The Project Gutenberg EBook of The American Missionary -- Volume 36, No.
3, March, 1882, by Various
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Title: The American Missionary -- Volume 36, No. 3, March, 1882
Author: Various
Release Date: July 15, 2018 [EBook #57510]
Language: English
Character set encoding: UTF-8
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CONTENTS.
EDITORIAL. |
|
Page. |
So Far—Pamphlet No. 7 |
65 |
Paragraphs |
66 |
Arthington Mission—A Parallel |
67 |
Latest News from Rev. H. M. Ladd |
68 |
Map of Mission in Eastern Africa |
69 |
The Slave Music of the South, by Rev. Geo. H. Griffin |
70 |
Round the World |
72 |
Revival News |
73 |
General Notes—Africa, Indians, Chinese |
74 |
Benefactions—“Missionary Papers” |
76 |
A Blind Sampson, by Rev. A. J. Biddle |
77 |
THE FREEDMEN. |
Twenty Years After Freedom (with cuts) |
78 |
Emerson Institute, Mobile, Ala., Burned |
80 |
THE INDIANS. |
Christmas at Spokan Falls, W. T., Etc. |
82 |
THE CHINESE. |
Clippings from forthcoming Annual Report
of our California Auxiliary |
82 |
CHILDREN’S PAGE. |
Boy Life in China |
83 |
RECEIPTS |
84 |
American Missionary Association,
56 READE STREET, NEW YORK.
President, Hon. WM. B. WASHBURN, Mass.
CORRESPONDING SECRETARY.
Rev. M. E. STRIEBY, D.D., 56 Reade Street, N.Y.
TREASURER.
H. W. HUBBARD, Esq., 56 Reade Street, N.Y.
DISTRICT SECRETARIES.
Rev. C. L. WOODWORTH, Boston.
Rev. G. D. PIKE, D.D., New York.
Rev. JAMES POWELL, Chicago.
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 Editor of the
“American Missionary,” to Rev. G. D. Pike, D.D., 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, Rev. C.
L. Woodworth, Dist. Sec., 21 Congregational House, Boston, Mass.,
or Rev. James Powell, Dist. Sec., 112 West Washington Street,
Chicago, Ill. A payment of thirty dollars at one time constitutes a
Life Member. Letters relating to boxes and barrels of clothing may
be addressed to the persons above named.
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.
The Annual Report of the A. M. A. contains the Constitution of the
Association and the By-Laws of the Executive Committee. A copy will
be sent free on application.
[65]
THE
American Missionary.
Vol. XXXVI.
MARCH, 1882.
No. 3.
American Missionary Association.
SO FAR.
One-third of the fiscal year of this Association ended January
31. Our friends will be glad to learn of our progress so far. Our
annual meeting, after careful deliberation, decided that $300,000
(or 23 per cent. more than last year) would be needed for the
growing work of this year; and we have been obliged to expend more
than one-third of this amount, showing that our estimate was none
too large.
Our receipts for the four months ending January 31 have been
$83,893.39. Of this amount $9,191.72 was received in legacies,
and $74,701.67 from other sources. There has been a decrease in
legacies of $3,132.28, and an increase from other sources of
$16,601.18, making a total increase of $13,468.90, or a little more
than 19 per cent. over that of last year instead of the 23 per
cent. asked for.
It will be seen that during the remaining eight months not only the
$200,000 allotted for that time must be raised, but also $16,107 of
deficiency. This will require an increase of 25 per cent. over the
income for the corresponding months of last year.
The increase of receipts from living donors is gratifying, and we
appeal with great confidence to those who have given to add to
their gifts, and to those who have not yet contributed to increase
the amount of their usual donations, so that the treasury of the
Lord may be full, and that the work be not hindered.
We have just published Pamphlet No. 7 of our series,
containing the address of President E. H. Fairchild, D.D., at
Worcester, on “God’s Designs for and through the Negro Race,” and
“Missions the Work of this Era,” by Rev. M. E. Strieby, D.D. Copies
will be sent free on application.
[66]
We have received recent letters of a hopeful character from our
Mendi Mission. Rev. J. M. Williams, after a preaching tour among
the native villages, returned suffering from a serious illness from
which he appears to be recovering. A neat tombstone has been placed
over the remains of Rev. Kelly M. Kemp at the Good Hope Station.
Messrs. D. Lothrop & Co. have done good service in publishing
“Around the World Tour of Missions,” by Mr. W. F. Bainbridge. The
book purports to give a universal survey of Christian Missions, and
contains in its appendix a list of missionary societies, home and
foreign. The amount of information in its 582 pages is a valuable
contribution to the missionary literature of the day.
A friend sending a donation to constitute a life member says: “I
believe that this makes twenty-six life members which I have made
during the last eight or ten years. Were you to ask me to-day to
give you the full sum, $780, I could not do it, but as it came by
$30 at a time, I have not felt it, but have been made happy in
making others to rejoice by a small amount yearly given to your
society. Why not urge others to adopt some such system of giving?”
We publish elsewhere an account of the burning of the
Congregational church and school building of the Emerson Institute,
Mobile, Ala. The origin of the fire is indicated by the following
offer of reward: “$300 reward. The undersigned will pay the above
reward of $300 for the arrest, conviction and punishment of any
person or persons who set fire to any of the following buildings,
to wit: Residence of John F. Cotham, house of Annie C. Sullivan,
house belonging to estate of Boulo, Congregational Church building.
A. P. BUSH, President Mobile Board of Underwriters.”
The school was enjoying a winter of unusual prosperity at the time
of the fire, and as will be seen by the communication referred to
it has made temporary arrangements for the continuation of its work.
Our newly-appointed business agent for the Mendi Mission, Mr. I.
J. St. John, in describing his journey from Freetown, West Africa,
to our Good Hope Station, writes: “Mr. Hall and myself had been on
the water in a boat with nothing but the soft side of a hard board
to sit on and sleep on for three days and two nights, with nothing
to eat but bread and strawberry jam. The worst of it was the board
each of us had was only fourteen inches wide and four feet long.”
These brethren will watch with special interest the report of the
receipts for the John Brown Steamer, which we shall commence to
build as soon as the money is assured. We trust the friends of this
Association will keep right on furnishing funds for this object.
About one-third of the $10,000 needful has been subscribed.
[67]
ARTHINGTON MISSION.—A PARALLEL.
The enterprises of different nationalities operating in
northeastern Africa are continually converging about Khartoum,
which, during the past three years, has been transformed in
appearance from an African to a semi-European city. Good houses and
extensive stores have been constructed, and at present all supplies
required by modern civilization are furnished.
The activity in this locality is indicated by some of the following
circumstances: Recently Mr. Goodwin, engineer at Cairo, reported to
the Egyptian government the necessity of prolonging the railroads
of lower Egypt to the Egyptian Soudan. A Spanish association is
planning an expedition from Korosko to the Albert Lake. Agents of
the Italian Society of Commerce are on their way to Khartoum for
mercantile purposes. The English government contemplate locating
consuls south of the desert, both at Souakim and Khartoum. A
special interest seems just now to be taken in the Galla country.
Baron Müller, with a German expedition, is heading towards this
locality. Piaggia is at Khartoum, from whence he purposes to
penetrate the same region. There is also reason to believe that
Count Pennazzi is already making his explorations in that country.
We are chiefly interested, however, in an enterprise which is
parallel to our proposed Arthington Mission.
It appears that a Swedish missionary society, founded in 1856,
was organized with a purpose to labor among the Gallas, reaching
their country via Khartoum and the Blue Nile. The society seems to
have been delayed and embarrassed in its operations, so much so
that it decided in 1866 to locate its stations at Massaoua and its
immediate neighborhood on the Red Sea. Here it gave instruction to
some 200 children, boys and girls, at its three stations. Some of
these children were pure heathen from the Galla tribes, and others
belonged to the Abyssinian church.
In 1877 Galla merchants came from Jemma, south of Abyssinia, and
anxiously requested that teachers be sent them. No Europeans at
that time could enter the country. Consequently three native
youths, who had been brought up at the mission schools and who
burned with zeal to carry the gospel of Christ to their fellow
countrymen, returned with the traders and established a mission for
Abyssinian and Galla children at Godjam, and began to preach to the
people, who seemed very willing to hear the glad tidings. Neither
language nor climate could hinder these, as they do Europeans.
The Swedish Society, however, has recently resolved to return to
its original purpose, and already one of its missionaries, Mr.
Arrhenius, accompanied by Onesimus, an Abyssinian by birth, and
another fellow laborer, are supposed to be on their way to Enarea,
via Berber, Khartoum[68] and the Blue Nile, to found a mission in
Southern Abyssinia. Mr. Arrhenius purposed to leave for the Galla
Country November, 1881, and it is not improbable that he may have
fallen in with Messrs. Ladd and Snow, at Khartoum. By reference to
the accompanying map it will be seen that Enarea lies in about the
same latitude as the mouth of the Sobat, on the White Nile, being
situated some 400 miles from it in an easterly direction. Both of
these points lie in the territory designated by Mr. Arthington. At
the latter, it will be remembered, we somewhat expect to locate
our first mission station. The experience of this Swedish Society
during its fifteen years of labor gives it a great advantage. Its
students may not only prove of service among the Gallas, they may
also aid us in our mission.
It is encouraging to note the activities among the different
nationalities for the development of trade and internal
improvements in that portion of the Nile Basin which we hope to
occupy, but especially the fact that He who has affirmed that
Ethiopia shall stretch out her hands unto God, is moving upon the
hearts of Swedish, English and American Christians simultaneously
to enter and occupy that country for Christ.
LATEST NEWS FROM REV. H. M. LADD.
Berber, on the Nile, Dec. 31, 1881.—“We arrived in
Berber, safe and sound, day before yesterday, the 29th, being
sixteen days from Korosko. We were nine days to Aboo Hamed, making
forced marches of twelve and thirteen hours, and averaging, to that
place, thirty-three miles a day. At Aboo Hamed we rested one day,
and from that place to Berber averaged twenty-one miles a day. I
have only time for a few lines now, as we go on board our dahabuyeh
for Khartoum to-night. The Atmoor desert is a trying one, and
nobody had better undertake it who has not a large amount of pluck
and endurance. We, however, are in perfect health and good spirits.
On our arrival we found all the merchant boats engaged. There
was here only one dahabuyeh belonging to the Governor. We went
to him and asked for it. He refused. We fell back on our orders
from Cairo. He changed his mind, and said we might take it if we
could get an order for it from Khartoum. We telegraphed to Raouf
Pasha, Governor-General of Soudan. This morning the order came by
telegram, and also a telegram of welcome to the Soudan. The Reis
has reported to us. The dahabuyeh now lies in front of our tents,
subject to our orders and ready to sail. In a few minutes we go on
board, and hope to reach Khartoum by the 5th. I will try to send my
journal from there, and bring it up to date. We are highly pleased
with Berber and the people we find here. Everything so far has gone
well. We are pressing forward just as fast as is possible.”
[69]
Map of Mission in Eastern Africa.
[70]
THE SLAVE MUSIC OF THE SOUTH.
By Rev. George H. Griffin, Milford, Ct.
If ever the real genius for music seems to have been born in the
soul of an entire race, that race is the African. Explorers of the
dark continent speak of a marked musical taste among the negroes on
their native heath, but the American type of African is still more
largely developed in that direction.
Some of the European races are naturally full of song, but in them
the culture of music as a science is also illustrated.
The light and pleasing melodies of Italian operas or the grand and
sonorous chords of German symphonies and sonatas show the results
of a high degree of musical education.
But, in searching for that undefinable entity which is sometimes
called the “soul of music,” or, in other words, that kind of music
which finds a responsive thrill in every human breast, because
it speaks most clearly the language of man’s best impulses and
tenderest feelings, it seems to the writer that the slave songs
of the South meet the demand more nearly than any other style of
musical expression. These children of bondage knew nothing of
the methods of the schools, yet, in the harmonious blending and
balancing of the four parts, their vocalization is seldom equalled;
while their skill in translating heart throbs into the descriptive
language of the diatonic scale is rarely surpassed.
No exhaustive analysis of the slave music is here attempted.
It is, however, a very rich mine to explore. Suffice to indicate
its principal features, namely these, among others: great
simplicity, but richness in the harmony, coupled with much variety
and originality of melody. Many of the “resolutions” of chords
are abrupt and startling; some of them doubtless contrary to the
principles of “thorough bass,” but all the more expressive on that
account of the rough and rugged experiences which gave them birth.
While the tempo of these songs is largely common, or four-four,
there are strange points of emphasis put upon syllables and
unexpected cadences in rhythm, which are well nigh unreducible to
musical notation.
The ad libitum passages are numerous, and the musical intervals
often abnormal, as in rapid changes from major to minor, and
conversely, like “Roll, Jordan, Roll”; also in the use of a minor
third, while singing on a major key, as in “Run to Jesus.”
Their general style is recitative and chorus, though a few are pure
solos or unisonal measures.
The music and words of many of these songs were born together.
This is true, especially, of those associated with social worship,
which,[71] having been produced by the sudden inspiration of religious
fervor came forth spontaneously from one voice, while the multitude
caught the refrain and sang it out with a mighty chorus, as the
sound of many waters.
Assuming the correctness of Geo. MacDonald’s definition of a song,
as a composition in which the emotional largely overbalances
the intellectual element, their songs, with their fullness of
sentiment, seem to realize the ideal.
A proper classification of these products of slavery should
distinguish between those songs which groan with the agonies of a
hard and cruel thralldom, and those which palpitate with the joy
of a present salvation, and the hope of a glorious home of freedom
beyond the grave.
