cherry +Pectoral for Coughs and Croup. It gives immediate relief, followed by +cure." Mrs. Mary E. Evans, Scranton, Pa., writes: "I have two little +boys, both of whom have been, from infancy, subject to violent +attacks of Croup. About six months ago we began using Ayer's Cherry +Pectoral, and it acts like a charm. In a few minutes after the child +takes it, he breathes easily and rests well. Every mother ought to +know what a blessing I have found in Ayer's Cherry Pectoral." Mrs. +Wm. C. Reid, Freehold, N. J., writes: "In our family, Ayer's +medicines have been blessings for many years. In cases of Colds and +Coughs, we take + + Ayer's Cherry Pectoral, + +and the inconvenience is soon forgotten." + + PREPARED BY + Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass. + Sold by all Druggists. + + + Happiness + +results from that true contentment which indicates perfect health of +body and mind. You may possess it, if you will purify and invigorate +your blood with Ayer's Sarsaparilla. E. M. Howard, Newport, N. H., +writes: "I suffered for years with Scrofulous humors. After using two +bottles of Ayer's Sarsaparilla, I + + Found + +great relief. It has entirely restored me to health." James French, +Atchison, Kans., writes: "To all persons suffering from Liver +Complaint, I would strongly recommend Ayer's Sarsaparilla, I was +afflicted with a disease of the liver for nearly two years, when a +friend advised me to take this medicine. It gave prompt relief, and +has cured me." Mrs. H. M. Kidder, 41 Dwight st., Boston, Mass., +writes: "For several years I have used Ayer's Sarsaparilla in my +family. I never feel safe, even + + At Home + +without it. As a liver medicine and general purifier of the blood, it +has no equal." Mrs. A. B. Allen, Winterpock, Va., writes: "My +youngest child, two years of age, was taken with Bowel Complaint, +which we could not cure. We tried many remedies, but he continued to +grow worse, and finally became so reduced in flesh that we could only +move him upon a pillow. It was suggested by one of the doctors that +Scrofula might be the cause of the trouble. We procured a bottle of + + AYER'S + Sarsaparilla + +and commenced giving it to him. It surely worked wonders, for, in a +short time, he was completely cured." + + Sold by all Druggists. + Price $1; Six bottles, $5. + + Prepared by Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, + Mass., U. S. A. + + * * * * * + +THE AMERICAN MISSIONARY. + +VOL. XXXIX. MARCH, 1885. NO. 3. + + * * * * * + +American Missionary Association. + + * * * * * + +$365,000 + +NEEDED FOR THE CURRENT YEAR. + + * * * * * + +Your Committee are convinced that not less than a THOUSAND DOLLARS a +day are imperatively demanded to perfect the admirably organized +plans of the Association, even for the present, to say nothing of the +pressing needs of the early future.-- + +[FINANCE COMMITTEE'S REPORT ADOPTED BY ANNUAL MEETING AT SALEM.] + + * * * * * + +THE FIGURES. + + _Receipts:_ Col. & Don. Estates. Total. + + Oct. 1, 1884, to Jan. 31, 1885 $66,078.97 $9,605.91 $75,684.88 + Oct. 1, 1883, to Jan. 31, 1884 69,941.52 9,809.35 79,750.87 + --------- --------- --------- + Decrease $3,862.55 $203.44 $4,065.99 + + + * * * * * + +Where the color-sergeant plants the standard, there the soldiers are +expected to rally. The Finance Committee at the Salem meeting +inscribed on the A. M. A. standard $365,000 needed for 1884-5, and +called upon the churches to advance to the support. _The Figures_ +showing receipts of our treasury indicate just how far the churches +have come up in response to the call. Had we received the $1,000 a +day recommended, our total receipts would be $123,000, as against the +$75,684.88 now reported. Will not the captains of our church hosts +rally the forces to an immediate advance? One-third of our fiscal +year has already passed. The showing is not what we had hoped, but +time enough remains to make up for the deficiency. + +Will our friends please bear these things in mind? + + * * * * * + +DEATH OF REV. G. D. PIKE, D. D. + + +In the death of Dr. Pike, which occurred in Hartford, Conn., Jan. 29, +the American Missionary Association has lost a most earnest and +successful worker. Repeated and protracted attacks of throat and lung +troubles during the last two or three years, terminating in an +illness that confined him to his room for three months, gave warning +to his friends of the approach of death. But with the hopefulness +peculiar to the disease, and especially characteristic of himself, he +entertained almost to the last the expectation of recovery. Yet death +had no terror; on the contrary, while he wished to live for the sake +of his family and the Association, he personally welcomed death with +the most joyful feelings. + +Dr. Pike was born in Topsfield, Mass., Aug. 6, 1831, graduated from +Dartmouth College in 1858, and from Andover Theological Seminary in +1861. He was ordained associate pastor with Rev. Austin Richards, D. +D., of the Olive Street Congregational Church, Nashua, N. H., April +23, 1862, and remained in that position till May 1, 1865. He was +acting pastor at East Hampton, Conn., from 1865 to 1867, and during +the latter year he entered the service of the Association as agent, +residing in Rochester, N. Y. In 1870 he became District Secretary, a +position which he filled till his death, and to which he devoted the +best energies of his life. His peculiar gifts fitted him for some +special services. During the years 1872-4 he accompanied the Jubilee +Singers in a tour through the United States and Great Britain. They +were welcomed by the royal family and by the nobility, and by large +and enthusiastic popular audiences. Their success, in its pecuniary +results, finds a fitting monument in the substantial and commodious +Jubilee Hall, at Nashville, Tenn.; and the untiring industry, the +skill and tact and energy of Mr. Pike as business manager contributed +in a large measure to this gratifying result. Before returning to +America he made a rapid trip through Egypt and Palestine. In 1881 he +assumed the editorship of the _American Missionary_, and brought to +that service a degree of variety and breadth that gave a new impulse +to the usefulness of the magazine. He devoted much thought and +research to the condition of Africa, and became so well acquainted +with it that editors of leading journals in this city and pastors of +churches sometimes sought information from him in regard to it. He +wrote two volumes on the History of the Jubilee Singers, which have +had a very wide circulation. + +Dr. Pike was eminently social and was blessed with unusual +conversational powers, and gave to others and won from them to +himself strong personal friendships. As a public speaker he was +earnest, animated and eloquent, and was gladly welcomed in the pulpit +and in the meetings of Associations and Conferences. His leading +characteristic was that of an organizer. He was perpetually devising +plans for active work and was diligent and untiring in his efforts to +carry them out. He was a man of prayer and of faith in God, which +sustained him in his constant labors, in his days of trial and in his +sickness and death. At his own request his mortal remains rest in +Nashua, the scene of his first pastorate, and his long sleep will be +with those whom he loved. By the generosity of Mrs. O. A. Woodbury a +portion of a cemetery lot was given for his burial, on which an +expensive monument is erected, and on one face of which will be +inscribed his name. + + * * * * * + +Since writing the above we have learned that a special memorial +service was held Sunday evening, February 1st, in the Chapel of Fisk +University. This was in every way appropriate, in consequence of the +intimate relations of Dr. Pike's life to the upbuilding of that +institution. With considerable feeling, President Cravath referred to +the fact that twenty years ago E. P. Smith, Dr. Pike and himself +entered upon the work of the American Missionary Association, and +that he was now left alone, adding that in the death of Brother Pike, +Fisk University had lost one of its warmest friends. + + * * * * * + +We notice the death of Mrs. Dr. L. B. Lane, of St. Charles, Ill. She +died on the 14th of January last, at the age of sixty-two years. Mrs. +Lane and her husband were ordained missionaries of the Am. Miss. +Assoc. to Siam in 1848. They returned in 1855, since which time they +have resided in this country. She was a good and true servant of +Christ when in the foreign field and no less so in her own land. Her +death came suddenly, but found her thoroughly prepared to go. + + * * * * * + +Few men in this country have had more experience in addressing +children, or greater success in winning them to Christ, than Rev. E. +P. Hammond. The result of this experience he has condensed in an +interesting and instructive little volume, entitled "Conversion of +Children." It will prove helpful and encouraging to parents and +interesting to children. We thank Mr. Hammond for the gift of fifty +copies of his book, which we have distributed among our missionaries +in the South, by whom they are appreciated and found useful in their +work. + + * * * * * + +Some time ago a Southern paper, in speaking of Dr. Roy, referred to +him as a colored man. At the time we thought the writer was mistaken, +but since looking over his itinerary, which our readers will find in +another part of the magazine, we have been led to feel that we shall +have to modify somewhat our opinion. The doctor himself explicitly +declares that at one point in their journey he and his companions +were all of the same color. At any rate he is not ashamed to call +them _brethren_, and we may also add that they are not ashamed of +him. + + * * * * * + +The Tillotson, at Austin, Texas, has taken to itself a church +organization. This was effected on the first Sabbath of the year--a +very interesting occasion. Superintendent Roy and Rev. Jeremiah +Porter, spending his second winter in Austin, were present to assist +the pastor, Rev. J. H. Parr, who, with his wife, united in the +organization. It consisted of twenty members, half of them teachers +and half students. Principal W. L. Gordon and wife presented their +two little children, born in the Institute, for baptism. Mr. Gordon +and Mr. R. F. Ferrell, a student, were ordained as deacons by prayer +and the laying on of hands. Mr. Porter offered the prayer of +institution, and broke the bread at the communion table. This +venerable servant of God had just passed his 80th birthday. His +golden wedding will come next June. His multitude of friends will be +glad to know that the United States Government, having put him upon +the retired list as chaplain, is continuing his salary. Mrs. Porter +is assisting the special missionary, Miss M. J. Adams, Professor +Dean, and other teachers and scholars, in supporting two mission +schools contiguous to the Institute. Miss Rose M. Kinney, a veteran +in the service, is matron and preceptress. The Tillotson is moving on +this year smoothly and successfully. A church in connection with +these main chartered institutions is essential to their best +Christian result. + + * * * * * + +Just a word with our ministerial readers. The heavy mail that daily +comes to this office brings us occasionally a letter with some such +words as these: "I preached to my people last Sunday an A. M. A. +sermon, and as a result I send you a contribution which is larger +than the church ever gave this cause before." Exactly, brother; let +the people know what is wanted and why it is wanted, and then let +them have a chance to give and they will meet the responsibility +every time. Another letter brings us this: "A few weeks ago I +preached a sermon on the work of the A. M. A. My congregation were so +deeply interested in what I said they requested my manuscript for +publication. Thinking you might be interested I send you a copy of +the published sermon." Exactly, again. We were interested, and long +before we had finished reading the discourse we understood full well +why the people were interested. Another letter: "The Missions of the +A. M. A. occupied our attention last monthly concert. I gave a bird's +eye view of the whole field and then selections were read from the +papers and addresses given at Salem. By this time the brethren were +quite ready to turn on the streams of their own thought. We found it +difficult to bring the meeting to an end. It was a great success. I +propose to follow it up." Again, exactly. Missionary information when +properly brought forward will make a meeting that for interest cannot +be surpassed. It is one of the strangest things in the world that so +many people have gotten the impression that a missionary meeting must +be dull, and that a missionary discourse must be uninteresting. It is +an impression that ought not to exist. Let sermons be preached. Let +the thrilling, soul-inspiring facts that go to make up the history of +missions be made known and the impression will soon be driven out of +existence. + +Brethren, we invite you to glean in the great field of the American +Missionary Association. There will be rich returns for you and your +people and golden returns for us. + + * * * * * + +THE TEST APPLIED. + + +When Berea College was started, in 1858, its students were all +white. The following year the question was raised, "What if colored +students should apply?" One teacher voiced the sentiment of all