Among the selections belonging to the first of these divisions, the
minor key naturally predominates. Indeed, this is the pitch upon
which the majority of human hearts, the world over, are tuned. A
more exquisite minor melody than “Nobody Knows the Trouble I See,”
can hardly be conceived. So, too, for pure pathos nothing can excel
“You May Bury Me in the East.” But for bold and thrilling grandeur,
scarcely anything in all the musical conceptions of the ages can be
considered superior to “Go Down, Moses, way down in Egypt Land.” As
the slaves used to roar it out, it must have seemed like the very
voice of Jehovah himself.
In these songs it is easy to trace the effects of a galling yoke
crushing the poor body to the dust, while the soul rises triumphant
over circumstances in the conviction of its true nobility and in
the hope, though long deferred, of realizing, even on earth, its
full liberty. The sweetest utterances of the sacred poets of all
the centuries have been those “songs in the night” that came forth
from the bitterest experiences of human woe.
It is related of a certain German nobleman that he had a number of
wires stretched from turret to turret of his castle which acted
like a great Æolian harp, bringing forth richest music, but only
when the tempests played upon its quivering strings. So may it be
said of the slaves in their forlorn condition, that they sang most
sweetly when the storms of adversity beat upon them most fiercely.
Happily the days of slave music are past. The system which brought
it into existence is abolished; but the world owes a great debt of
gratitude to those who have made a study of these songs and put
them in print for the benefit of future generations.
This article would not be complete without a single mention of the
Fisk Jubilee Company, whose wonderful history—more romantic than
the wildest fiction—furnishes a living illustration of our theme.
Their first performances doubtless represented the native music of
the South more perfectly than the present cultured state of their
voices will allow; but, while art has refined their methods, it has
also served to adorn[72] nature with a chaste and quiet beauty which
wins a way to every soul that comes under its magic spell.
The evident enjoyment with which they pour forth their music like
birds—their marvelous power of crescendo and diminuendo—their
faultless articulation both of notes and words, even in the most
piano and prolonged chords—stamp their style as a model for
church choirs and all who engage in the service of sacred song.
God be praised that we live to see this day, when these
long-despised and down-trodden sons and daughters of toil can visit
our Northern cities in the full enjoyment of American citizenship,
and teach us of the alleged and boasted superior race how to sing
most expressively and effectively the Lord’s song in a strange land.
ROUND THE WORLD.
—New York.—There are 489 churches and missions of all
denominations laboring for the spiritual welfare of the City of New
York, of which about 400 are evangelical Protestant churches.
—Chicago.—The number of churches in Chicago has increased in ten
years from 156 to 218. The Congregationalists and Presbyterians
have each lost one church in that time.
—Omaha.—The largest Congregational Church in Nebraska is at
Omaha. During the past year 49 persons were admitted to its
membership by its pastor, Rev. A. F. Sherrell.
—Ogden.—The influx of Mormons to Utah is indicated by the fact
that more than 2,000 recruits left Liverpool for that Territory
last summer.
—San Francisco.—There were 1,682 pupils enrolled in the schools
of the A. M. A. in California last year, of which number 140 were
hopefully converted.
—Sandwich Islands.—A $6,000 church for the Chinese has been built
at Honolulu, $500 being given by a Chinaman who was formerly hired
out for $4 per month.
—Yokohama.—The Reformed Church in America has at its Yokohama
station 158 members, 8 preaching places, 3 Sunday-schools, 131
scholars, with a boarding department.
—Hong Kong.—The Mission of the Basle Society at Hong Kong has 145
communicants. The London Missionary Society has 32 missionaries,
native and foreign, at the same point.
—Calcutta.—A sect of Hindoo dissenters has recently made an
attack on the idol of Juggernaut. They profess belief in Hindoo
deities, but do not respect their images.
—Bombay.—The native dispensary of the St. John’s Mission,
Bombay,[73] has an average attendance of about 60 patients, who are
read to daily by the missionaries of the English Church.
—Cairo.—The Mohammedans at Cairo have a very extensive
training-school, in which 10,000 students are taught annually the
doctrines contained in the Koran.
—Naples.—The Wesleyan Methodists sustain regular preaching in 96
preaching places in Italy. In the Naples district they have 575
members and 196 probationers.
—Rome.—The Free Church of Italy has 15 ordained ministers, 15
evangelists and 1,800 communicants. Its theological college,
attended by 16 students, is situated at Rome.
—Turin.—The village of Bertrolla, near Turin, in Italy, has
renounced Romanism and accepted the Protestant faith. The
archbishop suspended the priest and closed the church against the
2,000 parishioners.
—Paris.—In Paris there are said to be 89 Sunday-schools, with
7,596 scholars. The international series of lessons is used in 32
of these schools.
—London.—Three Congregational churches in the north of London
have opposed the application of the Salvation Army for permission
to occupy their chapels as centres for religious work.
—Liverpool.—Bishop Ryle has delivered a strong charge to his
clergy in consequence of the existence of a body of churchmen who
seemed determined to un-Protestantize the church.
—New York.—Rev. Albert B. Simpson, with a company of associates,
has undertaken a new evangelistic work for the masses in the
Academy of Music, New York.
REVIVAL NEWS.
—Meetings have been held every evening during the week for some
time at Talladega College. Several conversions are reported.
—A precious revival has been in progress some weeks in Fisk
University. Nightly meetings have been held, and at last report
twenty-five students had given evidence of conversion.
—Special meetings were held during the week of prayer at the Le
Moyne Institute. Three persons have been hopefully converted, and
others are inquiring the way of life. The church also has advanced
to a better spiritual condition.
—This month has been characterized by a great awakening in
Straight University, New Orleans. It is believed that ten of
the young lady boarders have been hopefully converted. The good
influence is widely felt throughout the school.
—Professor Francis writes from Atlanta University: “For some days[74]
past our school has been much moved by the presence of the Holy
Spirit, who has brought quite a number to confess their need of
a Saviour, and quickened greatly the zeal of many who had before
borne the name of Christ. We are holding extra meetings, and the
interest deepens from day to day, so that we have good reason
to hope that a good harvest may be gathered in, if we exercise
due fidelity and patience. The impressions of the gracious work
we enjoyed last year have remained with us, and already quite a
number have this year taken their stand for Christ, and we rejoice
greatly at the good dealings of the Lord with us, and seek greater
blessings.”
GENERAL NOTES.
AFRICA.
—A dispatch from Cairo announces the death of Mgr. Comboni,
Apostolic Vicar of Central Africa.
—The colonies of Natal, discontented with their form of
government, demand the institution of a parliamentary rule upon the
model of that which has been granted the colony of the Cape.
—The Queen of Madagascar has named for the first time the
ministers and secretaries of state, and at the same time given a
law relative to their functions.
—A steamer with two helixes has been ordered by an English house
for the civilizing station of the Portuguese which is to be
established upon the Congo.
—A society is formed in Liberia, under the title of Liberia
Interior Association, with a view of developing commerce with the
interior, of seeking means of transportation and the employ of
beasts in some parts of the country, and of bestowing attention
upon the commercial, agricultural and political interests of the
colony in the interior.
—The College of Liberia will be transferred into the country,
where to classical studies will be joined instruction in manual
labor, to teach the natives the use and practice of the instruments
of European industry.
—P. Autunes, Professor at Braga, set out the 15th of October,
with two assistants and three workmen, to establish at Hailla,
near Humpata, where the Boers are, schools for the children of the
colonists, the Boers and natives, under the direction of chosen
teachers. He will also establish an industrial and professional
school of arts and trades necessary for African life. The
Portuguese government has granted lands to him, reserving to itself
the approval of the rules which will regulate these different
establishments.
[75]
Mr. A. E. Jackson, of the Mendi Mission, in appealing
for supplies, says: “There are persons here who desire to unite
in matrimony. They are just emerging from paganism, and any favor
shown them by the Mission adds so much to its influence for good.
They ought to have plain white dresses, white gloves, shoes or
slippers, and a little underwear; and for encouragement, some
bedding—sheets, pillow-cases, and such like. We have a young
couple with us who were married this year, and Mrs. Jackson is now
preparing clothing for another couple who will marry in about two
weeks.”
THE INDIANS.
—The American Baptist Home Missionary Society reports 90 churches,
with nearly 6,000 church members, among the Indians in the Indian
Territory.
—Santiago Reino, an Indian from the Taos Pueblo, was recently
baptized and received into the church at Cenecero, Colorado. So far
as known, he is the first from that Pueblo to receive Christian
baptism.
—Rev. Mr. Hicks, of McAllister, Indian Territory, has selected
a site for a church, and reorganized a Sunday-school with 40
scholars. He hopes soon to reorganize a church with 20 members.
Four infants have already received the rite of baptism.
—The presence of fifteen civilized Indians at the Presbytery of
Idaho—one of them an ordained minister, four ruling elders, two
licentiates, three applying for licensure, and all of them church
members—speaking and singing the praises of God, was a grand
testimony to the power and influence of the Christian religion.
THE CHINESE.
—China proper is said to be entirely open to the missionary and
the Bible colporteur with the exception of Hunan.
—Miss H. Carter, a teacher among the Chinese in Boston, writes:
It is not unusual to find a man who learns the alphabet and a few
words in a single lesson. One pupil of more than twenty-five years
learned to read so rapidly at his weekly lesson that he could study
intelligently the Sunday-school Bible lesson in Isaiah lv. at the
end of five months.
—A Chinese named Wang, aged sixty-two, applying for baptism said:
“I should not like to die without having obeyed the commandment
of the Lord Jesus.” When asked what name he intended to choose at
his baptism, he said: “Lazarus was a poor man, just as I am a poor
man; I should like therefore to be called by his name.” He was
accordingly baptized by the name of Lazarus.
[76]
BENEFACTIONS.
—Mr. Haskell, editor of the Boston Herald, has subscribed $1,000
to Bates College.
—Mr. John P. Howard has given $28,000 to the University of
Vermont, for rebuilding its main edifice.
—Amherst College is to receive about $50,000 for its library from
the estate of the late Joel Stiles, of Boston.
—Mr. C. H. McCormick has added $50,000 to his already liberal
gifts to the Presbyterian Theological Seminary of the Northwest.
—The Boston University has come into possession of the $2,000,000
estate bequeathed to the institution ten years ago by Isaac Rich,
of Boston.
—The will of the late Cornelius Sweetser bequeathed $10,000 to
the Thomaston Academy, the income of $15,000 for public and school
libraries, $5,000 for a Sweetser school fund, and $12,000 to the
York Institute.
—St. Johnsbury Academy has received from Thaddeus Fairbanks an
additional $40,000 as a permanent fund. To this a gift of $50,000
is added from the estate of Governor Erastus Fairbanks, making,
with sums otherwise secured, an endowment fund of $100,000.
—The Executive Committee of the A. M. A. reported at its annual
meeting that $15,000 were needed for a Boy’s Dormitory at Straight
University, New Orleans, La. One individual offers $5,000 of this
amount on condition that the remaining $10,000 be secured.
A volume of 420 pages, entitled “Missionary Papers,” by
Rev. John C. Lowrie, D.D., is the work of a man well qualified to
write on a broad range of missionary topics. Dr. Lowrie was once
a missionary in India, and for many years has been the senior
Secretary of the Presbyterian Board of Foreign Missions. These
papers are, therefore, the results of extended observation and
of long and varied experience. They, like their author, are not
sensational, but scholarly and practical. We subjoin a quotation
from the paper on “Less Favored Races.”
“As to passing by the degraded, ignorant and uncivilized races, in
order to reach those who are in some degree intelligent, polite and
civilized—well, we do not so understand the example of the first
Christians. The Apostle Peter might have made a splendid argument
for the Hebrews as the main people to be first evangelized,
pointing to their wonderful history, their unrivaled geographical
position, their intellectual force, their widely-spread settlements
in other countries; so the Apostle Paul might have spent a part of
his unequaled eloquence in a plea for the Greeks as the people of
culture, and of the Romans as full of energy. But how little [77]do we
find in the first missionary records of ethnographic, political,
commercial, conventional ideas as motives for evangelizing labor.
We ought to understand, moreover, the lesson of our own Anglo-Saxon
history; where were men and women to be found who were less
attractive than the early inhabitants of Great Britain and Ireland?
The same Gospel that brought them to their present standing can
change the people of Africa and make them intelligent, cultured,
devoted Christians.”
A BLIND SAMSON.
From Address of Rev. A. J. Biddle, at Warsaw, N.Y.
Years ago, when the negro was a bondman, Longfellow thus spoke of
him:
“There is a poor blind Samson in the land,
Shorn of his strength and bound in bands of steel,
Who may in some grim revel raise his hand
And shake the pillars of the common weal.
Till the vast temples of our liberties
A shapeless mass of muck and rubbish lies.”
Well he is blind enough yet, poor enough, a Samson, too, and what
is more, he is no longer bound. His locks are beginning to grow,
and he is beginning to place his brawny hand upon the pillars of
our common weal; not angrily, but ignorantly. We placed them there
hoping that he would prove a support, and he will if we watch and
direct him. But thus far he has been a menace to our liberties; not
from malice, but because he is what he is. We have not dealt with
him wisely; but from the fatal day over two hundred years ago, when
that thrifty Dutchman landed the first negro on the hanks of the
James River to this, we have blundered. Our treatment of him has
been a mixture of stupidity and wickedness. We never should have
brought him here, but we did.
It should have been our endeavor to raise him from his barbarism by
careful education, but that was forbidden by law. We should have
emancipated him gradually, but that we could not do. We should have
fitted him for citizenship before giving him the ballot, but we did
the opposite. When emancipated, we should have educated him, but
that was too much trouble. So from the outset we have done those
things we ought not to have done, and left undone those things we
ought to have done. We can see it now, but it requires little wit
to see our blunders after they are made, and we are suffering the
consequences. But note three points:
1st. The negro is a part of our nation. One person in every eight
of our population is of African descent. He is going to stay a
permanent part of our population. You cannot colonize him. He will
not die out. The exodus is but a ripple, and that from one part of
the nation to another. In the South he will live and thrive. His
race increases with frightful rapidity. It does no good to grumble
about it. The problem we must solve is to build up a peaceful,
prosperous nation with such a population as we have.