when +he said, "If any one made in God's image comes to get knowledge which +will enable him to understand the revelation of God in Jesus Christ, +he cannot be rejected." The simple declaration of that sentiment had +the effect to make most of the students leave at the end of the term, +never to return. The John Brown raid, happening soon after, rendered +the school still more unpopular, and the war following a little +later, the school had to suspend altogether. But when the war ended +and, in 1865, the college opened its doors again, there being no +longer slavery, the question of color soon came up for consideration. + +In one of the by-laws to the constitution of the college was this +statement: "The object of this college shall be to furnish the +facilities for a thorough education to all persons of good moral +character." Three colored youths applied for admission. On +examination they were found to be "persons of good moral character." +There was only one thing to do. They were promptly admitted. What +followed? There were at the time seventy-five students in the +college, and we are told, "the morning that those three harmless +youths walked in, half the school walked out." + +But some one will say: "That was at the close of the war, when the +feelings of our white brethren at the South were naturally very +sensitive; that time, however, has passed away. We can now plant +schools and churches on an anti-caste basis, with open doors and +welcome hands for colored people, _if they choose to come_. No such +exhibition of race prejudice would now be made." _Well, let us see._ + +For several years past we have had our attention turned to the +terrible destitution of the people in the mountain region of Kentucky +and places adjacent. Two years ago we sent a special missionary to +labor among these people. He made his headquarters at Williamsburg, +the county seat of Whitley County, Kentucky. The town was sixty-seven +years old, yet it never had a church edifice; nor had the county, +with a population of fourteen thousand, ever had a church edifice +finished and dedicated to the worship of Almighty God. There were +very few schools, and what few there were could not be considered +schools by intelligent people. Our missionary went to work. The +people heard him gladly. A new life came into their famished souls. +They rallied round him. They built a beautiful church edifice. An +academy, too, was erected; able and skilled teachers were put in +charge. The missionary did not confine himself to the town merely. +For miles up and down the valley he traveled, preaching as he went. +Wherever he came the people were roused and steps taken to have +churches and schools planted. + +But the church and the academy above referred to must be dedicated. +At the dedication this Association was represented by Assistant +Corresponding Secretary Powell, by Field Superintendent Roy and by +Rev. Dr. Wm. H. Ward, of the Executive Committee. And dedicated they +were to the glory of God for the maintenance and spread of a _free_ +gospel and Christian learning. Special emphasis was placed upon the +fact that over the entrance to these temples was written, _Whosoever +will may come_. Does some one ask why that was specially emphasized? +Because we were in a country where popular sentiment said, Into white +churches and white schools there was a certain class who, on account +of the color of their skin, would not be admitted. When you are in a +community that publicly indorses a wrong, silence regarding that +wrong is complicity. Under such circumstances, to say nothing about +it is the same thing as to sign your name to a document affirming the +thing to be right. To dedicate a Christian church in New York City +and say nothing about the evils of Mormonism would be nothing +strange, but to dedicate a Christian church in Salt Lake City and be +silent as to what the teaching and the practice of that church was to +be in regard to polygamy would be _treason_ to the Gospel. We +therefore made specially prominent at the dedication the broad +principles on which our mission rested. Some said they were sorry to +hear such things proclaimed; others said nothing, but feared; while a +few said, That is right. It is just as it ought to be. + +The school started off with bright skies above and a broad distant +view around. The bell rung out its pealing calls, and bright-eyed, +rosy-cheeked children and youth clambered up the hill side to enjoy +such educational privileges as that country had never known. All was +peace and prosperity. School was crowded, and everybody was happy. +But suddenly the whole heavens were overcast. From horizon to horizon +a deathly pall enshrouded the entire sky--and the cloud large enough +to do all this was only the size of a black child's face! _Whosoever +will may come_, we had said. Did we _mean_ it? Oh, yes, _but_ it is +hardly right to sacrifice the feelings of that whole school merely to +gratify the wish of--_a nigger_. Did we mean it? Oh, yes, but it is +hardly right to imperil the very existence of the school merely to +take in that one poor, despised and uninfluential colored child! Did +we mean it? Oh, yes, but is it right, is it wise, to receive _one_ +when you know that by so doing you will lose twenty--perhaps more--to +receive one whom you will have to help, and lose twenty--or perhaps +more--who can help you? Did we mean it? Oh, yes, certainly, but would +it not be better to reason with the applicant and show her that while +we ourselves have no objection, yet things being as they are, she +would really do more for her people by staying away than by insisting +that she should be received? Why not take some such position as that? +We will have peace and harmony and prosperity. We shall be able to +tell our friends in the distance we are getting along swimmingly. We +are true to our principles. _Whosoever will may come._ We have no +trouble with the negro question. We simply let it alone. Our dear +brethren down South are perfectly delighted to receive us. We have no +trouble with them whatever, and the cause is going forward +triumphantly. + +_Is_ that the way to meet the responsibility? Imagine the Lord Jesus +Christ at the door of that school when that black child came asking +admission. What would have been His answer? Say, reader, imagine what +_would_ have been His answer. Put on your thinking cap. Summon to +your aid all the help that quibbling and dodging and sophistry can +give, and after you have gone through it all, what do you think would +have been His answer? Well, here is the answer the American +Missionary Association sent as quickly as the telegraph could carry +it: _Admit all applicants irrespective of color._ And then what +followed? Nearly half the scholars picked up their things and left! +This happened a few weeks ago. We had about a hundred students. We +have now about fifty, and we may lose even those. Letter writing is +easy. Talk is cheap. Even _Buncombe_ is not a lost art. But actions +speak louder than words. Let us know what follows when _the test is +applied_, and then we shall know just what profession of loyalty to +principle signifies. Berea stood by its guns, and it has steadily +grown in favor with God and man ever since. And it will win in the +end. Then what a glorious triumph! No regrets for having played the +hypocrite, no regrets for having played the part of a time server, no +regrets for having played the part of a trimmer, no regrets for +having played the part of a special pleader, no regrets for having +concealed its colors behind its back in shameful silence as to its +past history, no regrets for having turned away one of Christ's +little ones for whom He died, no regrets for having counseled it, +while professing friendship, to go elsewhere. What a glorious +triumph! + +And we, too, shall win--and our triumph shall be glorious. Let us go +forward preaching the Word, and when the time comes let there be no +attempt to postpone its issue--but let the test be applied. Better go +down standing on our principles than live with our principles denied +and dishonored. + + * * * * * + +RELIGIOUS CULTURE OF THE SLAVES BEFORE THE WAR. + + +The _Independent_ of Feb. 5 has an exceedingly interesting article on +the above subject from the pen of Rev. Dr. J. E. Edwards, Danville, +Virginia. + +He says that at an early period in this century Southern Methodists +sent missionaries to labor with the slaves on the rice and cotton +plantations. In 1845 Southern Methodism had in church fellowship +124,000 slaves. At one time the Methodist membership in Charleston, +S. C., was in the proportion of five colored to one white. Blacks and +whites worshiped in the same house and were ministered to by the same +pastor. + +One of the early reports of the South Carolina Board has the +following: "We claim it best, as a general rule, to include the +colored people in the same pastoral charge with the whites, and to +preach to both classes in one congregation, as our practice has been. +The gospel is the same for all men, and to enjoy its privileges in +common, promotes good will." + +We read so far and stopped. That language has the marks of the gospel +of Jesus Christ all over it. "All ye are brethren." So says the +gospel, and this report says the same. But how would it do to take +the language above quoted into a Southern white Methodist Conference +now! Just let the above report, without comment and without +explanation, be introduced to-day into such a Conference, and what an +explosion would follow! + +It is too bad to quote the rest of the report, because it mars +somewhat the beauty of what goes before; but here it is: "That when +the galleries or other sittings are insufficient, we consider it the +duty of our brethren and friends to provide the necessary +accommodations that none may make such a neglect a plea for absenting +themselves from public worship." "_Galleries or other sittings._" +There is the fly in the ointment. Of course, at communion, the master +class was served first and the slave class afterward. + +The Church of Christ is His body. But does Christ allow His followers +to decide that distinctions shall be made at His table on account of +the hue of the skin? When a Temple is erected in which Christ's +disciples are to meet for worship, is there anything in the gospel +that warrants a division of seats so that here superiors shall sit +and there inferiors? Where is the word that warrants it? and what is +the analysis that will find it in the spirit of the gospel? All honor +to the slave-holders who furnished the means of the gospel to the +slaves. All honor to the men and women who pointed the sin-burdened +negroes to the Lamb of God that taketh away the sins of the world. We +have no doubt but that as Dr. Edwards says, "Multiplied thousands +upon thousands of the sons of Ham will rise up in judgment to bless +the faithful men of the South for their long-continued labors in +teaching the benighted negro the way of life." We have no doubt of +it; but in the resurrection will the whites put in an appearance +first and the blacks second? In the day of judgment will the whites +lead and the blacks follow? Will there be galleries with hard seats +in Heaven for negroes and ground floors easy of access with soft +seats for Caucasians? Will the great chorus of Heaven be divided into +two parts, a white division and a black division? And will the +Hallelujah Chorus as sung by the white choir be more acceptable to +God than that sung by the black choir? + +Yes, the slave-holders did a great deal for the religious training +and the spiritual welfare of the slaves, and in consequence of what +they did, with God's blessing, the colored people of our country are +almost immeasurably lifted above their benighted heathen brethren in +Africa. Yes, that is all so. Does Dr. Edwards ask us to praise them +for it? We do. But, brethren, we must also add, "These ought ye to +have done and not to leave the other undone." + + * * * * * + +A TEACHER'S APPEAL. + + +We publish the following from F. A. Chase, Professor of Natural +Science in Fisk University. He pleads, of course, for Fisk, yet his +plea holds good for all our higher institutions. We commend it to our +friends. The American Missionary Association could make good use, +say, of a "_One Hundred Thousand Dollar Fund_" for the scientific +departments of its mission schools. It may be that some one whom God +has blessed with riches is waiting for just such an opportunity as +this particular branch of our great field opens. Special funds for a +designated institution, to be used for the promotion of Christian +science, as outlined by Prof. Chase, are earnestly solicited: + + Are there not some friends of the work among the Freedmen + who can appreciate the need of a teacher for a _complete + scientific outfit_? + + The race has been kept during slavery from all knowledge + of science. Their trades and occupations being of the + roughest, and having ignorant parentage, nothing has been + learned from the business of life, nor in answer to the + questioning of childhood and youth. There is no race now + admitted to the privileges of liberal education so barren + of scientific ideas and so lacking in scientific spirit. + Those who know this people solely from their fine + literary and oratorical abilities have no conception of + their great deficiency in science. It does not need to be + said that, until this is remedied, they cannot be + expected to hold their own in a scientific age, and in + competition with a scientific race. + + Though our course of study is brought down to the very + minimum of college work, and the instruction is of a + most elementary character, still there are eight sciences + to be taught. But this teaching, to be successful, + requires the use of illustrative material. With the + general introduction of illustrations in our modern + schools began the rapid progress in science that + distinguishes our age. All true teachers of science + affirm with one voice that this aid is indispensable even + with the most favored races. + + In botany, zoology, mineralogy and geology we need + specimens--the great type examples on which + classification is founded. In physiology and anatomy we + need, in default of _material_, cheap models. In natural + philosophy, chemistry and astronomy we need + apparatus--not the costly instruments of precision, but + plain, cheap pieces, that are fitted to illustrate and in + some cases demonstrate the many and various principles + that are taught. + + In the pressure of the growing work upon the society, + beyond a small sum for incidental expenses, most of the + money appropriated for schools goes for the payment of + salaries. Our land and our buildings have come from other + sources. But our outfit of school requisites has been for + the most part overlooked. Some fine instruments have been + presented to us, much more costly than we would have + selected for ourselves; but their value would be + increased many fold by accessory and supplementary + apparatus. Are there not those who can, by special gifts, + make up this lack also? Must _we_, of all other teachers + of science, be left to make bricks without straw? What + answer should be made to those who depreciate the negro's + mental capacity? Is it not a pitiful waste of the + opportunity, that a factory building should be put up, + workmen hired, materials supplied, but no _machinery_ put + in? Yet this has been going on with class after class for + ten years. + + Three-fourths of our graduates follow teaching as a + profession, and are more or less teachers of science. + They should not only learn that which apparatus alone can + teach, but also how to use it themselves. Should a master + workman be expected to teach the theory and practice of a + trade through the use of _pictures_ of tools and + machines? + + We have not neglected our opportunities in respect to + making collections of specimens about us, and + constructing cheap forms of apparatus. We have learned + new trades and toiled early and late and often through + whole vacations. But, without workshop appliances, part + of that accomplished is unsatisfactory, and the major and + more difficult part remains untouched. But where one has + a great pressure of outside duties incidental to such a + work as this, how utterly inadequate such driblets of + time as can be spared are for such a task can easily be + imagined. + + Is there any lover of science and friend of the freedmen + who can understand our condition and give us ten thousand + dollars for an outfit, and if possible an additional sum + as an endowment for annual expenses? + + * * * * * + +ADDRESS AT ANNUAL MEETING. + + * * * * * + +PREACHING THE MAIN FACTOR IN MISSIONARY WORK. + +REV. GEORGE R. LEAVITT. + + +It is a fact of history that the preaching of the Word has been the +great missionary agency. The Bible is a missionary book. The great +figure in the Old Testament history was the preacher of +righteousness--Enoch, Samuel, Elijah, Isaiah, the great line of +prophets--they were missionary preachers. In the beginning of +Christianity, the great figure was the preacher--John the Baptist, +the Apostles, our blessed Lord Himself. The salient feature in the +New Testament may be said to be a succession of great missionary +sermons which are expositions of the Gospel. In the history of the +Christian Church the great figure has been the preacher. The Church +of God is the body of Jesus Christ. As such she is the eye and ear, +she is the hands and feet of the Lord, but especially she is the +voice of the Lord. Doth not wisdom cry in all time? Did not the +Spirit when sent forth lift the voice declaring the great Gospel +message? And when the Church has had that possession of the Spirit, +has it not been especially her inspiration to cry out with the Gospel +message? The great figure in this Association work in the past has +been the teacher. We have had a gifted line of men and women in this +work, and to them all honor be given. It would be impossible for us +to give them the honor which is their due; but in the future the +great figure is to be the missionary preacher, the man who can reach +masses of men with the Gospel message. We are lifting this race, and +what has been true in the past will be true in the future. + +Perhaps I can not better exhibit this subject in the little space +allowed me than in noticing some of the traits which should +characterize the missionary preacher, and while the truth is general +and applicable to all parties, I trust that we may be under the +direction of the Spirit and take to heart these great traits we shall +be looking for in the preacher of the future in the South. + +The missionary preacher is a man who, to be effective, should be a +man of spiritual morality, a man of irreproachable character. I +presume the colored man has been maligned in the South, as his +character has so often been brought out among us. One of our +enthusiastic teachers was asked, "How many Uncle Toms do you find in +the South?" And she replied, "About as many as there are in the +North." A truth was there that we ourselves may very well take. + +There are three ways in which the Gospel is published. One is in the +book, one is by the voice, and the third by the life. The voice lies +between the book and the life, and the life is the great publication +of the message, and unless we have a voice of a man who is +spiritually qualified by a holy life, we have not a competent Gospel +preacher. In speaking of this matter of morality, we should have +something more in view than natural morals--there is a spiritual +morality. We want the higher. A man who has in himself the Spirit of +God, produces this type of morality. We can not canvass this subject +by the motives of worldliness. It takes two crosses to save the +world--the cross of Christ and the cross of the believer. A +ministerial brother said, in speaking of certain ones, that they had +undergone a deplorable religious transformation, that at one time +they held the Gospel of regeneration, but they had come to love the +Gospel of recreation. Ah, what a transformation has come over too +many of our churches and the community in loving this form of +worldliness! + +It is a matter of great satisfaction that our schools in the South +are doing such efficient work in this direction, as reports indicate, +and as private information shows. I quite lately had information from +General Armstrong touching this point of high morality that is +developed in the school. The young men and young women, he said, +compare well with the young men and young women in our Northern +schools. This is a matter of great satisfaction, because the preacher +of the future is to come out of these schools. + +The second essential in the missionary preacher, if he is to be +successful, is a mind which is spiritually illuminated, a man who is +intelligent in the truth. I presume the great characteristic of the +old-time preacher in the South is his ignorance, and if we should +select one point at which a change needs to take place, it is at this +point of instruction. He needs to be intelligent. + +Now, to these things ought to be added training in all branches of +knowledge, just as widely as possible, but we must fix our attention +especially upon one source of knowledge, namely, the Word of God. +The missionary preacher needs to be a man established in the +Scriptures. John the Baptist grew in grace. Our blessed Lord Himself +grew in grace. The man who is to be effective as a preacher in +elevating the world is a man who grows in grace. What is grace? It is +the undeserved favor of God exhibited in the plan of salvation for +the redemption of man. And the first truths of that grace say simply, +but how grandly, "grow in grace;" we are to be "ministers of grace;" +to be "masters of grace." The minister in the South is to be a master +of grace. Do you know how far it is away? It seems but a step, but +oh, what a work when we begin to comprehend the great things of God! +Do you know the height, depth and length of the great salvation of +the love of God? Ezekiel tells us of the depth of the stream when he +first came to it, that to his apprehension the water came up to his +foot, but, as he advanced, it came to the ankle, and the knee and the +loin, and then it was water to swim in, a river that could not be +passed over. Oh, my brethren, we need to understand these great +things of God, so that we may become masters of grace, for if we do +not, the missionary preacher that comes up under our influence will +not be thoroughly qualified for his duties. + +Then there is another quality; the missionary preacher, to be +effective as a missionary, must be, not only a "shining," but like +John also a "burning light." Then nothing shall be concealed. What +does the Scripture say in that psalm? "There is nothing hid from the +light?" No; "There is nothing hid from the heat thereof." We want a +Gospel preacher among those people who has a Gospel heat from which +nothing can be hid. How many things we can say of this fuel! We have +spoken of the Word of God. The Word of God is the light, and it is +the fuel for a fire. Our blessed Saviour when He was on the way to +Emmaus with the Disciples enkindled their hearts, not by his personal +presence; but when he opened the Scriptures, then they testified, +"Did not our hearts burn within us?" That was what took place at +Pentecost. The Holy Spirit did not bring the fuel that day, but they +had been gathering it as they spoke of Christ, and as they came +together to offer prayers, the Holy Spirit came, and the Word was a +fire in their bones; then fire came and kindled them, and then came +that wonderful effect. + +Sir James Herschel tells us in a little story, in fragments of his +biography, how after his telescopes became famous they were +distributed quite widely through Europe, and when he published his +great discovery, he began to receive complaints. Men said to him, in +angry letters, "We do not see what you see." In his response to them +he said: "Perhaps you do not take the care in your observations that +I do," and he spoke of one particular thing that is carefully noted. +"Do you take care," he said, "of the matter of temperature? The +instrument with which I examine the stars must be of the temperature +of the stars as nearly as may be, and when I observe on a winter +night I place my glass on the lawn at Greenwich, and let it stand +there until the instrument comes to be of the temperature of the air. +But beyond that," he said, "not only must my instrument be of the +right temperature, but I must be. Oftentimes," he said, "I have been +out in the winter air for two hours before I would open my glass, +because I must come to be of the same temperature as the instrument +itself." What a spiritual truth there is here! God's Word the +instrument, and the temperature that of the heavens. But we must be +of the temperature of that Bible and that heavens! Oh, for the heat +of the Gospel to be in the minister of Christ wherever he stands, and +then there will be nothing hid from its searching power. + +I think this subject is often presented in a way to confuse it. We +speak of heat in a way not to comprehend precisely what we want; and +let me touch upon the point which shows what I mean. When the Saviour +was at the well with the woman, it was the love in His heart from +which she could not be hid. What a lesson Peter learned that day when +our Saviour, in His great interview by the sea, asked him: "Lovest +thou me?" and said, "Feed my sheep and my lambs." There was a lesson +burned into his heart of the personal love of Christ. + +I heard Mr. Sankey sing last week "The Ninety and Nine," and he +prefaced it by saying that the old hymn was worn out. I was sorry to +hear him say that, but there was one accent he gave in singing which +was very affecting. When one expostulates with the shepherd that he +has ninety and nine with him, he cries out: "It is my sheep." I fancy +when Peter came to Pentecost and saw those great crowds before him +there was one element of preparation he needed, and the Saviour had +taught him how to feed his sheep and feed his lambs, and it lived so +in his heart that nothing could be hid from it. + +I am speaking too long on this matter. But it is a great subject. +This Association has a glorious opportunity. There is no cause that +comes to us that touches our inspiration and consecration like this +society, and the opportunity is such as, in my judgment, the +Christian Church never had. + +Now, we say this, we cannot do this work by any other form of service +but by preaching the Gospel, with at least these elements in it I +have mentioned. We speak of the hand work for Christ, but we want the +net work for Christ. When I was in Japan, I saw all over the bay, in +the night, little boats of fishermen. The men were in the boats two +and two, one holding a torch. They were busily engaged the night +through. I asked one, "Is this your mode of fishing?" and I was shown +a great seine net that lay upon the shore, and I was told, "This is +here especially for day fishing." When I stood before the young men +in the school at Kioto I referred to this. I said "It seems to me in +Japan you are doing the night fishing now; it is fishing in the night +with a torch, but, young men, there is a morning coming when the +great net is to be cast, your hands are to be upon it, and you are to +have the privilege of a great cast for God." It has come this year, +and those young men went out preachers of righteousness, clothed with +power to reach the masses of men, and they have drawn in hundreds, +and there is hope of the thousands, and that is what we want in this +work, men who can go to those Southern fields, to those five millions +of whom we have heard, and cast the great seine net of the Gospel; +and they are coming. + + * * * * * + +THE SOUTH. + +REV. JOSEPH E. ROY, D. D., FIELD SUPERINTENDENT. + +PROF. ALBERT SALISBURY, SUPERINTENDENT OF EDUCATION. + + * * * * * + +ITINERARY FROM AUSTIN TO CORPUS CHRISTI. + +REV. JOS. E. ROY, D. D. + + +JAN. 4, Sunday.