2d. They are citizens; they have the right to vote; they will
vote; the votes will be counted. The time will soon come when they
will hold the balance of power in every Southern State. Political
parties will bid for their vote, cater to their wishes and
prejudices, and shape legislation to catch their votes.
3d. They are as a class miserably poor, densely ignorant and low
in their moral[78] conception and practice. Seventeen years ago they
were turned loose without a cent of their own or a letter of the
alphabet. That they have done well in acquiring property and
knowledge under the circumstances, is the testimony of all who know
them. Many of them have little homes of their own, and those who
can read and write are numbered now by the hundred thousand. Take
them altogether, it is estimated that they own on an average above
$11 worth of property. It is an encouraging fact that in seventeen
years they have accumulated so much as that. But what poverty does
that indicate, with $11 for each man, woman and child among them!
Here we must not forget that they are six hundred years behind the
white race in civilization. They as a rule must be separated from
the whites. We cannot absorb them, as we do the German, or Irish.
They will be clannish by the nature of the case. The more ignorant
they remain the more clannish they will grow, and our only safety
lies in making them feel that their interest is not separated from,
but identical with the other citizens of the Republic. I tell you,
friends, that the mightiest question of the nation yet, is what to
do with that great mass of half civilized, impoverished, ignorant
people that cover the South.
THE FREEDMEN.
REV. JOSEPH E. ROY, D.D., Field Superintendent, Atlanta,
Ga.
TWENTY YEARS AFTER FREEDOM.
It is worthy of note that near where the first slaves disembarked
in our country, bondmen were first disenthralled by the events
of our civil war. Gen. Butler, in May, 1861, issued his famous
proclamation, declaring the negroes about his camp in Hampton
contrabands.
At that time, and later on, thousands of them gathered in near
proximity to his headquarters, living for the most part in an
improvised city, christened Slabtown. Twenty years have wrought
many changes in the condition of these people. Slabtown has
disappeared, and in its place and for miles around, cottages with
garden plots, and even considerable farms, are found. A large
number of these are owned by the freed people, who constitute a
majority in Elizabeth City county, and form a quasi-negro republic.
The blacks are courteous in their deportment toward the white
citizens, who in return display much kindness and good will. One of
the negroes, when asked recently by a Northern gentleman how his
people were treated by the whites, is reported to have said. “Oh,
we are largely in the majority, and the white man knows how to keep
his place.” They seem willing that the white people should hold
the important offices, and the most cordial relations apparently
exist between all classes. Not long after the recent election in
Virginia, the black people about Fortress Monroe were observed to
be intently reading the newspapers. A ministerial-looking colored
man, of fifty or upward, was asked by the writer if there was any
law forbidding the white people to read. “Why do you wish to know
that?” he inquired. On being told that the colored people were seen
reading the papers while the white laborers were standing idly
about, he replied pertinently, “These white folks don’t like the
way the election went much, but it just suited us.”
ASSEMBLY-ROOM AT HAMPTON.
The improvements about Fortress Monroe and Hampton during the
past twenty years have been considerable. New buildings have been
constructed inside of the fort, and Mr. Harrison Phoebus has built
near the government wharf a mammoth,[79] hotel, the Hygeia, capable of
accommodating a thousand visitors. The Soldier’s Home at Hampton
has extensive grounds, and accommodations for over 600 people.
A large and tasteful building has just been completed, with an
audience room seating from six to eight hundred. The grounds and
buildings connected with the Soldier’s Home are kept up with much
care and expense.
The Hampton Institute, which has done much to work all the changes
mentioned, is a village by itself, and Gen. Armstrong, its
principal, has 704 students under his supervision. The village of
Hampton, which was burned early in the war, has been rebuilt, and
recently Newport News has come to the front in consequence of the
extension of the Chesapeake & Ohio Railroad to that point. Already
the company has constructed a pier said to be the largest in the
United States, and land is held at $16,000 an acre at a point where
scarcely a dozen houses can be seen. The harbor facilities at
Newport News are unrivaled.
These varied developments have created a demand for labor and
given to the[80] negro, especially as he is the recognized laborer, a
grand opportunity for securing property. A canvasser for a sewing
machine company, who has spent three years in Eastern Virginia,
testifies that the negroes have most of the money to be found in
that country. He says they are prompt in paying their instalments,
whereas when he sells to the poorer white people he fails to
collect his money, for the reason that they have none.
The manners and customs of the people are still unique. It is no
uncommon thing to see a heifer or a steer harnessed to a cart and
driven by one or two women who bring supplies to market. Possibly
one-half of the conveyances seen by a visitor during a month’s stay
are of this fashion; but the proprietors do not seem to be unhappy.
Indeed, a Wall street broker, who had been spending a month at
the Hygeia hotel, and who was fond of the recreation afforded by
visiting Hampton on market days, affirmed that these negroes were
the happiest people he ever saw.
If twenty years of freedom can work such changes all over the land
as are manifested here, where emancipation first dawned, surely the
future is full of hope.
EMERSON INSTITUTE, MOBILE, ALA., BURNED.
Emerson Institute is lying in ruins. For the second time in her
history she is smoldering in ashes, and we are in mourning for the
destruction of our little church, made dear by so many sacred and
hallowed associations, and our beautiful school building, in which
so many happy hours of toil have been spent and labors of love
performed. November 21 a vain attempt was made to burn the little
Congregational church at Mobile, but the fire, being set at an
early hour in the evening, was discovered and soon extinguished.
The insurance company repaired damages at an expense of $30. Now,
when our minds were relaxing this tension, and lapse of time was
giving us a degree of security against further molestation, the
enemy approaches again and applies the torch—this time with
marvelous success.
The fire was discovered about two o’clock on the morning of January
23 by one of the teachers, who was startled by the crackling sound
of the flames. Arousing her room-mate and looking out to make sure
of the evidence, they discovered the flames and gave the[81] alarm
of “fire” to the household. It was set at the northwest corner
of the church, facing toward the house, and when discovered the
whole end was a sheet of flame. In an incredibly short space of
time Mr. Crawford was throwing an acid stream from our “Babcock
Extinguisher” into the devouring flames, but they had gained so
great an advantage before discovery that the “Babcock” alone could
not avail. The alarm boxes being out of order the tower bell could
not be struck. The Hook and Ladder Company were early on hand, but
had no fire buckets. When we found ourselves powerless to quench
the consuming flames on the church, we turned our attention to
the school building standing near. Danger to that did not seem
great as the building was of brick, the night was still and damp
and the engines had arrived. But thinking it better to err on the
safe side, most of the movable furniture was carried out. Before
this was fully accomplished, however, the cornice had caught and
the flames rapidly spread over the roof, leaping higher and higher
in mock derision of the little shower bath from the hose. Not
until the roof had fallen and the flames had spread to all parts
and our hopes were buried in despair, did the engines succeed in
getting water enough to throw a respectable stream. Help delayed
was unavailing. It seems almost incredible that our school building
should burn down before our very eyes, under such circumstances.
Was it an enemy did this foul deed? Who can tell? God only, who
reads the hearts of men, can answer. The expressed sentiments of
the best people of the city are in severe condemnation of the act,
and a reward of $300 has been offered for the arrest and conviction
of the incendiary.
The question which presented itself to us, even before the smoke
had died away, was, “What shall we do?” For a time we felt
constrained to utter the language of Gideon: “O, my Lord! if the
Lord be with us, why, then, is all this befallen us?” The answer
came clear and unmistakable: “Go, in this thy might, and thou
shalt save Israel from the hands of the Midianites; have not I
sent thee?” The way was made plain to us at once, when Rev. Mr.
Owen, pastor of the Third Baptist Church (colored) threw wide open
its doors and said: “We gladly make room for you here.” The offer
was as thankfully received as it was generously given. Scholars,
patrons and friends seem as anxious that the work should be
continued without delay as we ourselves. So that we re-open school
again on Monday, Jan. 30, with three departments, at the Third
Baptist Church, about one mile from the “Home,” and two departments
in the basement of Little Zion Church, about three blocks distant
from the Home. Of course, the accommodations now will be in sad
contrast to those enjoyed in our well-arranged and convenient
school-room, and our labors will be much more arduous and trying;
but the Lord has said, “As thy days so shall thy strength be,”
and we go forward relying on His strength. Our school seemed in a
most prosperous condition, over two hundred pupils enrolled, and
everything moving on to the satisfaction of all. The Sunday-school
has not had a larger attendance for three years than now. There
seemed to be a constantly growing interest manifested, and the
outlook was very encouraging.
Nothing at all was saved from the church. The cabinet organ, the
Sunday-school library of over two hundred volumes, a valuable chart
used by the primary department of the school, together with Bibles,
singing-books, etc., all perished in the flames.
In our now pressing needs we cannot close this article without
an appeal to the earnest, hopeful and sympathetic friends at the
North. “Come over and help us.”
Miss Emma Caughey.
[82]
THE INDIANS
CHRISTMAS AT SPOKAN FALLS, W. T.—SCHOOL WORK, Etc.
By Rev. H. T. Cowley.
Christmas is always the greatest occasion of the year with these
Indians, and its recent recurrence was unusually enjoyed. The
principal attraction is the opportunity to worship, hear anew
the story of the Saviour’s birth, renew their consecration and
participate in the ordinance of the Lord’s Supper. A social
festival follows all, tribal affairs are discussed and efforts are
made to heal jealousies and alienations.
On this occasion there was a marked religious interest and a very
visible improvement in outward condition. The school-house, which
is as yet our only place of meeting, was densely crowded; many had
come over twenty miles in sleds and on horseback.
Father Eells, their former missionary, was present and addressed
them, renewing old associations. There were seven infant and one
adult baptisms; and two others, a wife and husband, expressed a
desire to unite with the church at our next communion. It was
altogether a precious occasion, which we shall all long remember.
The school now numbers sixteen scholars equally divided between
the sexes, and is making reasonable progress considering the
disadvantages we contend with. A day school among Indians, as a
general rule, fails of the best results. The imperative demand is
for a boarding and industrial department and a matron. I have been
calling the attention of the Indian Department to this necessity
for the past six years, but as the Spokans are a small tribe and
peacefully inclined, Congress has overlooked them, while at the
same time their country is being rapidly filled by white settlers
and no adequate provision has been made for their permanent
location or education. Commissioner Price has, however, recently
informed me of his recommendation to secure an appropriation of
$5,000 to enable Spokans who wish to avail themselves of the
provisions of the Indian Homestead Act to pay the land fees and
commissions.
We are also much in need of a house of worship, as the school-house
(18×24) is too small and inconvenient for that purpose. Dr.
Atkinson informs me that he raised $50 while East to help in this
object, but about $200 more will be required to supplement the work
of the Indians.
THE CHINESE.
CLIPPINGS FROM THE FORTHCOMING ANNUAL REPORT OF OUR CALIFORNIA
AUXILIARY.
[BY REV. W. C. POND.]
General View.—“The past year has been one of blessing at
almost every point of our experience. We have to record our roll of
members unbroken, so far as we know, by any stroke of death; our
schools increasingly prosperous, on the whole, from the beginning
of the year to its close; our work larger and better, we trust,
than ever before; a deeper and more general interest in it, we have
reason to think, on the part of the churches, and our receipts,
especially in the way of gifts made directly to our own treasury,
much larger than in any preceding year.”
Our Work as a Whole.—“Fifteen schools have been sustained
for a longer or shorter period in the year, a gain upon last year’s
work of three schools. Of these fifteen, nine were sustained the
entire year, with no vacation at all, except for two or three days
at the annual holidays. Of the other six, all except one were
commenced during the year, [83]and all but two are still in operation.
One of them is still an experiment, and may be discontinued; the
others give such promise of usefulness—are, indeed, already
bearing such good fruit—that I think they are experiments no
longer.”
“We had at the close of the previous year 20 teachers and helpers
employed, six of whom were Chinese. At the close of this year 27
laborers—nine Chinese. The total number of months of missionary
service is 286, being more by 40 than in any other year of our
Mission’s history. We have great satisfaction now in all our
workers. Our Chinese helpers give us especial joy, as being
themselves the fruit of our mission-work. They are faithful,
zealous, and, generally, wise; and God owns their labors, setting
His seal upon their ministry by using it for the salvation of
lost souls. We greatly desire to call others into this service,
hoping that when they have learned among us to teach by teaching,
and to preach by preaching, it may please the Master to use them
not only to carry the good news of a Saviour to the Chinese in
America, but to evangelize also some of the myriads in their own
land. The total number of pupils enrolled was 1,632, an increase
upon the previous year of 76, even as that year showed an increase
of 67 on the one further back. The average membership month by
month reaches an aggregate of 562, a gain upon the year preceding
of 78, and the average attendance was 288, a gain of 36. We find
like gains in the columns representing those who have ceased from
idol worship and who give evidence of conversion. How many began
the new life during the year it is impossible to state accurately.
No month has passed without some accessions to our Association
of Christian Chinese, and to join that Association is to confess
Christ. I estimate the hopeful conversions at 56, and the total
number brought to repentance since our mission-work began at more
than 325. The contributions of these Chinese brethren to the work
of Christ through the treasury, either of our Mission or of their
Association, amount to about $1,900.”
POSTSCRIPT.
The Secretary takes the liberty to add, by way of bringing the
story of our work down to the date at which this report is issued,
that the monthly reports for the first third of the present
year—that is from September 1 to December 31—show that the
enrolled membership of our schools, month by month, has averaged
677, against a like enrollment last year of 473; the aggregate
average attendance 325, against 215 last year. And the total number
enrolled in all the schools up to December 31 was, this year.
1,104; last year, 753. So the work grows; may the gracious results
multiply in far greater proportion! Brethren, pray for us.
CHILDREN’S PAGE
BOY LIFE IN CHINA.
Hangchow, China.
My dear children: I think you will be interested to hear something
about the life of boys in China. Well, to begin at the beginning,
when a little baby-boy makes his appearance into the world he is
welcomed very warmly. When he is a month old a grand ceremony is
gone through; the child is washed, and its head shaved, all except
two little tufts of hair on each side of the head behind the ear,
which are tied tight and stick out at right angles from the head.
He is dressed up very smartly, and a feast is given. Up to about
six or seven years old, boys are allowed to do much as they like;
but after that they are taken to school, and learn reading, writing
and manners. They do not seem, as a rule, to be taught arithmetic;
but the master is very particular about his pupils’ manners.[84] In
every school there is put up opposite the entrance a tablet in
honor of Confucius, and all the pupils have to bow low before it,
holding up their books with both hands towards it, both on entering
and leaving school; they also bow in the same way to the master.
The books which they learn at school are full of the sayings of
the wise man Confucius, who was born 551 B.C., and lived about the
time when the Jews were returning from their captivity in Babylon.
Confucius himself did not write any books, but his disciples wrote
down his wise sayings, and the boys at school learn them off by
heart.
It is astonishing what memories these Chinese boys have, and what
a number of pages they will repeat straight off, as fast as their
tongues can go, and hardly stopping to take breath. They learn
their lessons aloud, and consequently as you walk along the street
you can tell when you are drawing near a school by the noise, which
becomes simply a din if you enter; and you can only wonder how the
children ever learn anything, and what the master has done to his
ears to make them strong enough to bear all that noise. When the
boys repeat their lessons they stand with their backs to their
master, and, swinging their bodies from side to side, gabble off
the words as fast as they can, without any stops except for breath.
They are not expected to understand what they learn till they have
been many years at school.
I dare say you wonder whether the Chinese school-boys play any
games. They do not know anything about such nice games as cricket,
foot-ball, marbles, etc. But at the new year they have a grand time
of flying kites.
The streets at that time look quite gay with groups of people,
dressed, not as at other times, in dark cotton clothes, but in
silks and satins of crimson, green, blue, purples and various
hues, often with beautifully embroidered sleeves, and jackets
often lined with fur. The children look particularly smart, being
adorned with gay caps and hats, ornamented with gilt figures
or Chinese characters, especially the Chinese character which
means “happiness.” The Chinese kites are very elaborate, and are
generally in the shape of some animal—a gigantic butterfly, a
centipede, a bird, a dragon, etc.; and it is a fine sight to watch
such a kite rise, rise steadily in the still, clear atmosphere,
till it becomes almost a speck. Sometimes they fly these kites at
night, and send lighted lanterns up after them, which startle the
unwary into imagining there are new stars appearing in the sky!
But you know, dear children, that these Chinese have evil hearts
as well as we, which need the renewing of the Holy Ghost. Will you
pray that they may receive this great blessing?—Mary Elwin in C.
M. Juvenile Instructor.
RECEIPTS FOR JANUARY, 1882.
MAINE, $462.36. |
Bangor. Central Cong. Ch. and Soc. |
$50.00 |
Bath. Central Ch. and Soc., $25.70; Mrs.
J.C., $1 |
26.70 |
Belfast. Rev. Wooster Parker |
5.00 |
Bethel. F. B. |
1.00 |
Brunswick. C. R. S. |
0.50 |
Bucksport. Miss L. S. Barnard |
5.00 |
Castine. Trin. Cong. Ch. and Soc. |
10.00 |
Dennysville. —— |
21.68 |
East Madison. Eliza Bicknell |
4.00 |
Ellsworth. L. F. D. |
0.50 |
Gorham. Bbl. of C. and $2.75 for Selma,
Ala. |
2.75 |
Hallowell. Cong. Sab. Sch., for Student
Aid, Fisk. U. |
5.17 |
Hallowell. 2 Bbls. C., for Talladega,
Ala., and McIntosh, Ga. |
Hampden. Cong. Sab. Sch., for John
Brown Steamer |
10.00 |
Hiram. Sab. Sch., for Selma, Ala. |
1.00 |
Litchfield. Miss Maria Plimpton |
2.00 |
Limerick. Rev. T. N. Lord |
2.50 |
Orland. Mrs. S. T. Buck and daughters,
to const. Sarah E. Buck L. M. |
30.00 |
Portland. State St. Ch., $75; High St.
Ch. and Soc., $100; Mrs. L. D., $1 |
176.00 |
Portland. “Ladies of Maine,” for Lady
Missionaries |
50.00 |
Portland. Brown Thurston’s S. S. Class,
High St. Ch., for Student Aid, Hampton
N. & A. Inst. |
25.00 |
Portland. Bbl. of C. and 50c. for Freight,
by Mary A. Perkins |
0.50 |
South Paris. Cong. Ch. |
6.06 |
Union. Cong. Ch.; for Freight, $1.50;
Cong. Sab. Sch., $3.50; for Selma, Ala. |
5.00 |
Union. Rev. F. V. N., 50c.; Mrs. H. R. B.,
50c. |
1.00 |
Weld. Rev. D. D. T. |
1.00 |
Wells. D. Maxwell |
20.00[85] |
NEW HAMPSHIRE, $462.47. |
Amherst. Cong. Ch., $15.60; Mrs. C. M. B., $1 |
16.60 |
Amherst. “Friends,” Box C. and $2,
for Wilmington, N.C. |
2.00 |
Antrim. “A Friend” |
10.00 |
Acworth. D. C. A. |
0.50 |
Concord. South Ch. and Soc. |
50.11 |
Dover. First Parish Ch. and Soc. |
91.16 |
Dublin. Mrs. L. B. Richardson, $10;
Malachi Richardson, $10; R. E., $1,
for John Brown Steamer |
21.00 |
East Alstead. S. D. H. |
1.00 |
East Jaffrey. Rev. J. C. Staples and
family, for Marietta, Ga. |
5.00 |
Exeter. “A Friend” |
30.00 |
Exeter. Ladies, 3 Bbls. of C. and $5,
for Freight, for Talladega C. |
5.00 |
Fisherville. Priscilla P. Gage, $30, to
const. herself L. M.; Jeremiah C. Martin,
$16.25; Mrs. A. W. Fiske, $5 |
51.25 |
Francestown. R. G. C. |
0.51 |
Great Falls. W. H. M. A. Aux., Bbl. of
C., for Student Aid, Fisk U. |
Greenland. Cong. Ch. and Soc. |
15.00 |
Hancock. “Cheerful Workers,” Bundle
C., val. $8. |
Haverhill. Eliza Cross |
5.00 |
Hillsborough. Mrs. N. T., $1; Mrs. J. G.,
$1 |
2.00 |
Lancaster. E. M. K. |
0.50 |
Lebanon. Cong. Ch. and Soc., $27;
O. S. M., 50c. |
27.50 |
Londonderry. C. S. P. |
1.00 |
Lyme. T. L. Gilbert ($1 of which for
John Brown Steamer) |
3.00 |
Manchester. I. G. M. |
0.51 |
Mason. L. J. G. |
0.50 |
Milford. Cong. Ch. |
12.29 |
Mount Vernon. J. A. S. |
1.00 |
New Ipswich. Cong. Ch. and Soc.,
$10.50; G. T., $1 |
11.50 |
New Ipswich. By Mrs. L. A. O., $1 for
Freight; Dea. R. T., 50c. |
1.50 |
Pembroke. C. C. S. |
0.51 |
Peterborough. Union Evan. Ch. to
const. Mrs. Ellen M. Hatch, L. M. |
30.00 |
Peterborough. Mrs. Eph. Holt ($1 for
John Brown Steamer) |
2.00 |
Plymouth. Cong. Ch. and Soc. |
10.00 |
Rindge. Collected by Mrs. Street, for
Almeda, S.C. |
4.55 |
Rindge. Cong. Ch. and Soc. |
2.55 |
Short Falls. J. W. C. |
0.50 |
South Newmarket. Cong. Ch. and Soc. |
5.81 |
Stratham. Cong. Sab. Sch. |
15.00 |
Tilton and Northfield. Cong. Ch. and
Soc. |
20.00 |
Wilton. A. B. C. |
0.50 |
Winchester. Cong. Ch. |
2.62 |
—— “Friend of Colored People” |
3.00 |
VERMONT, $811.15. |
Barnet. Cong. Sab. Sch. |
10.37 |
Bennington. Second Cong. Ch. and
Soc. |
74.66 |
Bradford. Bbl. of C., val. $35, for
Charleston, S.C. |
Brandon. “J. L. H.” |
10.00 |
Brownington. S. S. Tinkham |
5.00 |
Chester. G. H. C. |
0.60 |
East Hardwick. Cong. Sab. Sch., $27.78;
O. P., 50c.; S. W. O., 51c. |
28.79 |
Granby and Victory. Cong. Ch. and
Soc. |
2.00 |
Lowell. Cong. Ch. |
7.68 |
McIndoes. Cong. Ch. and Soc. |
12.00 |
Milton. Cong. Ch. and Soc. |
18.15 |
Middlebury. Cong. Sab. Sch. |
21.80 |
Montpelier. Bethany Ch. and Soc. |
12.80 |
Newport. Willie Richmond |
30.00 |
Northfield. O. D. E. |
1.00 |
North Thetford. Cong. Ch. and Soc.,
$7.70; Mrs. E. G. B., 50c. |
8.20 |
Pawlet. A. F. |
1.00 |
Pittsfield. H. O. G. |
0.50 |
Pittsford. N. P. Humphrey |
10.00 |
Pittsford. “Dea. A. D. T.,” $4; Dr. and
Mrs. Smith, $2; Mrs. A. W., $1; H. K.,
50c. |
7.50 |
Pittsford. Mrs. Swift’s S. S. Class, for
S. S. First Cong. Ch. Atlanta, Ga. |
3.00 |
Randolph. Mrs. Isaac Nichols |
2.00 |
Royalton. Cong. Ch. and Soc. |
17.50 |
Saint Albans. A. O. Brainerd (ad’l), to
const. Mrs. Jane E. Brainerd L. M. |
25.00 |
Saint Albans. Cong. Ch. Sab. Sch.,
Young Men’s Class, for Student Aid,
Fisk U. |
13.00 |
Saint Johnsbury. North Cong. Ch. |
283.99 |
Stowe. Cong. Ch., to const. Dea. H. S.
Atkins, L. M. |
46.42 |
Waitsfield. Cong. Ch. and Soc. |
16.88 |
Westfield. Cong. Ch. |
2.00 |
West Rutland. M. Newton ($5 of which
for John Brown Steamer) |
10.00 |
Worcester. Cong. Ch. |
3.31 |
|
——— |
|
685.15 |
LEGACY. |
Jericho. Estate of Hosea Spaulding, C.
M. Spaulding, $60; A. C. Spaulding,
$30; E. E. Spaulding, $18; Nellie M.
Percival, $18 |
126.00 |
|
——— |
|
811.15 |
MASSACHUSETTS, $10,925.60. |
Acton. Cong. Ch. and Soc. (ad’l), to const.
Rev. Franklin P. Wood, L. M. |
25.00 |
Alford. Rev. J. Jay Dana, to const. Mrs.
Anna B. Decamp, L. M. |
30.00 |
Amherst. Amherst College, $63.95; G.
C. Munsell, $2; W. H., $1: S. S., $1; H.
B., 50c.; A. I. C., 50c.; Mrs. William
Stearns, Jr., for Freight, $5 |
73.95 |
Andover. South Ch. and Soc., $300;
West Cong. Ch., $37.15; Edwin E.
Goodell, $25; “A Friend,” $10; Miss
C. R. Jackson, $10; H. C., $1; W. A.,
50c.; Mrs. F. R. B., 50c. |
384.15 |
Ashby. Second Cong. Ch. and Soc. |
12.91 |
Ashfield. Ladies’ Soc., Bbl. of C., for
Talladega C. |
Ayer. Mrs. C. A. Spaulding ($10 of
which for John Brown Steamer) |
50.00 |
Barre. Mrs. A. R. M. |
0.50 |
Beverly. Cong. Sab. Sch., $50; Ladies’
Benev. Soc. of Dane St. Ch., Bbl. of C.,
and $2 for Freight, for Student Aid,
Fisk U. |
52.00 |
Beverly. S. D. C. and E. H. G., $1; Mrs.
S. N., $1: Miss M. R. O., $1 |
3.00 |
Boston. Woman’s Home Miss. Ass’n,
for Lady Missionaries |
204.78 |
Boston. Miss H. N. Kirk ($5 of which
for Indian and $5 for Chinese M.) |
15.00 |
Boston. Rev. H. M. Dexter, D.D., for
Freight |
2.43 |
Boston. Mt. Vernon Ch. and Soc.,
$341.31; Rev. Charles Nichols, $30, to
const. John G. Cary L. M.; Rev. P.