--Assisted in organizing at the Tillotson Institute a +church of twenty-one members. Lord's Supper. Prof. W. L. Gordon's two +children baptized. + +JAN. 5, Monday.--At Austin depot. Waited for train five hours to 8 P. M. + +JAN. 6, Tuesday.--Arrived in San Antonio at 1 A. M. Departed for +Flatonia at 8 A. M., arriving at noon. Looked up the folks. Preached +at night for Pastor T. E. Hillson, whose second child was baptized, +as the first had been by the same hand at the dedication in Luling, +his alternate church. + +JAN. 7, Wednesday.--Up at 4 and off to Luling, arriving by daylight. +Off then, by livery rig, 45 miles to Riddleville. + +JAN. 8, Thursday.--On to Helena, 15 miles. Ride out with freedman, 3 +miles, to our Colony Church. Lecture at night for Pastor Thompson. + +JAN. 9, Friday.--Half a day of writing. Visited at another freedman's +home, taking supper. Preached at night. + +JAN. 10, Saturday.--Brother Thompson, with another colored man and +myself, start for Corpus, 80 miles, reaching Goliad, 35 miles, at +night. We are entertained at Pastor T. Benson's. + +JAN. 11, Sunday.--In the morning, Sunday-school, preaching and +communion. At night, preaching. Conferring all day, at the intervals, +with "parties," being called upon even after retiring at night. + +JAN. 12, Monday.--Up and off before daylight, without breakfast. But +Mrs. Benson has provided for us a grand lunch box that lasts us three +for the two days through to Corpus. No place on the way, to put up; +no chance to buy eatables. Our boss has planned to reach the half-way +spot on the Popolota for camping. The day wears away, and it is 10 +o'clock before we come to the halting-place. For the last three hours +Brother Thompson had led the way lantern in hand, splashing through +the mud and water. We turn under a live oak, take out and feed the +jaded horses, and eat our snack, and commit ourselves to the Heavenly +Father, and at 11 o'clock turn in for the night, Brother Thompson on +the ground, _under_ the hack, and Brother Eding and I _in_ the hack, +doubled like a couple of jackknives into our four feet square of +space, being all of a color. By our side the ponies through the night +crunch their corn; and, by turn, we jump up to drive off the cows +from stealing their hay. But we sleep, and snore, and rest some. + +TUESDAY, Jan 13.--Up and off by daybreak. We camp for breakfast +lunch. We camp for dinner lunch. As we consume the fragments, how we +do bless Mrs. Benson. When, at her own table, we had praised her +baking and cooking, she responded: "Oh, I learned that at Talladega +College." Then I had to tell Dr. Strieby's story of the native +preacher, who thanked him for the good wife who had been trained in +one of the American Missionary Association schools, saying that he +had gotten more than he had anticipated--a good cook and housekeeper. +On, on we trudge through the heavy mud. Night has come, and we are +yet seven miles from Corpus, and the cold, "wet norther" that has +been drizzling upon us all day, as we had been fearing, has at last +broken upon us. Again Brother Thompson is on the lead, with lantern +in hand, through the slush, and he has walked more than half the way +through the day. The black-waxy is heavy for the wheels, and slippery +for the poor old freedman ponies that have no shoes. Pastor J. W. +Strong, who for four years has manfully held this extreme +southwestern outpost of Congregationalism, having learned of our +approach from a dashing country rider, comes along in the dark, one +mile out to meet us, in Oriental style. After our salaams, he gallops +back to town to make the final arrangement for our entertainment. It +is now 8.30 P. M., too late for the preaching; and, for once, the +preacher is glad that the storm has kept the people away from the +appointment. But the next night they make it up, and the preacher +tries to make it up, too. When Mr. Thompson brought me down, six +years ago, we came straight through by fording, belly-deep to the +horses, across the reef, three miles long, that forms the nexus +between the Nueces Bay and the Corpus Christi Bay. On either side was +deep water or miring sand. Once, since that, he has had to _tote_ his +passengers out on his back. The reef has been washed out in spots. +Lo! this time we go up around the head of the bay, ten miles farther. +Brother Thompson claims that he can endure such jaunts without wear +or much weariness, because he is so abstemious as not to drink tea or +coffee nor to eat meat. And everybody knows him to be a true, pure +and high-minded Christian minister who, though he has had but +little schooling, has been so taught of God in the Word, that after +these eleven years in the same parish, that at Helena, he is yet +confided in there as an able pulpit teacher. In old times, his people +were Presbyterians. Blood will tell; and doctrine, too. + +[Illustration: VIEWS IN TEXAS] + + * * * * * + +WEEK OF PRAYER. + + +NASHVILLE, TENN.--The week of prayer was observed here this year as +usual, a meeting being held each day. Notwithstanding the bad +weather, the attendance was fair and the interest good, although not +of a revival kind. Before that time special efforts had been made in +connection with the labors of Rev. Mr. Field, the evangelist, and +twenty-five professed conversions took place. A pleasant state of +feeling in religion has existed since then. In the circumstances the +order of subjects for prayer was closely observed, except that the +subject of missions was postponed until Sunday evening, that being +the regular time for our monthly missionary meeting. The occasion was +one of unusual interest. The special subjects considered were the +Congo territory, the Congo conference, the mission to Bihe and that +to Umzila's kingdom. In the last mentioned mission we here have a +peculiar interest, as two of our former students, Mr. and Mrs. +Ousley, have been sent there as missionaries by the American Board. +Both are graduates of our college course and Mr. Ousley has since +studied theology at Oberlin. A letter from him, written at Cape Town, +Africa, was read at our meeting. Since then one has been received +from Mrs. Ousley, dated at Durban, Natal, which they had reached in +safety and good health and spirits. They were about to sail the next +day for Inhambane, their final destination. So as to locate them +better we had at the meeting, on our board, a map of that station. +Our society writes them once a month. They are very dear to us and we +hope they will do much good in Africa. Mr. Ousley dedicated himself +one Sunday in the summer of 1878 to that field of labor and has never +swerved from his purpose. The last part of the meeting was devoted to +a season of prayer for Secretary Pike in consideration of his serious +illness. + + A. K. SPENCE. + + * * * * * + +MEMPHIS, TENN.--Our church, as formerly, observed the week of prayer, +with, however, nothing of special note in the way of outward results. +The stormy weather from the first until the middle of the week +greatly hindered the attendance. There was, notwithstanding, for +those who came, a blessed realization of spiritual benefit. + +There were no special meetings at the Le Moyne School, the teachers +attending the night meetings at the church. + +We were quickened by the thought that even a few souls gathered in +each of many places, make up a great company in supplication before +God. The topics presented for each evening came to our minds with +more than ordinary freshness and force, and the weight of all +accumulated to the last. I trust that we were duly impressed with a +sense of the obligation incurred by thus confessing to the truth and +importance of those themes, and by coming with them to the Lord. +Those members of church who, unhindered by other things, come to +meeting in stormy weather are more clear in their testimony that it +pays, in direct returns of spiritual strength and joy in the +fellowship of Christ. + +The spirit of our meetings at the close was just such as warrants a +continuance of effort, but the winter has been unusually cold and, +unlike the custom North, it would be an extraordinary excitement +which would secure a general interest and attendance now. + + B. A. IMES. + + * * * * * + +SAVANNAH, GA.--The week of prayer was a spiritual feast to those who +attended the meetings, held each night in the Congregational Church, +and the results still continue to appear. Topics assigned by the +Alliance followed. + +To our church the week of prayer was largely a season of review, the +whole cycle of blessings, needs and hopes passing in prayerful +review. The meeting for thanksgiving, on Monday night, was a goodly +remembrance of special blessings during the past year, and the +exercises were chiefly supplications, experiences and rejoicings of +those who one year ago had no Christian hope. By count, more than +one-half of the persons present were, as one said, only "yearlings." +The ready use of Bible promises at this meeting measured well the +value of our special missionary's Bible work. Two mothers, each with +her family about her, testified in word and deed that the one year of +Christian life had created home forces and blessings of infinite +worth. The time of confession and consecration lasted the whole week, +and proofs of genuineness are not wanting. Said one: "The new year +shall not be so dull as the old one." Another: "The new year I give +_all_ to my Master, Jesus." And kindred promises were frequent and +fervent. + +Results of week of prayer: Church much encouraged and quickened, new +consecration to work, one convert, a number of interested souls, but +chiefly the quickened desire for growth of individuals in all that +makes Christian character; and, more than all, the growth of +missionary spirit shown in the earnest prayers for the conversion of +the world to Christ. + +At the close of the "Missionary night" meeting, one of the oldest +members of the Church called at the pastor's study and asked for the +Missionary magazines, saying: "I am just beginning to hear God's call +to missionary work, and I want to know more of what the A. M. A. is +doing for our people, and to have my part in it." Seed _will_ grow. + + DANA SHERRILL. + + * * * * * + +SANTEE AGENCY, NEB.