Fisk, $10; Mrs. L. A. Bartholomew,
$5; Mrs. J. K. H., 50c.; Mrs. M. A. C.,
50c.; F. D. C., 51c.; Mrs. T. K., 50c.;
J. H., 50c. |
388.82 |
Boston Highlands. Immanuel Ch. and
Soc. |
40.00 |
Boxford. Miss F. C. |
1.00 |
Boxford. Bbl. of C., for Talladega C. |
Boyleston Centre. “Friends,” 2 Bbls. of
C., for Talladega C. |
Bridgewater. Central Square Sab. Sch.,
$10; Rev. I. D., $1, for John Brown
Steamer |
11.00 |
Bridgewater. Mrs. I. D. |
1.00 |
Brimfield. First Cong. Ch. and Soc.,
$29.36; Second Cong. Ch. and Soc.,
$14.08 |
43.44 |
Brockton. Mrs. E. H., $1; L. C., $1 |
2.00[86] |
Brookfield. Mrs. J. S. M. |
1.02 |
Cambridge. A. E. H. |
1.00 |
Cambridgeport. Pilgrim Ch., Ladies’
Miss. Soc., $30, to const. Mrs. James
H. Sparrow, L. M.; Miss A. A. P., 50c. |
30.50 |
Charlestown. Mrs. H. B., Jr. |
0.50 |
Charlton. Rev. W. C. F. |
1.00 |
Chelsea. First Cong. Ch. and Soc.,
$30.95; Miss E. D., 50c. |
31.45 |
Chelsea. “Union Home Mission Band,”
for Lady Missionary, Chattanooga,
Tenn. |
119.00 |
Chicopee. Third Cong. Ch. ($25 of
which for Hampton N. & A. Inst.) |
65.73 |
Clinton. First Evan. Ch. and Soc. |
79.98 |
Colerain. P. B. S. |
1.00 |
Conway. D. L. |
1.00 |
Curtissville. G. E. D. |
1.00 |
Dalton. Mrs. Z. M. Crane, $100; Mrs.
James B. Crane, $100; A. B., $1 |
201.00 |
Dana. Cong. Ch. and Soc. |
3.50 |
Danvers. A. C. B., $1; Mrs. C. W. L.,
50c. |
1.50 |
Dedham. E. P. B., 50c.; E. P. C., 50c. |
1.00 |
Dorchester. “A Friend” |
1.00 |
Duxbury. Mrs. Rebecca R. Holmes |
2.50 |
East Boston. Dea. T. D. D. |
0.50 |
East Douglas. Cong. Ch. and Soc., to
const. Jacob Williams and Wm. H.
Briggs, L. M’s |
66.48 |
East Hampton. Mrs. A. L. C., $1; Mrs.
D. F. L., $1; I. A. J., 50c.; S. E. W.,
50c. |
3.00 |
East Longmeadow. Cong. Ch., $34.55,
and Sab. Sch., $16.97; Mrs. G. W. C.,
$1 |
52.52 |
Enfield. Edward Smith, for Little Rock,
Ark. |
5,000.00 |
Fall River. First Cong. Ch., $82.67; Miss
J. W. B., $1; J. A. B., $1 |
84.67 |
Fitchburgh. Benj. Snow, for John Brown
Steamer |
100.00 |
Fitchburgh. D. S. E., $1; Mrs. R. B. M.,
$1; A. C. H., $1; Mrs. L. W., $1; A. F. A.,
50c.; H. H. Dole, Bundle “Youth’s
Companion” |
4.50 |
Fitchburgh. “Friends,” for furnishing
Straight U. |
1.00 |
Florence. Sab. Sch. Class No. 7, for
Student Aid, Talladega C. |
17.50 |
Framingham. Plymouth Ch. and Soc.,
$128.89; Mrs. S. N. Brewer, $5 |
133.89 |
Framingham. Young People’s Miss.
Circle of Plym. Ch., for Student Aid,
Talladega C. |
25.00 |
Framingham. Plymouth Ch. Sab. Sch.,
for Student Aid, Fisk U. |
14.65 |
Gardner. Lucy Matthews |
3.00 |
Gloucester. Evan. Cong. Ch. and Soc.,
to const. Chas. Blatchford, Adam P.
Stoddart, Miss Lucy S. Davis and
Miss Miranda Steele L. Ms |
120.00 |
Grantville. Rev. J. Edwards, Books. |
Granville Corners. Mr. and Mrs. C. Holcomb |
10.00 |
Great Barrington. First Cong. Ch. and
Soc. |
100.00 |
Greenfield. Second Cong. Soc. |
50.71 |
Greenwich Village. Daniel Parker |
2.00 |
Hadley. Mrs. Rodney Smith and
“Friends,” Box of C. for Athens, Ga. |
Harwich. Cong. Ch. |
10.40 |
Haverhill. Fourth Cong. Ch., $5; West
Cong. Ch. and Soc., $4.90; J. U., $1; C.
C., $1; Mrs. S. C., 50c. |
12.40 |
Holliston. Mrs. W. R. T. |
1.00 |
Holliston. Ladies’ Benev. Soc., 2 Bbls.
C. and bedding, for Talladega C. |
Hopkinton. Cong. Sab. Sch., $50; First
Cong. Sab. Sch., $47.81; First Cong. Ch.
and Soc., $5.13 |
102.94 |
Ipswich. Linebrook Ch. and Soc. |
5.39 |
Lancaster. Ladies’ Benev. Soc., Box and
Bbl. of C., for Talladega C. |
Lawrence. Lawrence St. Cong. Ch. and
Soc. |
100.00 |
Lawrence. Lawrence St. Ch. and Soc.,
Bbl. of bedding, and $8 for Freight, for
Straight U. |
8.00 |
Leicester. “A Friend” |
10.00 |
Lowell. Kirk St. Ch. Sab. Sch., $83.94;
M. C., $1 |
84.94 |
Marblehead. First Cong. Ch. and Soc. |
90.00 |
Middleborough. First Cong. Ch. and
Soc. |
25.74 |
Millbury. First Cong. Ch. and Soc. |
61.78 |
Milford. First. Cong. Ch. and Soc.,
$83.88; Individuals, for Mag., by P. P.
Parkhurst, $3 |
86.88 |
Milford. Cong. Sab. Sch., for ed. of Indian
Youth, Hampton N. and A. Inst. |
40.00 |
Mittineague. Cong. Sab. Sch., for John
Brown Steamer |
10.00 |
Melrose. Cong. Ch. Sab. Sch., for Student
Aid, Fisk U. |
50.00 |
Methuen. “Methuen,” for John Brown
Steamer |
10.00 |
Monson. —— $20; Mrs. Dewey’s S. S.
Class, $1; S. E. B., $1 |
22.00 |
Montery. Mrs. F. A. T. |
0.50 |
New Bedford. Mrs. I. H. Bartlett, Jr.
($10 of which for John Brown Steamer) |
30.00 |
Newburyport. “A Friend,” for John
Brown Steamer |
2.00 |
Newburyport. Ladies, Bbl. of C., for
Washington, D.C. |
Newton. Eliot Ch. and Soc. |
239.53 |
Newton. Eliot Sewing Soc., Bbl. of C.,
for Tillotson Inst. |
Newton Centre. First Cong. Ch. and
Soc., $64.78; J. W., 50c. |
65.28 |
Newton Centre. Ladies of First Ch., by
Mrs. D. L. Furber, for Student Aid,
Atlanta U. |
50.00 |
Newton Centre. B. W. K., for John
Brown Steamer |
1.00 |
Northampton. “Aunt M,” for John
Brown Steamer |
2.00 |
Northborough. Mrs. A. E. D. F. |
1.00 |
North Brookfield. R. H. B., 50c.;
P. K. H., 50c.; Mrs. H., 50c.; Mrs. U.,
50c. |
2.00 |
Northbridge Centre. E. S. P. |
0.30 |
Northfield. Cong. Ch. and Soc., $3.20;
Mrs. A. M. D. A., 51c. |
3.71 |
North Newton. Rev. S. E. L. |
0.50 |
Norton. Trin. Cong. Ch. and Soc. |
34.00 |
North Reading. Cong. Ch. and Soc. |
4.00 |
North Somerville. “A Friend” |
1.00 |
Oxford. First Cong. Ch. and Soc.,
$15.68, and Sab. Sch., $18 |
33.68 |
Palmer. Second Cong. Ch. |
15.00 |
Petersham. Cong. Ch. and Soc., $3.69;
C. B., $1 |
4.69 |
Pittsfield. Mr. and Mrs. C. V. Spear,
$100; Mrs. J. A. J., $1 |
101.00 |
Reading. Old South Ch. and Soc., $28;
A. T. H., 50c. |
28.50 |
Rockland. Elijah Shaw, $10; Miss Mary
N. Shaw, $5, for John Brown
Steamer |
15.00 |
Roxbury. Mrs. E. D. |
0.50 |
Rutland. First Ch. |
8.00 |
Uxbridge. W. J. |
1.00 |
Salem. A. P., $1; J. H. T., 60c. |
1.60 |
Salisbury and Amesbury. Union Evan.
Ch. |
12.50 |
Shirley Village. Cong. Ch. and Soc. |
8.66 |
Somerville. Mrs. H. T. S. |
0.50 |
South Amherst. Cong. Ch. and Soc., $8,
and Sab. Sch., $23.50 |
31.50 |
Southampton. J. E. Phelps |
5.00 |
South Braintree. A. P. W. |
1.00 |
Southbridge. Cong. Ch. ($30 of which
to const. Rev. Joseph Danielson L. M.) |
125.49 |
South Dartmouth. Mrs. M. P. Staples,
for John Brown Steamer |
5.00 |
South Deerfield. Miss L. E. W. |
1.00[87] |
South Weymouth. Union Cong Ch. and
Soc., bal. to const. George Reed, Alfred
O. Crawford and Rev. William
H. Bolster L. Ms |
60.40 |
Spencer. Cong. Ch. and Soc., $183.90;
Cong. Sab. Soc., Primary Dept., $7.50 |
191.40 |
Springfield. “H. M.” |
500.00 |
Springfield. South Cong. Ch., $54.50;
First Cong. Ch., $49.70 |
104.20 |
Stockbridge. Miss Adele Brewer, 2 Bbls.
C., for Raleigh, N.C. |
Sunderland. Cong. Ch. and Soc. |
25.00 |
Warren. Cong. Ch. |
26.20 |
Wellesley. Cong. Ch. and Soc., to const.
Andrew W. Fuller L. M. |
48.75 |
Wellesley. Ladies, Bbl. of C., for
Washington, D.C. |
West Barnstable. Cong. Ch. and Soc. |
10.00 |
Westborough. Evan. Cong. Ch. and
Soc., $31.27; Mrs. E. F., $1 |
32.27 |
West Boylston. First Cong. Ch. and
Soc., to const. Rev. F. J. Fairbanks
L. M. |
75.00 |
West Brookfield. Cong. Ch. and Soc. |
25.00 |
West Brookfield. Dis. No. 3 Sab. Sch.,
for John Brown Steamer |
7.51 |
Westfield. First Cong. Ch. |
6.34 |
West Medway. S. A. C. |
0.50 |
West Medbury. “Friend,” for Student
Aid, Fisk U. |
15.00 |
Westminster. Ladies Sew. Circle, Bbl.
of C., for Tillotson Inst. |
West Newbury. Dr. O. Warren, $2; J.
C. Carr, $2; M. A. R., 50c. |
4.50 |
West Newbury. First Ch. and Parish, 2
Bbls. of C. (one of which for McIntosh
Ga.). val. $90. |
West Newbury. First Ch. and Parish,
Bbl. of C. and 77c. for Freight |
0.77 |
West Newton. Cong. Sab. Sch., $50, for
Student Aid, and $35 for furnishing a
room, Talladega C. |
85.00 |
West Newton. Mrs. S. E. and J. B. W.,
$1 each, for John Brown Steamer |
2.00 |
West Newton. Mrs. Sarah Erving |
2.50 |
West Somerville. Cong. Ch. and Soc. |
4.00 |
West Springfield. Park St. Cong. Ch.,
$31; Second Cong. Ch., $11.84 |
42.84 |
West Springfield. First Cong. Ch. |
16.00 |
Whitinsville. S. A. D. |
1.00 |
Williamsburg. First Cong. Ch. ($5 of
which for Hampton N. & A. Inst.) |
63.00 |
Williamstown. First Cong. Ch. ($7.49 of
which for Indian M.) |
14.98 |
Wilmington. Cong. Sab. Sch., for Student
Aid, Talladega C. |
28.00 |
Winchendon. Atlanta Soc., for freight |
2.00 |
Woburn. First Cong. Ch. and Soc.,
$116.41; William Temple, $5 |
121.41 |
Wolliston. Mrs. H. B. C. |
0.50 |
Worcester. Old South Ch. and Soc.,
$40.54; Wm. Workman, $15; Rev.
W. J. W., $1; E. W., $1 |
57.54 |
Worcester. Mrs. G. Henry Whitcomb,
for furnishing a room, Tillotson C. &
N. Inst. and to const. herself L. M. |
30.00 |
Worcester. Young Ladies’ Mission
Circle of Central Ch., for furnishing a
room, Tillotson C. & N. Inst. |
25.00 |
Yarmouth. Bbl. of C., for Florence,
Ala. |
Yarmouth. First Cong. Ch. and Soc. |
5.00 |
|
———— |
|
$10,875.60 |
LEGACY. |
Athol. Estate of Mrs. D. A. Bowker, by
Mrs. Mary E. Bowker, Execs. |
50.00 |
|
———— |
|
$10,925.60 |
RHODE ISLAND, $142.97. |
Little Compton. United Cong. Ch. and
Soc., $21.45; “A Friend,” $2 |
23.45 |
Nayatt. M. A. S. |
0.51 |
Pawtucket. Cong. Ch. and Soc., $15;
A. A. F., 50c.; Mrs. R. B., 51c. |
16.01 |
Providence. Young Ladies’ Mission Band
of Beneficent Cong. Ch., for Student
Aid, Fisk U. |
100.00 |
Providence. Arthur A. Fuller |
3.00 |
CONNECTICUT, $3,266.19. |
Ansonia. J. H. Bartholomew |
20.00 |
Avon. Mrs. S. Andrews, for John Brown
Steamer |
10.00 |
Bantam Falls. Cornelia Bradley |
2.00 |
Branford. Cong. Sab. Sch., for John
Brown Steamer |
20.00 |
Berlin. Rev. J. Whittlesey |
10.00 |
Bridgeport. Infant Class, by Mrs. C. R.
Palmer, for Lady Missionary among
Refugees |
20.00 |
Bristol. Chas. E. Nott, for Repairs, Talladega
C. |
50.00 |
Bristol. Cong. Sab. Sch., for furnishing
a room, Stone Hall, Talladega C. |
35.00 |
Bristol. Mrs S. T. S. |
1.00 |
Burnside. Miss E. S. |
1.00 |
Chaplin. Cong. Ch. and Soc. |
15.00 |
Cheshire. Thomas Savage |
5.00 |
Colchester. Mrs. C. F. S. and Mrs. E. H. O. |
1.00 |
Cornwall. G. H. Cole |
1.21 |
Cornwall Bridge. George H. Swift |
10.00 |
Cromwell. Cong. Ch. |
55.00 |
Deep River. Cong. Ch. |
26.73 |
East Hartford. First Ch. |
35.00 |
Ellington. Cong. Sab. Sch. |
40.00 |
Enfield. First Cong. Ch., $50; Miss E. A. L., $1 |
51.00 |
Essex. First Cong. Ch. |
10.00 |
Farmington. Cong. Ch. ($175 of which
from Henry D. Hawley to const. Miss
Mary Eliza Hoyt and Mrs. Elizabeth
K. Thomas, L. Ms) |
231.54 |
Glastonbury. F. C. C., $1; C. W. S., 50c. |
1.50 |
Glastonbury. Ladies of First Cong. Ch.,
Bbl. of C., for Tougaloo |
Greenville. Cong. Sab. Sch., for Student
Aid, Atlanta U. |
31.60 |
Greenwich. Israel Peck |
5.50 |
Greenwich. L. M. W., $1; Miss H. M. T.,
$1, for John Brown Steamer |
2.00 |
Guilford. Mrs. Lucy E. Tuttle ($100 of
which for John Brown Steamer) |
120.00 |
Guilford. First Cong. Ch. |
23.00 |
Hamden. H. H. |
0.50 |
Hanover. Cong. Ch. (ad’l) |
6.50 |
Hartford. Asylum Hill Cong. Ch. |
158.97 |
Hartford. Asylum Hill Cong. Sab. Sch.,
$25 for Talladega C. and $25 for Atlanta
U. |
50.00 |
Hartford. Geo. Kellogg, for Student
Aid, Atlanta U. |
100.00 |
Hartford. Mrs. Mary C. Bemis ($10 of
which for John Brown Steamer) |
30.50 |
Hartford. Miss C. A. J., $1; W. H. C.,
$1; J. W., $1; Mrs. C. C. D., $1; Mrs.
E. R. R., $1; H. E. B., $1; Mrs. S. N. K.,
50c.; Prof. W. T., 60c.; G. M. C., 50c.;
Mrs. L. L., 50c. |
8.10 |
Higganum. Cong. Sab. Sch., for John
Brown Steamer |
40.00 |
Jewett City. Cong. Ch. and Soc. |
25.00 |
Kensington. Mrs. M. Hotchkiss |
5.50 |
Ledyard. Cong. Ch. |
22.00 |
Lyme. Rev. William B. Cary, for John
Brown Steamer |
10.00 |
Marlborough. Cong. Ch. and Soc., $20.62;
Cong. Sab. Sch., $19.38, for furnishing
room, Talladega C. |
40.00 |
Meriden. Robert P. Rand, $5; A. B.,
$1 |
6.00 |
Middletown. W. M. D. |
1.00 |
Milford. First Cong. Ch. |
25.70 |
Milford. Sab. Sch. of First Cong. Ch.,
for John Brown Steamer |
5.00 |
Montville. First Cong. Ch. |
5.30 |
Moodus. Amasa Day Chaffee, for John
Brown Steamer |
10.00[88] |
Moose Meadow. Mrs. H. L. E. |
0.51 |
Naugatuck. Cong. Ch. |
107.00 |
New Britain. Augustus Stanley, for
John Brown Steamer |
10.00 |
New Britain. Mrs. O. C. S., $1; A. A.,
51c. |
1.51 |
New Haven. Dwight Place Ch., by
Nelson Hall, $50; Mrs. Sylvia Johnson,
$10; “A Friend,” $3; “W. C. S.,” $2;
E. A. P., $1; J. E., $1; Mrs. F. P. G.,
$1; Miss E. A. B., $1; H. N. D., $1;
Mrs. R. P. B., $1; Mrs. R. U., 50c.; E.
C., 50c.; G. W. N., 50c. |
72.50 |
New Haven. “A Friend,” for Talladega
C. |
0.75 |
New Haven. Dr. Wm. B. De Forest, for
Talladega C. |
25.00 |
New Haven. North Ch. Miss. Sab. Sch.,
for John Brown Steamer |
20.00 |
New London. Second Cong. Ch. |
631.43 |
New London. Mrs. J. N. Harris, for
Talladega C. |
50.00 |
New London. “Friends,” Box Pictures
and C. for Talladega C. |
New Milford. Cong. Ch., $90, to const.
George Hine and T. Dwight Merwin
L. Ms.; Mrs. F. G. B., $1 |
91.00 |
Norfolk. M. A. C. |
0.51 |
Northford. Cong. Sab. Sch., $10; Miss
F. L. S., $1, for John Brown Steamer |
11.00 |
North Madison. Cong. Ch. and Soc. |
9.20 |
North Woodstock. Cong. Ch. |
25.74 |
Norwalk. First Cong. Ch. and Soc.,
$100; Mrs. Wm. B. St. John, $3 |
103.00 |
Norwich. W. R. B., 50c.; Miss R. C. W.,
50c. |
1.00 |
Norwich Town. First Cong. Ch. |
59.50 |
Plantsville. Cong. Sab. Sch., $30.50,
for Hampton N. and A. Inst., and
$13.35 for John Brown Steamer |
43.85 |
Plymouth. Sab. Sch., by L. D. Baldwin,
Supt., for Student Aid, Talladega
C. |
50.00 |
Plymouth. “A Friend,” for Talladega
C. |
3.00 |
Pomfret. First Cong. Ch. |
27.00 |
Prospect. B. B. Brown |
20.00 |
Putnam. Class No. 14, Sec. Cong. Ch.
Sab. Sch., for John Brown Steamer
and to const. Walter P. White L. M. |
30.00 |
Saybrook. Cong. Ch. |
10.43 |
Sharon. Mrs. B. S. |
1.00 |
South Coventry. Cong. Sab. Sch., for
Student Aid, Talladega C. |
12.50 |
South Windsor. First Cong. Ch., for
John Brown Steamer |
10.00 |
South Windsor. C. W. |
0.60 |
Stafford Springs. Cong. Sab. Sch., for
Student Aid, Fisk U. |
25.00 |
Stamford. “Cheerful Workers,” for
Strieby Hall, T. U. |
25.00 |
Stonington. Rev. H. B. Mead, $5;
Ladies of Cong. Ch., $5, for Student
Aid, Talladega C. |
10.00 |
Thompsonville. D. P. |
1.00 |
Tolland. Mrs. Lucy L. Clough, $50,
for Indian and $50 for Chinese M., and
to const. herself L. M. |
100.00 |
Vernon. Mrs. E. P. |
1.00 |
Warren. First Cong. Ch. and Soc. |
48.25 |
Washington. “Z.,” for Indian M. |
1.00 |
Washington. Rev. W. C. |
0.51 |
Watertown. Cong. Sab. Sch., for John
Brown Steamer and to const. Charles
B. Woodward L. M. |
61.00 |
West Haven. Cong. Ch. Sab. Sch., for
John Brown Steamer |
10.00 |
Willington. Mrs. H. C. Harbison |
3.00 |
Winsted. Mrs. M. A. Mitchell, for Student
Aid. Talladega C. |
20.00 |
Woodbridge. Cong. Ch. |
12.00 |
Woodbridge. Cong. Sab. Sch., for John
Brown Steamer |
10.00 |
Woodbury. First Cong. Ch., $23.50; Mrs.
E. L. Curtiss, $10.50; Mrs. H. D. C., 50c. |
34.50 |
——. “Friend” |
17.50 |
NEW YORK, $1,793.37. |
Albany. D. A. T. |
1.00 |
Baldwinsville. Harvard Carter |
20.00 |
Bangor. Individuals, by Rev. W. C. Sexton |
1.50 |
Brooklyn. Mrs. Mary E. Whiton $20;
Miss E. O., $1; H. W. B., 50c. |
21.50 |
Canandaigua. H. Gregory |
3.00 |
Canastota. Enoch Northrup, $5; Mr.
and Mrs. R. H. Childs, $5 |
10.00 |
Castile. Rev. Jeremiah Porter |
10.00 |
Chestertown. Mrs. S. H. Foster, for
John Brown Steamer |
10.00 |
Churchville. Mission Circle of Cong.
Sab. Sch., for John Brown Steamer |
10.00 |
Cohoes. Mrs. I. Terry |
5.00 |
Coxsackie. Rev. M. Lusk |
5.00 |
Crown Point. “L. H. P.” |
50.00 |
Ellington. H. B. Rice, $5; Mrs. Eliza
Rice, $4; A. C. R., $1, for John Brown
Steamer |
10.00 |
Chenango Forks. Cong. Ch., $9; Mrs.
M. H., 50c. |
9.50 |
Fairport. First Cong. Ch. |
89.87 |
Franklin. Mrs. I. H. Penfield, for John
Brown Steamer |
5.00 |
Gainesville. Box of C., for Tougaloo U. |
Galway. Presb. Sab. Sch., for John
Brown Steamer |
10.00 |
Galway. Delia C. Davis, for Student
Aid, Atlanta U. |
10.00 |
Gouverneur. Mrs. H. D. S. |
0.50 |
Harpersfield. G. S. H. |
1.00 |
Hudson. Mrs. D. A. Jones |
15.00 |
Hume. L. H. P. |
1.00 |
Ilion. Mrs. Sophia Miller ($1 of which
for John Brown Steamer) |
7.00 |
Le Roy. A. McEwen |
5.00 |
Lima. Chas. D. Miner, Sen., $5; Mrs.
A. E. M., 50c. |
5.50 |
Locust Valley. Mrs. Sarah Palmer |
6.00 |
Marcellus. Mrs. L. H. |
1.00 |
Middlesex. Lester and E. J. Adams |
10.00 |
Millbrook. Mrs. J. W. C. |
0.50 |
New Lebanon Centre. Ladies Soc., Bbl.
of C., for Lassitus Mills, N.C. |
|
New York. Gen. Clinton B. Fisk, $30,
to const. James D. Burrus, L. M.; Dr.
A. S. Ball, $5; F. J. S. K., $1 |
36.00 |
New York. John Dwight, $100 for
John Brown Steamer; $100 for Tougaloo
U. |
200.00 |
New York. “A Friend,” for Tillotson
C. & N. Inst. |
100.00 |
New York. S. T. Gordon ($10 of which
for John Brown Steamer) |
10.50 |
New York. Broadway Tab. Sab. Sch.,
Class No. 11, for Student Aid, Fisk U. |
10.00 |
New York. W. A. M., for John Brown
Steamer |
1.00 |
New York. Gen. Wager Swayne, Bbl.
of Books; C. L. Mead, Suit of Clothing,
for Talladega C. |
Oriskany. Albert Halsey, $5; Mrs. R. W. P., $1 |
6.00 |
Perry Centre. Ladies’ Benev. Soc.,
$13.91, and Box of C. |
13.91 |
Poughkeepsie. Sab. Sch. of First Cong.
Ch., for John Brown Steamer |
10.00 |
Rochester. A. Hubregtre |
2.00 |
Saratoga Springs. Mrs. A. M. Wheeler |
2.00 |
Tompkinsville. Mrs. Maria Snyder |
5.00 |
Troy. Mary and Margaret J. Cushman |
3.00 |
Vernon Centre. Mary R. Judson |
3.00 |
Walton. First Cong. Ch., $56.26; Mrs.
T. J. O., 50c. |
56.76 |
Warsaw. Cong. Soc. |
24.04 |
Watertown. Geo. Cook |
2.00 |
Waterville. Mrs. J. Candee, $3; Mrs.
Wm. Winchell, $2 |
5.00 |
Watkins. E. D. |
1.00 |
West Chazy. Daniel Bassett |
5.00 |
West Farms. J. A. |
1.00[89] |
Whitestown. —— |
5.00 |
—— “Friends” |
25.00 |
|
———— |
|
$861.08 |
LEGACIES. |
Dryden. Estate of Lucy B. Eastman, by
Geo. E. Goodrich |
200.00 |
Homer. Estate of Mrs. Celinda E. Hubbard,
by Dea. Manley Hobart, Ex. |
725.29 |
Jefferson. Estate of Miss Hubbard, by
Miss S. Rulifson |
7.00 |
|
———— |
|
$1,793.37 |
NEW JERSEY, $212.00. |
Chester. “A Friend” |
25.00 |
Irvington. Rev. A. Underwood, for
John Brown Steamer |
100.00 |
Jersey City. Tabernacle Cong. Sab.
Sch., for Student Aid, Fisk U. |
40.00 |
Jersey City. S. E. H. |
10.00 |
Newark. R. D. W. |
1.00 |
Paterson. P. Van Houten |
5.00 |
Trenton. A. P. Sherman, $10, for John
Brown Steamer; S. T. Sherman, $10,
for Mendi M. |
20.00 |
Trenton. Mrs. Olivia S. Fuller |
11.00 |
PENNSYLVANIA, $91.50. |
Allentown. Rev. C. M. |
0.50 |
Canton. H. Sheldon |
5.00 |
Centre Road Station. J. A. Scovel |
10.00 |
Conneaut. Sab. Sch. of First Cong.