--We remembered the week of prayer by services in +the chapel every evening, except on Thursday and Saturday, when we +held the meetings in the afternoon for the convenience of our Indians +who live at a distance from the Mission. The spirit of prayer rested +upon all of our several school boarding halls, and we felt that the +mercy seat had come near. + +The line of instruction in these meetings was concerning the Holy +Spirit as enlightening the mind, convicting of sin, revealing Christ +to the soul, and abiding with the believer. + +Our young men very generally took part in prayer. And their prayers +showed a clear understanding of the truths spoken, and deep feeling +with regard to their own needs and the wonderful revelation of the +mercy of Christ. And they seemed to open their hearts to the ministry +of the Spirit. + +The same spirit of tender prayerfulness and devotion to the Master +was manifest among the girls, a number of them coming out as +candidates for church membership and eagerly forming a class for the +study of the Catechism. + +In the middle of these days of prayer, we were startled by the word +that came from a brother missionary's family, the Rev. J. P. +Williamson, at Yankton Agency, Dakota, that his children were all +sick with scarlet fever, that one was dead and another dying. We took +their burden on our hearts in prayer. And the merciful Father spared +the one on the borders of death. + +By this I was called away from Santee for two days to attend the +burial of the dear missionary child that was taken. But I found no +interruption of interest when I returned. Thus, all in all, the +experiences of this week have been very precious, and we believe that +larger fruits of it are yet to appear. + + ALFRED L. RIGGS. + + * * * * * + +LETTER FROM A STUDENT. + + + ----, Miss., January 18, 1885. + +DEAR PROFESSOR: As I only wrote you a few days ago, you will no doubt +be surprised somewhat to receive this letter so soon after. But it is +on a matter of great importance that I write you. I think I told you +in my letter previous to this that I found no Sabbath-school here, +and that I had formed a little class among my day pupils. + +This is my second Sabbath here, and we met this morning in our little +schoolroom for the first time. How happy it made me feel to meet with +such a pleasant little band of children, all eager to talk and learn +of Jesus. But I was greatly pained to find that the teachers who +recently taught here failed to have Sabbath-school. I inquired of +those present this morning how long since they had Sabbath school +here, and was informed, "three years." I then asked what the teachers +did who previously taught free school here; the answer which came +from many was, "They visited on Sundays." I don't see how they could +content themselves at doing nothing in a place like this, when there +is so much work to do. I have not in all my experience of school +teaching found a place so pitifully neglected and needful as this. +What I want to say, Professor, is this: We have no Sabbath-school +literature of any kind. + +Have you anything that you could send me, Professor, for my little +Sabbath-school? If so, please send it at my expense. I shall be glad +to get anything that I could interest them with; I mean to have them +come to my room Sunday afternoons, that I may read to them and talk +with those who are not Christians, and perhaps you can find something +that would be good for that purpose. We shall be glad of anything. +There is so much work here, and I shall be so glad if I can do any +good. Now, Professor, if you can find ANYTHING to send us, do send it +at once. Hoping to hear from you soon, I remain your pupil and +friend, + + ---- ----. + + * * * * * + +THE CHINESE. + + * * * * * + +LOU QUONG AT HIS HOME IN CHINA. + +BY REV. W. C. POND. + + +Our brother Lou Quong, for several years the Chinese Helper in our +West School in this city, has recently returned from a visit to his +native land. I was so greatly interested in his account of his +experience as a Christian, thrown back into the heathen associations +of his childhood, that I asked him to write it out for me, and I give +it to the readers of THE MISSIONARY with only a few corrections of +his English,--respecting which, during his absence, he has lost some +ground: + +"I came to California in 1876, and lived in the city of San +Francisco. In the day-time I worked in a family, but in the evenings +I attended the Mission school. In 1877, I became a poor Christian +among our countrymen here. The schools were cared for by all the good +Christian friends that are in this free country, and even by some +from England and other nations. They were looked after by Rev. W. C. +Pond, pastor of Bethany Church--the same church that all our Chinese +brethren go to, to take the Lord's Supper, once in two months. + +Last September I paid a visit to my home--the home that I had left +for so long a time. But before I go I make up my mind to stand up for +Jesus, who has kindly given His life for my soul. At first my heart +was some troubled about going back to my heathen country, but I pray, +and kept praying that Jesus would go with me. So He heard my humble +prayers. He was going before me, and made everything smooth for me. I +got home Oct. 9th, at noon. In a few moments there came all the +people of my village, both young and old, women and men, asking me +about California. I answered them the best I could. Some of them try +to get a look on my head at first, to see if my hair is all right, +for they believed Christian Chinese have their queue cut off, and +belong to California. He is no more Chinaman. For this cause they +trouble me many days. + +I met Rev. C. R. Hager at Hong Kong, when first I got there. We fell +to talking of the Mission work among our people. + +When I was at home, as soon as my father worshiped the ancestors or +the idols, he sent one of my little sisters to call me to join the +worship; but my mother, who has a better spirit, told my father that +I would not worship them any more, "for (as she said) he have told me +that he did thank God _in his heart_, and that he love us the same." +Thus, my mother stopped the calling for the worshiping of the +ancestors ever since. I thank God for this first. + +During the time I was at home there were seven or eight brethren +called at my house and did shake hands with me. Some of them I knew +in California, but the rest I knew not and never saw them before; yet +they could find their fellow-brethren in Christ, and came from far +to do so. Some of them are Bible-sellers; some are preachers. They +show their brotherly love and Christian faith by bringing candy and +oranges for my sisters. And my father was also glad to see them, each +time they call. Some of them did take dinner with us in our family. +Rev. Mr. Jones also call, and he preached to the people in my +village. He can use the chop-sticks, and did eat our food. In the +evening, with the moon shining, and in the day-time he asked me to +take him to the market-place, to tell the people the same thing in +Chinese as we preached here in California. He was astonished that the +people treated him so well, and did not say a bad word to him about +it. + +Now comes the hardest thing for a Chinese Christian to bear; that is, +the marriage day. I was married on March 28, 1884. I had been engaged +by my parents when I was fourteen years old to a girl who was only +nine, and lived four miles away. When she come to our house to live +with us, then she begin to ask me why I did not worship the ancestors +with her on the marriage day; and I begin with my lesson to her in +simple things, telling her why I don't worship those things any more. +When I make a prayer to God before I go to bed she laugh at me +because I pray to nothing--no God that I can _see_. But I told her +that she must bow her head too when I pray, and must keep still. So, +after this, she pay more attention to what I tell her about this +great God that I have found in California. + +Once she ask me why I don't take Mr. Ying's example, and do just like +he do to please all men. For Mr. Ying was living in the same house +with us, and had come back from California at the same time with me; +and though he had been in our Mission schools for two or three years, +yet he will not take Jesus as his Lord. So when he got back to China, +he do things just as free as any heathen. So I ask her: "Well, +suppose a man who served his ancestors, and all the dead and all the +idols with all his heart; yet he would not take care of himself and +go about smoking opium, gambling, throwing away his money in +foolishness, and leaving his whole family uncared for. Now, how do +you like that?" Then she said, without delay, "I will not like such a +man. I rather take a man that is called a Christian, and have him do +good, than to have him serve ancestors and gods and do bad things." +Though she was a heathen, yet I think she see a little light now. I +left home to come here again, Oct. 29, but I still pray God to keep +her on the right way; and may she become a Christian woman by the +Lord's power alone! Thus the Lord blessed me. May He bless all the +workers in His vineyard." + +[Illustration: BRIDE AND BRIDEGROOM WORSHIPING TABLETS OF DECEASED +ANCESTORS.] + +I have exceedingly interesting accounts from the new fields: Alturas, +Modoc Co.; Tulare, Tulare Co., and San Diego. In Sacramento where +Rev. Mr. Jones is engaged in special services, we hear of crowds +gathering about him in the street when he speaks there, and following +him into the mission house till it is completely packed. We hear also +that some hearts seem to have been touched; and that the hope is +cherished that some who were far off have been brought nigh. Space +fails me to go into details; but I bespeak the earnest prayers of all +who love this cause and love our Lord, that this evangelistic work +may yield us the glad harvests for which we have been wrestling with +God. + + * * * * * + +BUREAU OF WOMAN'S WORK. + +MISS D. E. EMERSON, SECRETARY. + + * * * * * + +We are glad to notice that the ladies of Connecticut have recently +organized a State Missionary Society to co-operate with the leading +benevolent societies for work in our own country. Nothing in these +days can be accomplished without organization. What is everybody's +business is nobody's business, and causes whose support is left to +those who merely happen to have an interest in them are very likely +to be neglected. We wish that in every State of the Union, ladies' +domestic missionary societies might be organized. The great work +which our Association is called upon to perform among women needs to +be specially brought to the attention of the Christian ladies in our +churches. This information can only be effectually disseminated +through organized and systematic effort. We are prepared to furnish +interesting missionary material to all who will ask for it. We invite +correspondence with missionary societies, promising to give careful +attention to any inquiries they may make. With gratitude do we record +the fact that the interest in the woman's department of the American +Missionary Association's work is steadily enlarging. + + * * * * * + +LETTER FROM A LADY MISSIONARY. + + +----, Ga., January, 1885. + +DEAR FRIENDS: As I take my pen to write my mind goes back to the +general letter that I wrote. Can I tell you of any improvement among +those with whom we have to do, since that time? Watching the progress +of our school from day to day the upward tendency seems slow, but +looking back a year a marked improvement can be seen. While they +learn readily they remember well, and the homes of those who come in +contact with our church and school are different. Last Saturday was +the coldest day of the winter, but Miss Robertson and I, according to +a previous appointment went to the Dunwoody settlement to hold a +woman's meeting. I think I wrote you about a similar meeting one year +ago; this is the third one that I have held, and the meetings have +gained in interest. In that settlement, before they commence +planting, the people have a fast day; they neither eat, wash their +faces nor perform any ordinary duties from one sunset to the next. +They pray in their homes and unitedly for God's blessing upon the +labor of their hands. It reminds me of the way fast days used to be +kept in the early history of New England. I am inclined to think they +caught the idea from the people who came from New England here. I do +not know that such a custom is observed except in this settlement. I +asked the women if a blessing followed their prayers? They answered +decidedly, "Yes," and said that while the people all about them had +suffered for the necessities of life, in that settlement they had +never since freedom bought corn, rice or potatoes, but had raised +sufficient for their needs. In their simplicity they take God at His +word, "Ask and ye shall receive." + +Last Sabbath another couple entered upon the "_matrimonial sea_," +this time young people. The gorgeous attire of the wedding party can +be better imagined than described. We see few tokens of love and +affection among this people. In the Sunday-school lesson of last +Sabbath the questions and remarks of our pupils led us to think that +it was almost a missing link in their lives; it seemed impossible for +them to understand why the people should fall on Paul's neck and kiss +him; it is a rare sight to see a kiss exchanged among them. + +Yesterday, after school, the parson went with me over the swamps to +the homes of some of our scholars. We passed through several ditches, +where the water was up to the hubs of the buggy wheels; there was a +log for a foot-path over these places. It was very muddy all along +the way, and yet these children are seldom absent from school. +To-day, the clouds are heavy and dark, and the rain has come down in +torrents, yet many have come into school from these long distances, +to our surprise, one boy having the promise of being promoted into +the second reader came at least six miles, bringing a chicken and six +eggs to pay for his book; when he arrived he was wet to his skin. +Two-thirds of our school were present to-day. I realize as never +before the effort these children are making for themselves. Oh! I +remember how freely money was given and the young men from our homes +that freedom might be obtained for this people; then the women must +wait and pray at home, but now the way is open for women to teach the +young of this vast race that the future may not disclose a nation +within a nation, hostile to the good and true of a Christian people. +Shall there not be volunteers among our New England girls, who shall +say: "Here am I. Send me" to the work? + +Very cordially yours, + + E. P. + + * * * * * + +Some of our hard-worked sisters at the North may wish to enter the +service of the A. M. A., that they may get a little rest and find +time for literary culture. We commend to such a careful perusal of +the following report. + +MONTHLY REPORT BY MISS H. + +Days taught during the month, 25; Hours taught, 150; Scholars +classified, 73; Tuition collected, $54.75; School books sold, 111; +Book money, $24.00; School programmes, 10; Slates corrected, 1,250; +Arithmetical examples (oral), 325; Words written on the blackboard, +225; Spelling words (oral), 450; Reading