Ch., for John Brown Steamer |
10.00 |
Corry. Cong. Ch. |
2.00 |
Cowdersport. “Postal Order” |
5.00 |
Honesdale. Mrs. H. Weston |
3.00 |
Kennett Square. H. M. D. |
1.00 |
Philadelphia. W. P. F. and Others,
$1.50; Rev. H. L. P., $1 |
2.50 |
Pittston. James Challenger, $2.50 and
Box of Books |
2.50 |
Scranton. F. E. Nettleton |
15.00 |
South Bethlehem. H. D. Kitchell |
5.00 |
Washington. Mrs. M. H. McFarland,
for John Brown Steamer |
25.00 |
West Alexander. J. McCoy and wife |
5.00 |
OHIO, $1,576.23. |
Alliance. Mrs. J. L. Thomas |
1.50 |
Ashland. Mrs. Eliza Thompson |
2.28 |
Belpre. Cong. Ch. |
3.94 |
Bellevue. “Happy Workers” Miss. So.
of Cong. Ch., for Mendi M. |
10.00 |
Berea. James S. Smedley, $10; F. S.
Smedley, $3; F. B., $1, for John Brown
Steamer |
14 00 |
Berea. James S. Smedley |
5.00 |
Brooklyn Village. M. L. M. |
1.00 |
Cincinnati. “Agamemnon” |
25.00 |
Claridon. Rev. C. C. Starbuck, for Student
Aid, Talladega C. |
6.00 |
Cleveland. Ladies of First Cong. Ch.,
for Student Aid, Talladega C. |
70.00 |
Cleveland. S. H. Sheldon, for Talladega
C. |
50.00 |
Cleveland. Euclid Av. Cong. Ch. |
28.64 |
Dayton. E. P. |
0.51 |
Dayton. D. E. McSherry & Co., one self-opening
and closing gate, for Talladega
C. |
Delaware. William Bevan |
5.00 |
East Liverpool. A. W. A., for John
Brown Steamer |
1.00 |
Elyria. Cong. Sab. Sch., for Student
Aid, Fisk U. |
30.00 |
Fosteria. C. M. |
1.00 |
Fulton. D. C. H. |
0.50 |
Gambier. J. S. Sawer |
5.00 |
Geneva. Mrs. S. Kingsbury, $8; “A
Friend,” $1, for John Brown Steamer |
9.00 |
Greenfield. Wm. Smith |
4.00 |
Harrison. Dr. J. D. B. |
5.00 |
Huntsburgh. A. E. Millard and Mrs. M.
E. Millard, $5 ea. |
10.00 |
Jefferson. J. A. Howells, $2.50.; James
Whittemore, $2.50; Rev. S. W. D., $1;
“Friends,” $1.45, for Talladega C. |
7.45 |
Kelloggsville. Rev. Hinds Smith, for
John Brown Steamer |
2.00 |
Kingsville. Myron Whiting, $20; Jeremiah
Luce and wife, $6 |
26.00 |
Marietta. Rev. C. S. Irwin and wife |
1.25 |
Marysville. O. M. S. |
1.00 |
Medina. Woman’s Miss. Soc. ($1.50 of
which from a Sab. Sch. class), for Student
Aid, Talladega C. |
10.00 |
Medina. E. J. M., for Student Aid,
Talladega C. |
0.50 |
North Benton. Margret J. Hartzell |
3.00 |
North Bloomfield. “Friends,” for Student
Aid, Talladega. C. |
35.00 |
North Kingsville. Rev. E. J. Comings,
$10; B. S. Noyes, $2 |
12.00 |
Norwalk. Rev. Chas. N. Fitch, for Cooking
Sch. Talladega C. |
6.00 |
Oberlin. Ladies Soc. of First Cong. Ch.
for Lady Missionary, Atlanta. Ga. |
75.00 |
Oberlin. First Cong. Sab. Sch. for Talladega
C. |
50.00 |
Oberlin. Second Cong. Ch., for Student
Aid, Atlanta U. |
30.00 |
Oberlin. “A Friend,” $25; L. F., $1.,
for John Brown Steamer |
26.00 |
Oberlin. First Cong Ch., Mrs. C. G.
Finney, $20; Second Cong Ch., $12.94;
Individuals, for Mag., by Rev. Geo.
Thompson, $4.50; Mrs. J. F. B., 51c. |
37.95 |
Painesville. First Ch., Hon. Reuben
Hitchcock, for Lady Missionary,
Athens, Ala. |
500.00 |
Painesville. Hon. Reuben Hitchcock,
for John Brown Steamer |
50.00 |
Painesville. First Cong. Ch., $42.40;
Mrs. L. S. and E. S., $1; By Rev. G. R. M., for Freight, $1 |
44.40 |
Parisville. D. D. |
0.50 |
Peru. Henry Clapp, for Talladega C. |
5.00 |
Peru. “A Friend,” for Student Aid,
Talladega C. |
0.50 |
Richwood. Edward D. Jones |
5.00 |
Ruggles. Mrs. H. T. |
0.50 |
Sandusky. Ladies’ Miss. Soc. Box of
C. and $3, for Freight, for Theo.
Dept., Talladega C. |
3.00 |
Sandusky. Chester Woolworth |
5.00 |
Saybrook. Wm. C. Sexton |
2.00 |
Seville. First Cong. Ch. of Guilford,
$10; Mrs. A. C. Dowd, $5; T. B.
Dowd, $5, for John Brown Steamer |
20.00 |
Sicily. S. W. Huggins, $10; J. F. Cumberland,
$5 |
15.00 |
Troy. Cong. Ch. |
7.00 |
Twinsburgh. J. R. Parmelee |
2.00 |
Unionville. Rev. J. M. Fraser and Mrs.
H. B. Fraser, for Chinese M. in Cal. |
50.00 |
Unionville. Mrs. H. B. Fraser, for John
Brown Steamer |
100.00 |
Unionville. Package of Goods, for
Selma, Ala. |
Wakeman. Second Cong. Ch. |
10.85 |
West Andover. Cong. Ch. |
5.00 |
West Williamsfield. Cong. Ch. and Soc. |
10.00 |
Wellington. “Young Ladies Mission
Circle,” for John Brown Steamer |
10.00 |
Wellington. A. H. A. |
0.50 |
Willoughby. Mary P. Hastings |
10.00 |
Willoughby. Mrs. C. A. Garlick ($1 for
John Brown Steamer) |
1.50 |
|
———— |
|
1,469.27 |
LEGACY. |
Cleveland. Estate of Chas. French |
106.96 |
|
———— |
|
1,576.23 |
INDIANA, $40. |
Dublin. H. M. |
1.00 |
New Corydon. Geo. Stolz |
5.00 |
Newville. A. D. |
1.00[90] |
South Bend. R. Burroughs to const.
himself L. M. |
30.00 |
Sparta. John Hawkswell, $2.50; Mrs.
L. R., 50c. |
3.00 |
ILLINOIS, $750.89. |
Altamont. E. P., for Student Aid, Talladega
C. |
1.00 |
Altona. Cong. Ch., $3.81; Ladies Mis.
Soc. Cong. Ch., $5 |
8.81 |
Altona. Cong. Sab. Sch., for John
Brown Steamer |
5.00 |
Amboy. C. A. Church ($5 of which for
John Brown Steamer) |
5.50 |
Beecher. Cong. Ch. |
10.30 |
Buda. Cong. Sab. Sch., for John
Brown Steamer |
5.87 |
Bunker Hill. J. W. B. |
0.50 |
Chicago. First Cong. Ch., $114.41;
Lawndale Cong. Ch., $10.50; W. S.,
$1; H. B., $1; J. B., 50c. |
127.41 |
Chicago. Woman’s Miss. Soc. of New
Eng. Cong. Ch., for Lady Missionary,
Mobile, Ala. |
8.04 |
Chicago. Ladies. Bbl. of C., for Washington,
D.C. |
Cobden. E. W. T. |
0.50 |
Danville. Mrs. Anna M. Swan |
5.00 |
Elmwood. K. H. Reed |
20.00 |
Elgin. Mrs. E. E. C. B. |
1.00 |
Farmington. Phineas Chapman |
50.00 |
Galesburg. E. A. C. and Mrs. H. S. H.,
50c. ea. |
1.00 |
Geneseo. First Cong. Ch., $8.85; First
Cong. Sab. Sch., $21.35; Mrs. E. L.
Atkinson, $5 |
35.20 |
Geneseo. “Band of Sisters,” for Student
Aid, Talladega C. |
25.00 |
Geneseo. “Busy Workers,” for Student
Aid, Talladega C. |
5.00 |
Geneseo. “A Friend,” for John Brown
Steamer |
1.00 |
Glencoe. Sab. Sch., for John Brown
Steamer |
10.00 |
Granville. “Merry Workers,” for John
Brown Steamer |
10.10 |
Hampton. Sab. Sch., for Student Aid,
Talladega C. |
11.00 |
Highland Park. L. S. Bingham |
5.00 |
Huntley. Rev. D. Chapman and Son, for
John Brown Steamer |
5.00 |
Kewannee. Cong. Sab. Sch., for Student
Aid, Fisk U. |
25.00 |
La Grange. John W. Bushnell ($1 of
which for John Brown Steamer) |
6.00 |
Lisbon. Dr. G. K. |
0.50 |
Lombard. Sab. Sch. of First Ch., for
John Brown Steamer |
10.00 |
Lyndon. Mrs. M. W. |
0.50 |
Lowell. V. G. Lutz |
5.00 |
Maywood. R. B. B., for John Brown
Steamer |
1.00 |
Morris. Miss N. Sample |
5.00 |
Neponset. Cong. Sab. Sch., for John
Brown Steamer |
7.50 |
Quincy. L. Kingman |
5.00 |
Rock Falls. Rev. R. A. |
0.60 |
Roseville. Mr. and Mrs. Axtell, Box Ornithological
Specimens and Bbl. of
Hats, for Talladega C. |
Odell. Mrs. H. E. Davis, $10; Mrs. John
MacWilliams, $10 |
20.00 |
Ottawa. Cong. Ch., $11.55; Cong. Sab.
Sch., $25.82 |
37.37 |
Payson. J. K. Scarborough, $60, to
const. John F. Spencer and Mrs. Harriet
S. Kay, L. Ms.; Payson Cong.
Sab. Sch., $20 |
80.00 |
Port Byron. Ladies’ Miss. Soc. |
5.00 |
Sheffield. Cong. Sab. Sch. (ad’l), for
Lady Missionary, Savannah, Ga. |
4.25 |
Sycamore. Cong. Sab. Sch., for Student
Aid, Talladega C. |
50.00 |
Sycamore. Rev. A. S. |
0.50 |
Stillman Valley. Cong. Ch. |
10.44 |
Thomasborough. H. M. Seymour |
5.00 |
Toulon. Cong. Sab. Sch., for Student
Aid, Fisk U. |
13.50 |
Tonica. J. C. Heywood |
10.50 |
Union. Union Sab. Sch., for John Brown
Steamer |
5.00 |
Victoria. Cong. Ch. |
6.00 |
Washington. “A Friend,” for Student
Aid, Tougaloo U. |
30.00 |
|
——— |
|
$700.80 |
LEGACY. |
Morrison. Estate of John Roy, by
Frank Clendenin, Admr. |
50.00 |
|
——— |
|
$750.89 |
MICHIGAN, $1,102.46. |
Allegan. Mrs. R. E. Booth, for furnishing
a room Tillotson T. & N. Inst. |
30.00 |
Alpine & Walker. Cong. Sab. Sch., for
John Brown Steamer |
1.00 |
Battle Creek. Cong. and Presb. Sab.
Sch., for Student Aid, Talladega C. |
11.00 |
Church’s Corners. Cong. Ch., $16, and
Sab. Sch., $10.80; James Robbins, C.
Foller and A. W. Douglass, $2 each;
Friends, $5.60 |
38.40 |
Chelsea. John C. Winans |
50.00 |
Covert. Cong. Sab. Sch., $20; A. S.
Packard, $20, for John Brown
Steamer |
40.00 |
Custer. Rev. L. Curtiss |
3.00 |
Dexter. Dennis Warner |
10.00 |
Detroit. Mrs. P., for John Brown
Steamer |
1.00 |
Detroit. J. C. H., $1; Mrs. C. H. L.,
50c. |
1.50 |
East Saginaw. Cong. Ch., $92.91, to
const. Lucius C. Storrs, Edwin W.
Glynn and Clarence L. Judd L. Ms.;
Mrs. M. S., 50c. |
93.41 |
Grand Blanc. Cong. Ch. Sab. Sch., for
John Brown Steamer |
5.00 |
Grand Rapids. Abijah Wood, to const.
Harvey J. Holister L. M. |
30.00 |
Greenville. M. Rutan, for Tillotson C.
& N. Inst. |
500.00 |
Greenville. “Friends,” Box of books
and C., and $3.65, for freight, for Talladega
C. |
3.65 |
Jackson. Mrs. R. M. Bennett |
2.00 |
Kalamazoo. Mrs. H. C. B. |
0.50 |
Laingsburg. Cong. Ch. |
10.00 |
Muskegon. Cong. Ch. |
15.00 |
Olivet. A. T. |
1.00 |
Port Huron. C. G. M., 50c.; Miss A. B.,
50c. |
1.00 |
Three Oaks. Cong. Ch. |
40.00 |
Union City. Cong. Sab. Sch., $13, bal.
to const. Mrs. Alice M. Collins L. M.;
Mrs. D. B. W. and Mrs. E. J. H., 50c. ea. |
14.00 |
Whitehall. B. H. |
1.00 |
—— “A Western Man” ($100 of
which for John Brown Steamer and
$50 for Indian M.) |
200.00 |
WISCONSIN, $882.43. |
Appleton. Woman’s Miss. Soc. of Cong.
Ch., for Lady Missionary, Talladega,
Ala. |
10.00 |
Arena. Woman’s Miss. Soc., for Lady
Missionary, Talladega, Ala. |
2.30 |
Baraboo. Cong. Sab. Sch., for Student
Aid, Talladega C. |
10.00 |
Beloit. Sab. Sch. Class of First Cong.