lessons, 50; Golden Texts, +4; New song taught, 1; Five-minute talks, 10; Conducted chapel +exercises, 4; Conducted home devotions, 5; Tuesday evening public +talk, 1; Interviewed mothers of refractory scholars, 5; Notes to +parents, 10; Postal cards (absent scholars), 20; Written examination, +1; Choir meetings, 4; Whipped scholar, 1; Attended woman's prayer +meeting, 4; Church services, 20. + + * * * * * + +CHILDREN'S PAGE. + + * * * * * + +VIC'S LILIES. + + +School was dismissed, and the boys and girls came rushing out with +merry shouts and laughter. The voices had a musical ring and the +intonation peculiar to uncultivated colored lads and lassies. They +were a comely, thrifty-looking set, and the instinctive hopefulness +of their race looked from the bright eyes and shone in the cheery +faces. Life had gone hard with some, but had failed to quench their +faith in the good time yet to come. + +As they neared the corner of the street and came in sight of a large, +handsome white house, a girl's voice called, "Hush! hush!" + +"Lor', now, Vic!" her brother Phil remonstrated, "what nonsense!" But +in spite of the remonstrance every voice took a lower tone, and the +house was passed almost in silence. The blinds of the house were +closed, and from the door-knob hung the black-and-white token of +mourning. Vic was saying, "Yes, sick jest two days; taken Sunday and +died this morning. When I tol' teacher, she said, 'Death loves a +shining mark.'" + +"I'm awful sorry," said Nan; "he was a mighty peart little 'un, and +he al'ays looked up and smiled when we passed. But if I'd knowed he +was really goin', I'd sent a message to sister Fan. Don't you think +she'd like to know about the Christmas tree, Vic?" + +"You're a green un," said Phil. "You don't s'pose that little pink +and white chap has gone to our heaven, do you? He'll see Fan a heap +sight! She's off in a little cubby-hole with all the rest of the +darkies. All the first-class 'commodations b'longs to the white +peoples, ye know." + +"Hush, Phil," said Vic; "you shan't stuff Nan so. Everything will be +all right, honey, when we gets up dere. Shouldn't be s'prised if Fan +knew all 'bout the tree. And p'rhaps the good Lord will let her help +take care of the little fellow till his po' mother comes. Ole Dinah +says she's awfully cut up--his mother, you know. You see they're +strangers here, came for the mammy's health; and Frankie, he was the +only chile. 'Pears like I want to comfort the po' mammy. My lily has +three blossoms. I mean to take them all to her." + +"'Pears like you'd better min' your own business. She may be a dog-on +white lady, if she do come from the Norf. Like as not she'd turn up +her nose at your lilies. I'll 'low the little un was a brick, but +you'd better let his mother 'lone." This was Phil's advice. + +But although Victoria Porter had a black skin, she had a tender, +loving heart, and she had pored over the Christ-life until she had +unconsciously imbibed its spirit. She was always yearning to comfort +some one. Later in the day she stood at the door of the white +mansion, holding her precious lilies. "They're for his mother," she +said to Dinah. "Tell her we chil'ens loved Frankie, and we're all +mighty sorry." + +It was a simple message and a simple offering, and the giver was a +poor little black girl; but behind the gift was sincerity and love, +and the heart of the poor, sorrowing mother was touched and +comforted. + +And Vic's lilies had a mission of which she knew not. They preached a +lovely sermon on the high privilege and duty of comforting others. We +may be poor, and very humble may be our station in life; but if we +try, we may make life brighter and sweeter to someone. What a glad +surprise it will be to Vic when the Saviour honors her many kind acts +by the words--"Inasmuch as ye have done it unto one of the least of +these my brethren, ye have done it unto Me." + + E. E. B. + + * * * * * + +RECEIPTS FOR JANUARY, 1885. + + * * * * * + +MAINE, $714.22. + + Andover. "Friends" $9.50 + Bangor. "Little Women" and "Busy Bees" of Bangor, and + Ladies of Hampden, Bbl. of Christmas Presents, _for + Wilmington, N. C._ + Bath. Central Ch. and Soc., 32.50; Winter St. Ch., 47.15 79.65 + Brunswick. 2 Bbls. and 1 Box of C., _for Selma, Ala._ + Centre Lebanon. "A Friend" 10.00 + Cumberland Centre. Cong. Ch. and Soc. 21.00 + Cumberland Mills. Warren Ch. to const. STEPHEN A. + CORDWELL and PETER W. FILES, L. M's 68.31 + Elliot. Cong. Ch. and Soc. 3.50 + Ellsworth. Cong. Ch. 34.47 + Farmington. Rev. C. E. Pope's S. S. Class, _for Student + Aid, Talladega C._ 5.00 + Gardiner. Bbl. of C., _for Selma, Ala._, 3.20 _for + Freight_, by Miss S. E. Adams 3.20 + Gorham. Bbl. of C., _for Selma, Ala._, 2 _for Freight_, + by Miss M. E. Smith 2.00 + Limington. "A. B." 2.00 + New Castle. Mrs. Chas. D. Crane, _for Student Aid, Fisk + U._ 30.00 + New Castle. Mrs. C. D. Crane, _for Selma, Ala._ 8.00 + North Bridgeton. By Miss Proctor's Sch., _for Student + Aid, Wilmington, N. C._ 1.00 + Orland. Mrs. S. T. Buck and Daughters 35.00 + Orono. Bbl. and Box of C., _for Wilmington, N. C._ + Portland. High Street Ch. 90.50 + Portland. Brown Thurston's Class, High St. Sab. Sch., + _for Student Aid, Hamilton N. & A. Inst._ 25.00 + Portland. Miss A. Partridge, Bbl. of C., _for + Wilmington, N. C._, 59c. _for freight_ .59 + Searsport. Second Cong. Ch. and Soc. 11.00 + Searsport. 2 Bbls of C., _for Selma, Ala._, 4 _for + freight_, by Mrs. C. T. Hawes 4.00 + South Berwick. Mrs. MATILDA BURLEIGH to const. herself + L. M. 30.00 + Union. Bbl. of C., _for Selma, Ala._ + Woolwich. Mrs. E. M. Gardner. .50 + --------- + $474.22 + + LEGACY. + + Castine. Estate of Mrs. Lucy S. Adams, by Rev. Geo. + M. Adams, Ex. $240.00 + --------- + $714.22 + + +NEW HAMPSHIRE, $755.21. + + Alstead Centre. Cong. Ch. 12.24 + Antrim. "Friends" by John E. Hastings 26.50 + Candia. Cong. Ch. and Soc. 15.00 + Candia. Frank E. Page 5.00 + Chester. Cong. Ch. and Soc. 20.00 + Concord. South Ch. Sab. Sch. 8.99 + Derry. Woman's Miss'y Soc. (one share) 20.00 + East Alstead. Cong. Ch. 13.63 + Exeter. Second Cong. Sab. Sch., 20 _for Student Aid, + Talladega C._; Second Cong. Ch., Bbl. of C. _for + Talladega C._, 1 _for freight_ 21.00 + Exeter. Mary E. Shute 15.00 + Exeter. Miss A. E. McIntire, Bbl. of C. _for Wilmington, + N. C._, 50c. _for freight_ .50 + Farmington. Cong. Ch. 14.28 + Francestown. Cong. Ch. 25.00 + Hampstead. Cong. Sab. Sch. 12.20 + Hanover. Cong. Sab. Sch. (one share) 20.00 + Harrisville. Mrs. L. B. Richardson 10.00 + Hillsborough Bridge. Mrs. J. Gerry 1.00 + Hollis. "A Friend" 1.00 + Hudson. Bbl. of C., _for Dudley, N. C._ + Keene. First. Cong. Sab Sch., _for Student Aid, Atlanta + U._ 70.00 + Keene. Second Cong. Sab. Sch. 46.30 + Keene. Ladies' Benev. Soc. of Second Ch., _for freight_ 2.50 + Lebanon. Cong. Soc., _for Atlanta U._ 40.00 + Lisbon. "A Friend" 2.00 + Londonderry. Chas. S. Pillsbury 1.00 + Lyme. Cong. Ch., to const. Dea. W. S. BALCH L. M. 30.00 + Manchester. Franklin St. Church 70.50 + Mason. Box of C., _for Dudley, N. C._; 1.60 _for + freight_ 1.60 + Milford. "Willing Workers," _for Student Aid, Tougaloo + U._ 50.00 + Nashua. First Cong. Ch. and Soc. 25.96 + Nashua. Bbl. of C., _for Dudley, N. C._ + New Boston. Presb. Ch. and Soc. 6.75 + New Ipswich. Leavitt Lincoln 50.00 + Newport. Cong. Ch. 42.52 + Pembroke. Mrs. Mary W. Thompson 5.00 + Penacook. JEREMIAH C. MARTIN, to const. himself L. M. 30.00 + Salisbury. Cong. Ch. and Soc. 5.30 + Temple. Cong. Sab. Sch., 28.03; Rev. Geo. Goodyear, 5 33.03 + Winchester. Cong. Ch. and Soc. ad'l 1.41 + + +VERMONT, $678.67. + + Barnet. Cong. Ch. 72.00 + Bennington. Cong. Ch., bal. to const. Dea. G. A. + WATTLES, HENRY G. ROOT and Miss E. M. HUBBARD L. M's 53.20 + Bennington Centre. First Cong. Ch. 16.25 + Cambridge. Madison Safford 5.00 + Chester. Cong. Sab. Sch. 30.62 + Hartford. Cong. Sab. Sch. 14.06 + Ludlow. "A Friend" 5.00 + Manchester. Ladies of Cong. Ch., Bbl. of C., _for + Atlanta U._ + Marshfield. Lyman Clark 20.00 + Montpelier. Mrs. L. C. Bowen 10.00 + New Haven. "P. M." 100.00 + New Haven. Ladies' Aid Soc., 2 Bbls. C., _for Oaks, + N. C._ + Quechee. Cong. Sab. Sch. 9.36 + Saint Albans. Henry E. Seymour 5.00 + Saint Johnsbury. South Cong. Ch., 54.72; "A Colored + Man," 2 56.72 + Saint Johnsbury. Mrs. Franklin Fairbanks, _for Student + Aid, Fisk U._ 50.00 + Springfield. Mrs. F. Parks 100.00 + Stowe. Cong. Sab. Sch. (Part share) 8.00 + Wallingford. Cong. Sab. Sch. 10.00 + West Randolph. Miss B. Nichols .50 + West Brattleboro. Cong. Ch. 11.69 + West Randolph. Susan E. Albin 7.00 + West Randolph. Cong. Sab. Sch., _for Woman's Work_ 5.00 + Williston. Cong. Ch. 16.00 + Woodstock. Cong. Ch. 19.00 + By Mrs. Henry Fairbanks, _for McIntosh, Ga._; Johnson, + Sab. Sch., $13.67; Chelsea, Ladies' Soc., $10; + Pittsford, Cong. Sab. Sch., 20; Montpelier, Ladies, + $10 53.67 + + +MASSACHUSETTS, $5,202.67. + + Amherst. William M. Graves, 20; "A Friend," 10 30.00 + Amherst. Young People of Cong Ch., 10; Mrs. T. P. + Huntington, 2, _for Student Aid, Tougaloo U._ 12.00 + Andover. Free Christian Ch. and Soc., 80.82; "A + Friend," 30 110.82 + Andover. Ladies' Union H. M. Soc. (70 of which _for + Student Aid, Talladega C._) 72.00 + Andover. Mrs. Blake, _for Fort Sully, Dak._ 5.00 + Andover. West Parish Juv. Miss'y Soc. (One share) 20.00 + Ashburnham. First Cong. Ch. and Soc., bal. to + const. CLIFTON E. STOWE L. M. 10.00 + Ashland. Cong. Sab. Sch. 10.56 + Boston. Mount Vernon Ch. and Soc., 279.14; Rev. + MORTON DEXTER, 40, to const. himself L. M.; Mrs. E. + C. Parkhurst, 20; Mrs. M. B. Adams (one share), 20; + Miss Harriet N. Kirk, 15; "Mrs. W.," 1.--Brighton. + Cong. Ch. and Soc., 50.--Brookline. Harvard Ch. and + Soc., 88.48.--Cambridge. Ladies' Miss'y Soc., _for + Student Aid, Fisk U._, 6.25.--Cambridge. "A + Friend," 4.--Cambridgeport. Prospect Ch. and Soc., + 87.55.--Cambridgeport. Ladies' Miss'y Soc. of + Pilgrim Ch. to const. Mrs. E. D. LEAVITT L. M., + 30.--Dorchester. Young People's Mission Circle of + Second Ch., by Edith L. Mansfield, Treas., 40, _for + Two shares_, and 8 _for Student Aid, Wilmington, N. + C._--Dorchester. Mrs. Wm. Wales, 6.--South Boston. + Phillips Ch. and Soc., 68.29 763.71 + Bedford. "M. E. R." 5.00 + Braintree. South Cong. Ch. and Soc. 22.53 + Brimfield. Benev. Soc. of First Cong. Ch. to const. + MINER H. CORBIN L. M. 37.77 + Brimfield. Second Cong. Ch., _for Student Aid, + Chattanooga, Tenn._ 31.12 + Campello. Cong. Ch. and Soc. 50.00 + Charlton. Cong. Ch., 12.26 and Sab., Sch., 1.64 13.90 + Chelsea. Ladies' Union Home Mission Band, _for + Missionary, Chattanooga, Tenn._ 60.00 + Chelsea. Central Ch. and Soc., 21.24; Miss E. + Davenport, 5 26.24 + Chicopee Falls. Second Cong. Ch., Bbl. of C., _for + Talladega C._ + Clinton. Woman's Home Miss'y Ass'n, to const. Mrs. + JULIA M. DAKIN L. M. 30.00 + Clinton. Mrs. R. N. Ingalls, _for Student Aid, + Talladega C._ 25.00 + Clinton. By Marion E. McPhail, Treas., _for Student + Aid, Talladega C._ 20.00 + Clinton. Miss'y Soc., _for Talladega C._, _freight_ 2.40 + Clinton. 2 Bbls. of C., _for Kittrell, N. C._ + Cotuit. Union Ch. 14.25 + Curtisville. Frances M. Clarke 3.00 + Dalton. Mrs. James B. Crane 100.00 + East Bridgewater. Union Sab. Sch., _for Student + Aid, Talladega C._ 25.00 + East Bridgewater. Union Sab. Sch., Bbl. of C., _for + Talladega C._; 2 _for Freight_ 2.00 + East Douglas. Cong. Ch. and Soc. to const. Miss + NELLY M. KEMP L. M. 41.90 + Easthampton. ----, _for Reading R., Talladega C._ 4.00 + East Medway. First Cong. Ch. and Soc. 8.00 + East Weymouth. Cong. Soc. 16.00 + Edgartown. Cong. Ch. 10.00 + Fall River. First Cong. Ch., 80.70; Third Cong. + Ch., 10.20 90.90 + Falmouth. First Cong. Sab. Sch., _for Student Aid, + Atlanta U._ 10.00 + Fitchburg. Rollstone Ch. Sab. Sch., _for Student + Aid, Fisk U._ 40.50 + Framingham. Plym. Ch. and Soc., 48.86; and Sab. + Sch., 13.19; Mrs. S. N. Brewer, 10; "G. N.," 5; "A + Friend," 10 87.05 + Gardner. First Cong. Ch. 19.31 + Globe Village. Union Ch. Sab Sch. 25.00 + Gloucester. Evan. Cong. Ch. And Soc., 98; Mrs. + Nancy E. Brooks, 10 108.00 + Gloucester. Evan. Cong. Sab. Sch. (Bal. Share) 5.00 + Grafton. Bbl. of C., _for Dudley, N. C._ + Granby. Cong. Sab. Sch., to const. CHESTER KELLOGG + L. M. 30.00 + Hadley. First Ch. and Soc., 12.37; and Sab. Sch., + 9.48 21.85 + Hardwick. E. B. Foster 5.00 + Haverhill. West Cong. Sab. Sch., Dea. EBENEZER + WEBSTER'S Class, to const. him L. M., 30; Mrs. + Appleton's Class, _for Student Aid, Talladega C._, + 5; Perry Elliott's Class, 3.41 38.41 + Holliston. Ladies' Soc. of Cong. Ch., Bbl. of C., + _for Talladega C._ + Huntington. Second Cong. Ch. 6.37 + Ipswich. Linebrook Cong. Ch. and Soc. 5.69 + Lawrence. Lawrence St. Cong. Ch. 176.95 + Lee. Elizur Smith 100.00 + Leeds. E. L. Clark 5.00 + Lenox. F. Augustus Schemerborn, 25; Richard + Goodman, 15; Henry Sedgewick, 10 50.00 + Lowell. Kirk St. Cong. Ch. (2 of which _for Indian + M._), to const. Rev. C. A. DICKINSON and Mrs. C. A. + DICKINSON L. M's 200.00 + Lowell. John St. Cong. Ch 41.62 + Lowell. First Cong. Ch., Bbl. of C., _for + Wilmington, N. C._ + Malden. "Two Friends," 2; "A Friend," 1 3.00 + Maplewood. Bbl. of C., _for Wilmington, N. C._ + Marblehead. First Cong. Ch. and Soc. 7.00 + Marlborough. Young People's Mission Circle of Union + Ch., _for Tillotson C. & N. Inst._ 25.00 + Matfield. Mrs. W. S. E. Shaw, Box of C., _for + Macon, Ga._; 5 _for Freight_ 5.00 + Merrimac. Cong. Ch. 25.00 + Methuen. Cong. Sab. Sch., _for Student Aid, Fisk + U._ 30.00 + Middlefield. "A Friend" 5.00 + Milford. Ladies' Benev. Soc. of Cong. Ch., 2 Bbls. + of C., _for Talladega C._; 2.50 _for Freight_ 2.50 + Millbury. First Cong. Ch. and Soc. 58.45 + Millbury. Second Cong. Ch., 12.36; First Cong. Sab. + Sch., 20, _for Student Aid, Atlanta U._ 32.36 + Monson. Miss Sarah E. Bradford 4.00 + Natick. First Cong. Sab. Sch., _for Student Aid, + Straight U._ 50.00 + Natick. First Cong. Ch. and Soc. 20.00 + Needham. Evan. Cong. Ch. 3.50 + New Bedford. Mrs. I. H. Bartlett, Jr. 30.00 + New Bedford. Cong. Sab. Sch., _for Student Aid, + Fisk U._ 25.00 + Newton. Eliot Ch. and Soc. 123.85 + Newton. "A Friend," _for Talladega C._ 3.00 + Newton. Ladies' Aid Soc., Box of C., _for Macon, Ga._ + Newton Center. First Cong. Ch. and Soc. 94.26 + Norfolk. Cong. Ch. and Soc. 5.15 + North Billerica. Mrs. E. R. Gould, _for Macon, Ga._ 4.00 + Northbridge. Cong. Ch. and Soc. 10.00 + North Brookfield. First Cong. Ch. and Soc., bal. to + const. WILLIAM WRIGHT and LUTHER K. SNELL L. M's 45.00 + North Brookfield. Mrs. W. H. Montague, _for Student + Aid, Fisk U._ 5.00 + North Hadley. Mt. Holyoke Sem., Miss L. W. Shattuck, + 5; Miss Anna C. Edwards, 5, _for Student Aid, + Straight U._ 10.00 + Norton. Trin. Cong. Ch. and Soc., to const. Mrs. + DAVIS GREGORY and EDWIN FREEMAN L. M's 71.31 + Oxford. First Cong. Sab. Sch. 20.33 + Oxford. Ladies' Miss'y Circle, _for Kittrell, N. C._ 6.00 + Palmer. Second Cong. Ch., _for Student Aid, Fisk U._ 25.00 + Pepperell. 2 Bbls. of C., _for Dudley, N. C._ + Petersham. Cong. Ch. and Soc. 2.59 + Pittsfield. James H. Dunham, 50; First Cong. Ch., + 25; Second Cong. Sab. Sch., 5 80.00 + Raynham. First Cong. Ch. and Soc. 14.64 + Reading. Bethesda Sab. Sch., _for Student Aid, Fisk U._ 40.00 + Rockland. Cong. Ch. and Soc. 75.00 + Royalston. First Cong. Sab. Sch., _for Student Aid, + Tougaloo U._ 15.00 + Royalston. Mrs. H. M. Estabrook 5.00 + Salem. South Cong. Ch. and Soc. 86.28 + Salem. Crombie St. Sab. Sch., _for Student Aid, + Talladega C._ 25.00 + Somerville. E. Stone, _for Student Aid, Fisk U._ 50.00 + Somerville. "M" 50.00 + Southbridge. Cong. Ch., 2 Bbls. of C., _for + Wilmington, N. C._; 3.05 _for Freight_ 3.05 + South Wellfleet. "A Life Member" 1.00 + South Weymouth. Sec. Cong. Ch., Miss Grover's S. S. + Class, _for Student Aid, Atlanta U._ 10.00 + Spencer. Mrs. G. P. Ladd's S. S. Class, _for + Student Aid, Talladega C._ 2.01 + Springfield First Cong. Ch. Sab. Sch., 20; + "Friends" 5.60, _for Oaks, N. C._ 25.60 + Stockbridge. Cong. Ch. 48.96 + Stoneham. Cong. Ch. and Soc. 23.00 + Sunderland. Cong. Sab. Sch. 40.39 + Sunderland. "The Acorns," _for Student Aid, Fisk U._ 7.73 + Wakefield. Cong. Ch. and Soc. 53.39 + Walpole. Or. Cong. Ch. and Soc., 43; Mrs. C. F. + Metcalf, 1; Miss L. J. Gould, 1 45.00 + Walpole. Mr. Johnson, _for Student Aid, Fisk U._ 1.00 + Watertown. Mrs. M. Fuller, _for Student Aid, + Tougaloo U._ 10.00 + Watertown. Phillips Ch. Sab. Sch., _for Student + Aid, Tougaloo U._ 10.00 + Watertown. Mrs. J. Q. A. Pierce 1.00 + Wayland. Cong. Sab. Sch., _for Kittrell, N. C._ 5.50 + Wellesley. Cong. Ch. and Soc. 100.46 + Wellesley Hills. Cong. Ch. 74.75 + West Attleborough. First Cong. Ch. and Soc. 9.78 + Westborough. Cong. Ch. and Soc. 12.54 + West Brookfield. Cong. Ch. and Soc. 30.25 + West Dennis. Mrs. Sarah S. Crowell 1.50 + Westfield. Miss E. B. Dickinson, 50.10; Mrs. C. W. + Fowler, 5 55.10 + Westfield. Ladies' Benev. Soc., Second Ch., Bbl. of + C., val. 66, _for Straight U._; 1.65 _for Freight_ 1.65 + West Newbury. J. C. Carr 1.00 + West Springfield. First Cong. Sab. Sch., _for + Atlanta U._ 10.00 + Williamsburg. Cong. Ch. and Soc. (5.20 of which + _for Hampton N and A. Inst._) 95.20 + Winchester. First Cong. Sab. Sch., _for Student + Aid, Fisk U._ 55.00 + Woburn. Cong. Sab. Sch., _for Student Aid, Fisk U._ 75.00 + Woburn. William Temple 5.00 + Worcester. Union Ch. and Soc., 209.16; Piedmont Ch. + (ad'l), 50.77; Rev. C. M. Lamson, 5; "A Friend," 2 + Dictionaries (Greek and Latin) 264.93 + Worcester. Collected by Mrs. C. M. Lamson, of Salem + St. Ch., _for Student Aid, Fisk U._ 25.00 + Worcester. "A Friend," _for Kindergarten, Storrs + Sch., Atlanta, Ga._ 25.00 + Worcester. Ladies' Miss'y Circle, by Mrs. H. B. + Merriman (one share) 20.00 + Worcester. Mrs. H. L. Stearns' S. S. Class, _for + Student Aid, Talladega C._ 5.00 + ----. "Mount Holyoke," _for Student Aid, Tougaloo U._ 8.00 + ----. "A Friend" 2.00 + By Charles Marsh, Treas. Hampden Benev. Ass'n: + Springfield, First, 26.96; South, 81.81; Blandford, + 6; Palmer, Second, 50; Mittineague, 28 192.77 + --------- + $5,198.63 + + LEGACY. + + Lancaster. Estate of Miss Sophia Stearns, by Wm. W. + Wyman, Ex. 4.04 + --------- + $5,202.67 + + CLOTHING, ETC., RECEIVED AT BOSTON OFFICE: NEW + HAMPSHIRE, Keene Ladies' Benev. Soc. of Second Ch., + 1 Bbl., _for McIntosh, Ga._; Walpole, Ladies of + Cong. Ch., 1 Bbl. _for Dakota Home_. MASSACHUSETTS, + Dorchester, Mrs. James Foster, "The Family + Library," etc.; Mrs. R. L. Prouty, Pkg. + "Congregationalists"; Fitchburg, Herbert H. Dole, + Pkg. "Youth's Companion"; Harvard, Woman's Benev. + Soc. of Ev. Cong. Ch., 2 Bbls. C., _for Wilmington, + N. C._, val. 35; Lawrence, Ladies' Benev. Soc. of + Lawrence St. Ch., 1 Bbl., val. 75, _for Talladega + C._; Templeton, Elizabeth C. D. Shattuck, Bundle, + val. (in part) 3.16, _for Chattanooga, Tenn._; + Revere, Cong. Ch., 2 Bbls., _for Chattanooga, + Tenn._; Watertown, Ladies of Phillips Ch., 1 Bbl. + RHODE ISLAND, Westerly, Cong. Ch., 1 Bbl., _for + Savannah, Ga._ + + +RHODE ISLAND, $1,684.77. + + Barrington. Cong. Ch. (ad'l) 17.40 + Central Falls. Cong. Ch. 65.00 + Newport. "A Friend" 10.00 + Pawtucket. Cong. Ch. 77.14 + Providence. Union Cong. Ch. 785.23 + Providence. Beneficent Cong. Ch. Sab. Sch., _for + Student Aid, Talladega C._ 50.00 + Seekonk and East Providence. Cong. Ch., to const. + ROBERT R. PEARSE and ALBERT M. FINNAMORE L. M's 60.00 + --------- + $1,064.77 + + LEGACY. + + Providence. Estate of Anthony B. Arnold, by John H. + Cheever and Wm. Knight, Exrs. 620.00 + --------- + $1,684.77 + + +CONNECTICUT, $4,766.91. + + Bethel. Cong. Ch. 107.08 + Bethel. "Willing Workers," _for Talladega C._ 20.00 + Black Rock. Cong. Ch. 11.54 + Branford. Cong. Ch. 9.13 + Bridgeport. Children of North Ch. Infant Class, _for + Cal. Chinese M._ 20.00 + Bridgeport. Miss Wood, Box Books, etc., _for Talladega + C._ + Bristol. Cong. Sab. Sch. 20.00 + Brookfield. Cong. Ch. and Soc. 15.63 + Canterbury. Westminster Cong. Ch. 9.07 + Collinsville. Cong. Ch. and Soc. 17.84 + Cromwell. Cong. Ch. 78.00 + Danielsonville. Case of C., _for Tougaloo, Miss._ + Fair Haven. Miss H. L. Rice, _for Indian M._ 1.00 + Farmington. Cong. Ch. 57.80 + Goshen. Cong. Ch. and Soc. 12.00 + Greenville. Cong. Sab. Sch., _for Student Aid, + Straight U._ 32.94 + Hadlyme. Joseph W. Hungerford 100.00 + Hartford. Asylum Hill Cong. Ch. (5 of which _for + Indian M._) 281.65 + Hartford. Second Ch. of Christ, 150; Gilbert G. + Mosely, 10 160.00 + Jewett City. Cong. Ch. 9.04 + Kensington. Cong. Ch. and Soc. 26.65 + Lakeville. Mrs. M. H. Williams 25.00 + Ledyard. Cong. Ch. and Soc. and Sab. Sch. 24.78 + Lyme. First Ecc. Soc. 34.47 + Middletown. Cong. Ch. Sab. Sch., _for Indian M._ 30.00 + Milton. Cong. Ch. 5.00 + Montville. First Cong. Ch. 10.15 + Mount Carmel. W. W. Woodruff, _for Tillotson C. and + N. Inst._ 25.00 + Mystic Bridge. Cong. Ch. 12.50 + Naugatuck. Cong. Ch. 80.00 + New Britain. South Cong. Ch. 198.41 + New Hartford. Bible Class, by Rev. F. H. Adams, _for + Student Aid, Fisk U._ 10.00 + New Haven. Nelson Hall, 50.; College St. Cong. Ch., + 36.65, and Sab. Sch., 11; Mrs. Sylvia Johnson, 30, + to const. Miss LUCIE J. HARRISON L. M. 127.66 + New Haven. Young Ladies' Mission Circle of United Ch., + _for Dakota Home, Santee Agency_ 50.00 + New Haven. L. M. Law, 25; Miss Julia Leek, 1, _for + Indian M._ 26.00 + Newington. Miss Agnes Belden, Bbl. of C., _for + Talladega C._ + New London. Second Cong. Ch., 595.24; "A Friend," 1.50 596.74 + Newtown. Cong. Soc. 20.00 + Northford. Cong. Ch. 15.08 + Norwich. Second Cong. Ch., 217.10; Miss Sarah M. Lee, + 25 242.10 + Norwichtown. "First Ch." 21.00 + Old Lyme. First Cong. Ch. 15.00 + Orange. Cong. Ch., _for Tillotson C. & N. Inst._ 35.00 + Plainville. "A Friend" 100.00 + Pomfret. First Cong. Ch. 55.00 + Rockville. J. Edwards Banta, Box papers, etc., _for + Macon, Ga._, 1, _for Freight_ 1.00 + Salisbury, Cong. Ch. and Soc. 52.70 + South Britain. Cong. Ch. 15.41 + Staffordville. Cong. Ch. 5.00 + Talcottville. Sarah T. Avery 5.00 + Thomaston. Cong. Ch. and Soc. 29.66 + Thompsonville. D. Pease .50 + Tolland. Mrs. Lucy L. Clough, 50, _for Indian M._, 25 + _for Chinese M._ and 25 _for Freedmen_ 100.00 + Torrington. Young Ladies' Miss'y Soc., Cask of C., + etc., _for Talladega C._, 4, _for freight_ 4.00 + Wallingford. First Cong. Ch. 35.33 + Wapping. Cong Ch. 16.75 + Waterbury. Second Cong. Ch. 196.00 + Watertown. Dr. John De Forest, _for Student Aid, + Talladega C._ 200.00 + West Hartford. A. Chappell, 10; Cong. Ch. (ad'l), 8.02 18.02 + Wilton. Cong. Ch. 66.41 + Windsor Locks. Cong. Sab. Sch., _for Dormitory, + Tillotson C. & N. Inst._ 195.00 + Winsted. Mrs. M. A. Mitchell, _for Student Aid, + Talladega C._ 20.00 + Winsted. Elias E. Gilman, 10; Mrs. Emily W. Case, 10 20.00 + Woodbury. Mrs. E. L. Curtiss 10.00 + --------- + $3,739.04 + + LEGACY. + + Ellington. Estate of Maria Pitkin, by Edwin Talcott, + Ex. $1,027.87 + --------- + $4,766.91 + + +NEW YORK, $2,739.93. + + Baldwinsville. Howard Carter 25.00 + Binghamton. Sheldon Warner 5.00 + Brooklyn. Clinton Av. Cong. Ch., 531; Plymouth Ch., + 464.51; South Cong. Ch., 50; Ch. of the Covenant + Sab. Sch., bal. to const. Mrs. JULIETTE H. MACKAY + L. M., 20; Mrs. M. L. Hollis, 2; Rev. E. P. Thwing, + Pkg. Books 1,067.51 + Brooklyn. Central Cong. Sab. Sch., _for Santee + Agency_ 37.50 + Canastota. E. B. Northrup 100.00 + Churchville. Union Cong. Ch. and Soc. 28.53 + Ellington. Mrs. H. B. Rice, 10; Mrs. E. Rice, 4; + A. C. Rice, 2 16.00 + Flushing. Cong. Sab. Sch., 10, _for Student Aid, + Talladega C._; Miss C. T. Gilman, 2.30, _for + freight_ 12.30 + Gaines. Cong. Ch. and Soc., 30.84, and Sab. Sch., 6.25 37.09 + Groton. Cong. Ch., 18.08; Mrs. Kesia Bostwick, 7.; Dr. + Clark Chapman, 5 30.08 + Himrods. Mrs. G. L. Ayres, _for Woman's Work_ 5.00 + Homer. Sab. Sch. Class, _for Student Aid, Talladega C._ 1.00 + Hudson. Mrs. D. A. Jones 15.00 + Keeseville. Enos Barnes 1.50 + Lockport. First Cong. Ch. 18.06 + Lockport. Cong. Ch., _for Student Aid, Talladega C._ 14.00 + Marcellus. Mrs. L. Hemenway 3.00 + Middlesex. Lester Adams 20.00 + Morristown. First Cong. Ch. 8.00 + New York. S. T. Gordon (of which 100 _for Little + Rock, Ark._; 100 _for Wilmington, N. C._; 100 _for + Tougaloo, Miss._; and 100 _for Tillotson C. & N. + Inst._), 500 500.00 + New York. Roswell Smith, 250; By "Aunt Patience," 1 251.00 + New York. The Century Co., 50 cop. "Songs of the + Church" (second hand), _for Marion, Ala._ + North Walton. Cong. Ch. Sab. Sch. 35.90 + Owasco. Mrs. A Stewart 1.00 + Oswego. Primary Pub. Sch., Box Books _for Oaks, N. C._ + Port Richmond. Captain Stephen Squier 5.00 + Salamanca. Rev. Wm. C. Scofield 7.00 + Saratoga. Cong. Ch., Ladies Soc., Bbl. of C., _for + Talladega, C._ + Sinclairville. E. Williams 3.00 + Syracuse. ---- 5.00 + Syracuse. Mrs. Caroline B. Curtis, Box Papers, etc., + _for Macon, Ga._; 1.70 _for Freight_ 1.70 + Walton. First Cong. Sab. Sch. 35.67 + Warsaw. Cong. Ch. 20.34 + Waterville. Mrs. Winchel, 5; Mrs. J. Candee, 5 10.00 + Westmoreland. Miss C. M. Miller .75 + West Salamanca. "A Friend" 419.00 + + +NEW JERSEY, $26.73. + + Jersey City. First Cong. Ch. 6.73 + Montclair. Mrs. J. F. Pratt's Sab. Sch. Class, _for + Student Aid, Talladega C._ 8.00 + Perth Amboy. Friday Afternoon Class, by Miss E. W. + Martin, Bdl. S. S. Papers + Raritan. Miss S. Provost, Case of Books and Papers + ----. "Heart's Content" 10.00 + ----. "A Friend," _for Santee Agency, Neb._ 2.00 + + +PENNSYLVANIA, $50.50. + + Guy's Mills. Cong. Ch., 18.50; Ladies' Miss'y Soc., 5; + Children's Miss'y Soc., 5 28.50 + Kingston. Welsh Cong. Ch. 10.00 + Philadelphia. Sarah Furber 1.00 + Sewickley. "E. H. T.," _for Indian M._ 2.00 + Stony Creek. Charles E. Webster 9.00 + + +OHIO, $544.11. + + Ashland. Mrs. Eliza Thompson 2.28 + Brownhelm. Cong. Ch. 11.00 + Cleveland. Mrs. A. Scott (_one share_) 20.00 + Cleveland. Franklin Av. Cong. Ch. 15.00 + Cincinnati. Geo. S. Gray, 18 Anthem Books, _for + Talladega C._ + Delaware. Wm. Bevan 5.00 + Greenwich. Anna M. Mead 1.50 + Geneva. "H. A. W." 1.50 + Kingsville. Myron Whiting 250.00 + North Benton. Mrs. M. J. Hartzell 2.50 + Oberlin. First. Cong. Ch., 87.88; E. P. Barrows, 10; + Mrs. C. C. Wheat, 1 98.88 + Oberlin. Second Cong. Ch., _15 for furnishing room + and 10 for Student Aid, Williamsburg, Ky._ 25.00 + Oberlin. Young Ladies' Miss'y Soc., 5; Mrs. M. J. P. + Hatch, 1, _for Reading-room, Lexington, Ky._ 6.00 + Oberlin. Young Ladies' Miss'y Soc., _for Student Aid, + Tougaloo U._ 1.50 + Painesville. First Cong. Ch., 51.64, to const. N. O. + LEE L. M.; Mrs. E. Hickok, 5 56.64 + Painesville. "O. W. H. M. U.," by Mrs. Wm. Clayton, + Treas. 4.76 + Painesville. Sab. Sch. Class, by M. M. House, _for + Santee Agency, Neb._ 3.00 + Radnor. Edward D. Jones 5.00 + Ravenna. Cong. Ch. 23.55 + Savannah. George Mackie 1.00 + Saybrook. Mrs. A. M. Messenger, 2; Dea. D. Maltby, 1 3.00 + Tallmadge. Rev. Luther Shaw, 8 Bibles + Unionville. Mrs. E. F. Burnelle 2.00 + Windham. Wm. A. Perkins 5.00 + + +INDIANA, $22.00. + + Elkhart. First Cong. Ch. 15.00 + Indianapolis. Rev O. C. McKullock, Box Books, etc., + _for Macon, Ga._; 5 _for Freight_ 5.00 + Sparta. John Hawkswell 1.50 + Versailles. John D. Nichols .50 + + +ILLINOIS, $837.99. + + Atkinson. First Cong. Ch., Box S. S. Papers, _for + Talladega C._ + Batavia. Cong. Ch. 65.00 + Belvidere. Mrs. M. C. Foote 5.00 + Brimfield. Cong. Ch. 5.00 + Champaign. Cong. Ch. 45.55 + Chicago. N. E. Cong. Ch., 198.53; South Cong. Ch., + 39.26; Mrs. J. H. McArthur, 5 242.79 + Chicago. Ladies' Miss'y Soc. of N. E. Cong. Ch., _for + Missionary, Mobile, Ala._ 47.10 + Chicago. First Cong. Sab. Sch., _for Student Aid, Fisk + U._ 25.00 + Chicago. South Cong. Sab. Sch., _for Student Aid, + Talladega C._ 13.00 + Elgin. Cong. Ch. 32.48 + Elgin. Mrs. E. E. C. Borden (20 of which _for Hampton + N. & A. Inst._) 30.00 + Galesburg. First Church of Christ 37.10 + Galva. Theodora Miss'y Soc., Bbl. and Box of C., _for + Talladega C._ + Geneso. Cong. Ch. 116.30 + Geneseo. Young Ladies' Soc., Bbl. of C., etc., _for + Talladega C._ + Hamlet. Levi Cooper .50 + Ivanhoe. Miss Mary Cowdry, _for Student Aid, Tougaloo + U._ 5.00 + Lyndon. Mrs. H. Deming .50 + Lombard. First Cong. Ch. 9.50 + Malden. Cong. Ch. 13.00 + Maywood. Woman's Co-operative Miss'y Soc. of Cong. Ch. 5.00 + Millburn. Cong. Ch. 10.00 + Moline. Mission Circle of Cong. Ch., 23.50. Incorrectly + ack. in Nov. number from Hartford, Ct. + Oglesby. T. T. Bent 5.00 + Payson. Cong. Sab. Sch. 16.60 + Peoria. Rev. A. A. Stevens 10.00 + Plainfield. Mrs. Edward Ebbs 10.00 + Port Byron. Mission Circle of Cong. Ch. _for Missionary, + Mobile, Ala._ 17.50 + Princeton. Mrs. Polly B. Cross 10.00 + Rochelle. W. H. Holcomb, Sen. 2.00 + Roseville. Mrs. L. C. Axtell, Bbl. of C., etc., _for + Macon, Ga_. + Shabbona. First Cong. Ch. and Soc. (30 of which from + "A Friend," _for Student Aid, Fisk U._) 46.57 + Wilmette. Cong. Sab. Sch., _for Student Aid, Fisk U._ 12.50 + + +MICHIGAN, $773.09. + + Allendale. Cong. Ch., 4.15, and Sab. Sch., 1.85 6.00 + Delhi Mills. "A Friend" 2.00 + Dexter. Dennis Warner 20.00 + Grandville. "E. B." 2.00 + Greenville. M. Rutan 500.00 + Hancock. Woman's Miss'y Soc. of Cong. Soc., _for Theo. + Dept., Talladega C._ 25.00 + Laingsburg. Cong. Ch. 10.85 + Lake Lyndon. Cong. Sab. Sch., _for Student Aid, + Talladega C._ 20.00 + Lansing. Plymouth Ch. 4.71 + Northville. D. Pomeroy 5.00 + Oakley. Ch. of Christ 1.00 + Olivet. Cong. Ch. 96.92 + Saline. Eli Benton 50.00 + Three Oaks. Cong. Ch. 19.61 + White Lake. Robert Garner 10.00 + + +IOWA, $637.35. + + Burlington. Cong. Ch. 15.41 + Davenport. Geo. W. Ells 10.00 + Des Moines. Dr. H. L. Whitman, _for Talladega C._ 500.00 + Dubuque. Young Ladies' Benev. Soc., _for Student Aid, + Talladega C._ 25.00 + Dubuque. Woman's Miss'y Soc. of Cong. Ch., _for + Missionary, New Orleans, La._ 10.00 + Grinnell. Cong. Ch. 30.29 + Grinnell. By Miss Ella E. Marsh, _for Missionary, New + Orleans, La._ 17.75 + Grinnell. C. A. Taylor's Sab. Sch. Class, _for Talladega + C._ 7.35 + McGregor. Woman's Miss'y Soc. 6.30 + New Hampton. Woman's Cent. Soc. 2.25 + Osage. Cheerful Giver's Mission Band 8.00 + Stuart. Woman's Miss'y Soc., _for Missionary, New + Orleans, La._ 5.00 + + +WISCONSIN, $222.04. + + Appleton. Cong. Ch. 81.57 + Beloit. First Cong. Sab. Sch., _for Student Aid, + Talladega C._ 30.00 + Elkhorn. Cong. Ch. 16.00 + Fond du Lac. Cong. Ch. 13.00 + Geneva. Cong. Ch. 10.73 + Janesville. "Busy Bees," First Cong. Sab. Sch., _for + Student Aid, Macon, Ga_. 3.00 + New London. First Cong. Ch., Box of C., etc., _for + Macon, Ga._ + New Richmond. First Cong. Ch. 18.45 + Nicollet. Mrs. D. D. Kellogg, Sewing Machine, _for + Macon, Ga._ + Oshkosh. Mrs. Lucy Bartlett, Box Books, _for Library_, + and Box of C., _for Macon, Ga._ + Racine. Mrs. D, D. Nichols .50 + Ripon. First Cong. Sab. Sch., 10.85; Do Good Soc., 95c. 11.80 + Ripon. Do Good Soc., 6.80; First Cong. Sab. Sch., 5.19; + _for Macon, Ga._ 11.99 + Salem. First. Cong. Ch., _for Student Aid, Williamsburg, + Ky._ 15.00 + Sheboygan. First Cong. Sab. Sch., _for Macon, Ga._ 10.00 + + +MINNESOTA, $406.63. + + Excelsior. Cong. Ch. 12.00 + Glyndon. Union Ch. 3.42 + Hamilton. Cong. Ch. 4.00 + Mankato. Belgrade Sab. Sch. 1.65 + Minneapolis. Plymouth Cong. Ch., 33.35; First Cong. Ch., + 11.15; The Open Door Cong. Ch., 3.15 47.65 + Northfield. Ladies of Cong. Ch., _for Talladega C., + Freight_ 5.65 + Rochester. G. H. Swasey 1.00 + Saint Paul. Plymouth Cong. Ch. 67.11 + Worthington. Union Cong. Ch. 14.15 + ----. "Friends," _for Atlanta U._ 250.00 + + +KANSAS, $15.95. + + Atchison. Ladies of Cong. Ch., _for Student Aid, + Atlanta U._ 3.00 + Topeka. Tuition 12.95 + + +MISSOURI, $97.71. + + Kansas City. Clyde Cong. Ch. 5.00 + Saint Joseph. Tab. Cong. Ch. 9.00 + Saint Louis. First Cong. Ch. 83.71 + + +NEBRASKA, $42.88. + + Exeter. Ladies' Miss'y Soc., 7.45; Children's Mission + Band, 3.55; First Cong. Ch., 7.80 18.80 + Wahoo. Cong. Ch. 20.80 + Waverly. Cong. Ch. 4.00 + + +DAKOTA, $10.00. + + Fort Berthold. Cong. Ch., _for Indian M._ 10.00 + + +CALIFORNIA, $25.00. + + San Francisco. Rev. J. Rowell 25.00 + + +DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA, $15.00. + + Washington. Mrs. Abby N. Bailey, 10; Lincoln Mission + Sab. Sch., 5 15.00 + + +MARYLAND, $4.00. + + Federalsburg. Sarah Beals 4.00 + + +KENTUCKY, $106.14. + + Lexington. Tuition, 38.40; Rent, 5.54 43.94 + Williamsburg. Tuition, 58; Rent, 1 59.00 + Williamsburg. Rev. J. T. Ford, _for Room_ 3.20 + + +VIRGINIA, $6.00. + + Herndon. Cong. Ch. 6.00 + + +TENNESSEE, $712.21 + + Chattanooga. Miss L. M. Lawson 1.00 + Jellico. Tuition 29.00 + Jonesboro. Tuition 5.50 + Knoxville. Cong. Ch. 12.00 + Memphis. Tuition 229.65 + Nashville. Tuition 425.06 + Nashville. Jackson St. Cong. Ch. 5.00 + Pleasant Hill. Cong. Ch. 5.00 + + +NORTH CAROLINA, $221.01. + + Kittrell. Tuition 14.00 + McLeansville. Cong. Ch. 5.74 + Wilmington. Tuition 188.27 + Wilmington. Cong. Ch. 10.00 + Wilmington. By Miss Warner, _for Student Aid_ 3.00 + + +SOUTH CAROLINA, $15.00. + + Charleston. Plym. Cong. Ch. 15.00 + + +GEORGIA, $612.47. + + Atlanta. Storrs Sch., Tuition, 226.95; Rent, 3 229.95 + Atlanta. Prof. T. A. Chase 5.00 + Macon. Tuition 149.95 + Macon. Cong. Ch. 10.00 + Macon. Unknown Friends, 2 Boxes of C., _for Macon, Ga._ + McIntosh. Tuition 43.36 + Savannah. Tuition 174.21 + + +ALABAMA, $925.76. + + Athens. Tuition 168.70 + Marion. Cong. Ch. 45.52 + Mobile. Tuition 205.60 + Montgomery. Cong. Ch. 30.00 + Selma. Cong. Ch. 20.80 + Talladega. Tuition 445.14 + Talladega. Miss J. Lunt, _for Student Aid_ 10.00 + + +MISSISSIPPI, $124.15. + + Tougaloo. Tuition 112.15 + Tougaloo. By Miss Mary A. Scott, _for Student Aid_ 12.00 + + +LOUISIANA, $290.00. + + New Orleans. Tuition 290.00 + + +TEXAS, $151.88. + + Austin. Tuition 148.88 + Helena. Rev. M. Thompson 3.00 + + +INCOMES, $895.00. + + Avery Estate, _for Mendi M._ 570.00 + Graves Library Fund, _for Atlanta U._ 150.00 + Howard Theo. Fund, _for Howard U._ 125.00 + Plumb Scholarship Fund, _for Fisk U._ 50.00 + + +PERSIA, $10.00. + + Oroomiah. Mrs. E. W. Labaree, by Charles Marsh, + Treas. H. B. A. 10.00 + + ---------- + Total for January $24,342.98 + Total from Oct. 1 to Jan. 31 75,684.88 + ========== + + +FOR THE AMERICAN MISSIONARY. + + Subscriptions for January 274.10 + Previously acknowledged 402.47 + --------- + Total $676.57 + ========= + + + H. W. HUBBARD, Treas., + 56 Reade Street, N. Y. + + * * * * * + +WANTS. + +1. A steady INCREASE of regular income to keep pace with the growing +work. This increase can only be reached by _regular_ and _larger_ +contributions from the churches, the feeble as well as the strong. + +2. ADDITIONAL BUILDINGS for our higher educational institutions, to +accommodate the increasing number of students; MEETING HOUSES for the +new churches we are organizing; MORE MINISTERS, cultured and pious, +for these churches. + +3. HELP FOR YOUNG MEN, to be educated as ministers and teachers here +and missionaries to Africa--a pressing want. + +4. FUNDS FOR INDUSTRIAL DEPARTMENTS--to purchase farm implements, +plows, harrows and cultivators; to erect shops and furnish tools and +materials for instruction and use in the mechanic arts, for +carpenters, blacksmiths, tin-men, harness and shoemakers; and to +supply the girls' industrial rooms with sewing and knitting +materials. + +5. Ten Thousand new subscribers for THE AMERICAN MISSIONARY. All in +favor of indorsing this want will please send on their vote, making +use of the following: + + +FORM OF BALLOT. + + H. W. HUBBARD, _Esq., Treasurer_, + + _56 Reade Street, New York_: + + _Inclosed please find Fifty Cents, subscription for_ THE AMERICAN + MISSIONARY _for the year 1885._ + + _Sign with your Name and Address._ + +We are not afraid of a heavy vote. Roll up the majority! + + * * * * * +_Advertisements._ + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: CHILD'S CATARRH SPECIFIC] + + +_Eighteen years_ of terrible headache, disgusting nasal discharges, +dryness of the throat, acute bronchitis, coughing, soreness of the +lungs, rising bloody mucus, and even night sweats, incapacitating me +from my professional duties, and bringing me to the verge of the +grave--all were caused by, and the result of nasal catarrh. After +spending hundreds of dollars and obtaining no relief, I compounded my +Catarrh Specific and Cold Air Inhaling Balm, and wrought upon myself +a wonderful cure. Now I can speak for hours with no difficulty, and +can breathe freely in any atmosphere. + + T. P. CHILDS. + + +DANGER SIGNALS + +Do you take cold easily? Have you a cold in the head that does not +get better? Have you a hacking cough? Is your throat affected? Are +you troubled with hoarseness? Soreness of the throat? Difficulty in +breathing? Have you pain in the head between and above the eyes? A +sense of fulness in the head? Are the passages of the nose stopped +up? Is your breath foul? Have you lost all sense of smell? Are you +troubled with hawking? Spitting? Weak, inflamed eyes? Dullness or +dizziness of the head? Dryness or heat of the nose? Is your voice +harsh or rough? Have you any difficulty in talking? Have you an +excessive secretion of mucus or matter in the nasal passages, which +must either be blown from the nose, or drop back behind the palate, +or hawked or snuffed backward to the throat? Ringing or roaring or +other noises in the ears, more or less impairment of the hearing? If +so you have CATARRH. + + +120,000 + +Catarrhal cases have applied to me for relief. Many thousands have +received my Specific, and are cured. We add a few of the many +hundreds of unsolicited certificates which have been sent to us by +grateful patients-- + + My wife is entirely cured. I. V. COLLINS, Corcket, Tex. + + Your remedy has cured me. M. ALSHULER, Mattoon, Ill. + + Your treatment has cured my daughter of Catarrh, induced + by a severe attack of measles. + JOHN W. RILEY, U. S. Express Agent, Troy, O. + + Your treatment did me great good. I have not lost a + day by sickness this year. + ABNER GRAHAM, Biddle Uni'sity, Charlotte, N. C. + + I have used your Catarrh treatment, and am cured. A + thousand thanks to you for so sure a remedy. + FANNIE DEMENT, Dyer Station Tenn. + + The medicine did for me all you represented. + T. H. MESSMORE, Cadillac, Mich. + + My health is fully restored. The horrid and loathsome + disease is all gone. My lungs feel all right. + MRS. W. D. LINCOLN, York, Neb. + + Your treatment has cured me; Your inhalers are excellent. + This is the only radical cure I have ever found. + E. S. MARTIN, M. E. Church, Port Carbon, PA. + + I have so far recovered that I am able to attend church, + can walk half a mile, have a good appetite, and am gaining + all the time. + MRS. A. N. MUNGER, Detroit, Mich. + + Now I am cured; head free; air passages all open, and + breathing natural. A thousand thanks to you for so sure + a remedy. + (JUDGE) J. COLLETT, Lima, Ohio. + + I was thought to have had Consumption, and had suffered + many years with what was really Catarrh, before I + procured your treatment. I have had no return of the disease. + (MISS) LOUIE JAMES, Crab Orchard, Ky. + + +Childs' Catarrh Specific + +Will effectually and permanently cure any case of catarrh, no matter +how desperate. The treatment is local as well as constitutional, and +can only be obtained at Troy, O. We especially desire to treat those +who have tried other remedies without success. + +Childs' Treatment for Catarrh, and for disease of the Bronchial +Tubes, can be taken at home with perfect ease and safety, by the +patient. No expense need be entailed beyond the cost of the medicine. +A full statement of method of home treatment and cost will be sent on +application. + +Address REV. T. P. CHILDS, Troy, Ohio. _Mention this paper._ + + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The American Missionary -- Volume 39, +No. 03, March, 1885, by Various + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK AMERICAN MISSIONARY, MARCH 1885 *** + +***** This file should be named 30459.txt or 30459.zip ***** +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: + https://www.gutenberg.org/3/0/4/5/30459/ + +Produced by Joshua Hutchinson, KarenD, and the Online +Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This +file was produced from images generously made available +by Cornell University Digital Collections.) + + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. 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