Ch., for Student Aid, Talladega C. |
2.50 |
Beloit. Dr. A. |
1.00 |
Bristol & Paris. Woman’s Miss. Soc.,
for Lady Missionary, Talladega, Ala. |
10.00 |
Columbus. J. Q. A. |
1.00 |
Fond du Lac. Mrs. R. M. Lewis, $2.50;
Mrs. R. W. B., 50c. |
3.00 |
Geneva Lake. Presb. Ch., $35.40; W. H. H., 50c. |
35.90[91] |
Geneva Lake. Mrs. H. A. Allan, for repairs,
Talladega C. |
10.00 |
Madison. First Cong. Ch., to const. Mrs.
Sarah D. Wright, Mrs. Ellen W.
Lamb, Edwin Sumner, Hiram Johnson
and William Anderson L. Ms. |
100.00 |
Menasha. Cash |
5.00 |
Milwaukee. Grand Av. Cong. Ch. |
68.23 |
Milwaukee. Woman’s Miss. Soc. of
Grand Av. Cong. Ch., for Lady Missionary,
Talladega, Ala. |
25.00 |
Milwaukee. Young People’s Miss.
Circle of Grand Av. Cong. Ch., for
Student Aid, Talladega C. |
16.00 |
Milwaukee. Rev. Mr. Ide’s Children,
for Reading Room, Talladega C. |
4.00 |
Racine. D. D. N. |
1.00 |
Racine. Cong. Ch., box of C. for Talladega
C. |
Ripon. “Family of sister of Hon. E. P.
Smith” (ad’l,) for furnishing room,
Talladega C. |
10.00 |
Ripon. Miss Mary Jarvis, for Student
Aid, Talladega C. |
7.00 |
Rosendale. Cong. Sab. Sch., $5; Mrs.
H. M. C., $1, for John Brown Steamer |
6.00 |
Salem. William Munson |
50.00 |
Sheboygan. D. B. |
1.00 |
Stevens’ Point. Mrs. F. H. Montague |
3.00 |
Whitewater. Woman’s Miss. Soc., for
Lady Missionary, Talladega, Ala. |
0.50 |
|
——— |
|
$382.43 |
LEGACY. |
Monroe. Estate of Mrs. Orissa Rood,
by J. L. Rood, Ex. |
500.00 |
|
——— |
|
$882.43 |
IOWA, $660.94. |
Burlington. Cong. Ch. ($30 of which to
const. Thomas R. Rankin, L. M.)
$51.16; Mrs. R. G. H., 50c. |
51.66 |
Cedar Rapids. Mrs. R. D. Stephens, for
Student Aid, Straight U. |
10.00 |
Cedar Falls. Mrs. T. R. Robbins |
3.00 |
Clay. Cong. Ch. $3, and Sab. Sch. $4 |
7.00 |
Danville. Cong. Ch. |
14.00 |
Davenport. Geo. W. Ells ($5 of which
for John Brown Steamer) |
15.00 |
Decorah. First Cong. Ch. |
44.05 |
Dubuque. Mrs. James Beach, Bbl. of
C., for Talladega C. |
Dubuque. Mrs. J. B. |
1.00 |
Earlville. Cong. Ch. |
3.28 |
Eldora. Cong. Ch. |
10.00 |
Fontanelle. Ladies, for Freight |
2.50 |
Fort Dodge. Cong. Ch. |
5.70 |
Franklin. Cong. Ch. |
2.12 |
Genoa Bluffs. Ladies of Cong. Ch., for
Lady Missionary, New Orleans |
3.00 |
Gilman. Rev. F. Magoun and “Friends”
for furnishing a room, Stone Hall,
Talladega C. |
35.00 |
Iowa City. J. T. T. and Mrs. E. A. B. |
1.00 |
Le Grand. T. P. Craig ($1 for John
Brown Steamer) |
5.00 |
Marion. Ladies of Cong. Ch., for Lady
Missionary, New Orleans |
15.00 |
Marion. Cong. Sab. Sch., for John
Brown Steamer |
5.00 |
McGregor. Woman’s Missionary Soc. |
12.21 |
New Hampton. Woman’s Cent. Soc. |
2.35 |
Oskaloosa. Daniel Lane |
5.00 |
Prairie City. Cong. Ch. |
4.40 |
Sherrills Mount. German Cong. Ch. |
2.00 |
Wittemberg. Cong. Ch. |
4.85 |
|
——— |
|
$264.12 |
LEGACY. |
Tabor. Estate of D. E. Woods, by Rev.
John Todd |
396.82 |
|
——— |
|
$660.94 |
MINNESOTA, $412.28. |
Austin. Cong. Ch. |
24.34 |
Excelsior. Cong. Ch. |
10.00 |
Faribault. Cong. Ch. |
30.84 |
Dean. A. B. Hilts ($5 of which for John
Brown Steamer) |
6.00 |
Glyndon. Sab. Sch. of “The Ch. at
Glyndon,” $10; Infant Class, $1, for
John Brown Steamer |
11.00 |
Hamilton. Cong. Ch. |
5.00 |
Hutchinson. Cong. Ch. |
2.00 |
Northfield. Cong. Sab. Sch., for Student
Aid, Talladega C. |
41.26 |
Northfield. A. L. and Mrs. C. T. N.,
50c. ea. |
1.00 |
Minneapolis. Plymouth Ch., $36.47;
Second Cong. Ch., $2; J. G. N., 55c.;
J. C., 55c. |
39.57 |
Minneapolis. E. D. First Cong. Ch. |
150.00 |
Rochester. Cong. Ch. |
40.27 |
Tivoli. L. H., for John Brown Steamer |
1.00 |
Winona. Cong. Ch. ($30 of which to
const. Miss Elizabeth Whitman L. M.) |
50.00 |
KANSAS, $12.26. |
Bavaria. A. M. |
0.50 |
Emporia. Cong. Ch |
11.76 |
NEBRASKA, $71.24. |
Arborville. Cong. Ch. |
1.96 |
Nebraska City. “A Friend.” |
11.00 |
Omaha. Cong. Ch. |
34.58 |
Omaha. “K. & C.,” for John Brown
Steamer |
10.00 |
Randolph. Cong. Ch. |
1.00 |
Red Cloud. Cong. Ch. |
1.00 |
Silver. Melinda Bowen |
10.00 |
Wayland. Cong. Ch. |
1.70 |
DAKOTA, 50c. |
Yankton. Mrs. W. H. H. B. |
0.50 |
UTAH, 51c. |
Wood’s Cross. Rev. D. P. |
0.51 |
COLORADO, $37.91. |
Denver. First Cong. Ch., $36.90, to
const. Rev. J. V. Hilton L. M.; J. W. S., 50c.; A. R. B., 51c. |
37.91 |
CALIFORNIA, $533.31. |
Benicia. Mrs. N. P. S. |
0.51 |
San Francisco. Receipts of the California
Chinese Mission |
532.80 |
WASHINGTON TER., $22.85. |
Skokomish. Cong. Ch. |
22.85 |
DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA, $2.30. |
Washington. “Little Rills of Liensmary,”
by Rev. M. Porter Snell |
2.30 |
KENTUCKY, $10.20. |
Berea. Cong. Ch. |
10.20 |
TENNESSEE, $1,000.25. |
Memphis. Le Moyne Inst., Tuition |
198.25 |
Memphis. Hattie A. Hilton |
5.00 |
Nashville. Fisk U., Tuition |
787.00 |
Nashville. Prof. F. A. Chase |
10.00 |
NORTH CAROLINA, $143.55. |
Wilmington. Tuition |
138.55 |
Wilmington. Cong. Ch. |
5.00 |
SOUTH CAROLINA, $289.50. |
Charleston. Avery Inst., Tuition |
289.50 |
GEORGIA, $822.96. |
Atlanta. Atlanta U., Tuition |
408.61[92] |
Atlanta. Storrs Sch., Tuition |
166.80 |
Macon. Lewis High Sch., Tuition |
100.85 |
McIntosh. Dorchester Academy, Tuition |
15.70 |
Savannah. Beach Inst., Tuition |
126.00 |
Savannah. “A Friend,” for Atlanta U. |
5.00 |
ALABAMA. $521.64. |
Anniston. Tuition |
5.00 |
Athens. Trinity Sch., Tuition |
7.25 |
Childersburg. Rev. A. J. |
1.00 |
Marion. Cong. Ch. |
33.80 |
Marion. Rev. A. W. C. for John Brown
Steamer |
1.00 |
Mobile. Emerson Inst., Tuition |
154.85 |
Mobile. Cong. Ch. |
1.00 |
Montgomery. Public Fund |
175.00 |
Montgomery. M. Blanche Curtiss, for
Student Aid, Atlanta U. |
18.00 |
Selma. Cong. Sab. Sch., for John
Brown Steamer |
10.20 |
Selma. D. G. & W. H. G. |
1.00 |
Shelby Iron Works. G. G. F. |
0.50 |
Talladega. Talladega C., Tuition |
103.04 |
Talladega. Woman’s Miss. Ass’n., for
John Brown Steamer |
10.00 |
MISSISSIPPI, $136.30. |
Tougaloo. Tougaloo U., Tuition |
129.00 |
Tougaloo. Rev. G. S. Pope, for Freight |
7.30 |
LOUISIANA, $169.50. |
New Orleans. Straight U. Tuition |
169.50 |
FLORIDA, $60.70. |
Monticello. Rent |
50.00 |
Orange City. “One of the least of His
Disciples” ($10 of which for John
Brown Steamer) |
10.70 |
TEXAS, $103.95. |
Austin. Tillotson C. and N. Inst., Tuition |
101.25 |
Corpus Christi. Cong. Ch. and Sab. Sch.,
for John Brown Steamer |
2.70 |
CANADA, $2.50. |
Caledonia. A. C. Buck |
2.00 |
Montreal. H. G. |
0.50 |
INCOME FUND, $1,154. |
Avery Fund, for Mendi M. |
694.00 |
Graves Library Fund, for Atlanta U. |
150.00 |
Theological Endowment Fund, for
Howard U. |
225.00 |
Scholarship Fund, for Fisk U. |
50.00 |
Greenwich (N.Y.) Town Bonds, for
Straight U. |
35.00 |
|
————— |
Total |
$28,688.77 |
Total from Oct. 1 to Jan. 31 |
$83,893.39 |
FOR ARTHINGTON MISSION. |
Pawlet, Vt. A. Flower |
5.00 |
Hartford, Conn. Park Cong. Ch. |
158.14 |
Terryville, Conn. R. D. H. Allen |
50.00 |
New York, N.Y. John Dwight |
100.00 |
|
——— |
Total |
$313.14 |
Receipts of the California Chinese Mission,
E. Palache, Treasurer, from Sept. 28, 1881, to
Jan. 4, 1882, applicable to the expenses of the
year ending Aug. 31, 1881, being in fulfillment
of pledges made for that purpose: |
I. From Auxiliaries, Viz.— |
Petaluma Mission |
$9.00 |
Sacramento Mission. Seven memberships |
14.00 |
Santa Barbara Mission. Rev. S. M. Crowther |
2.00 |
Stockton Mission |
2.00 |
|
——— |
Total |
$27.00 |
II. From Churches— |
Oakland First Cong. Ch. |
13.25 |
Rio Vista Cong. Ch. Mrs. M. L. Merritt |
5.00 |
San Francisco. First Cong. Ch. Collection,
$3.00; Three annual memberships.
$6.00 |
9.00 |
Plymouth. Mrs. S. S. Smith |
2.00 |
Bethany Ch. Eighteen annual memberships,
$36.00; Miss Lilian Ladd, $2.50;
Friends, which, with previous donations,
constitute Mrs. Jane C. Snook
and Miss Jessie S. Worley life members,
$11.00: An Unknown Friend, 50c.;
D. S. Woo, adl. to const. himself life
member, $17.00; Jee Gam. adl. to
const. himself life member, $17.50 |
84.50 |
|
——— |
Total |
$113.75 |
III. From Individual Donors— |
Miss M. C. Waterbury |
$50.00 |
N. P. Cole, Esq. |
25.00 |
Rev. J. Rowel |
20.00 |
|
——— |
Total |
$95.00 |
IV. From Eastern Friends— |
Bangor, Me. E. R. Burpee. Esq. |
$100.00 |
Bangor, Me. “Almost Home” |
25.00 |
Grinnell, Ia. Bethel Mission Sunday-School.
Miss Helen Brewer’s class |
1.00 |
Montana. Lee Haim |
2.00 |
|
——— |
Total |
$128.00 |
|
——— |
Grand Total |
$363.75 |
Also the following amounts, applicable to the
expenses of the year ending Aug. 31. 1882: |
I. Auxiliaries, Viz.— |
Marysville. Collection at Anniversary |
$24.55 |
Two annual memberships |
4.00 |
Chinese monthly offerings |
22.25 |
|
———— |
$50.80 |
Oroville. Chinese monthly offerings |
2.20 |
Petaluma. Chinese monthly offerings |
4.45 |
Sacramento. Chinese monthly offerings |
18.50 |
Santa Barbara. Collection at Anniversary |
2.30 |
Twelve annual memberships |
24.00 |
Chinese monthly offerings |
18.00 |
|
——— |
44.30 |
Santa Cruz. Chinese monthly offerings |
12.50 |
Stockton. Rev. J. Hooper |
1.00 |
Chinese monthly offerings |
9.00 |
|
——— |
10.00 |
|
——— |
Total |
$142.75 |
II. From Churches— |
Grass Valley Cong. Ch. Mrs. H. Scott |
2.00 |
Los Angeles Cong. Ch. Miss A. L. Peabody |
2.00 |
Oakland First Cong. Ch. collection |
9.30 |
Rio Vista Cong. Ch. Mrs. A. J. Gardner |
2.00 |
San Francisco First Cong. Ch. Three
annual members |
7.00 |
Third Ch. Mrs. Boole |
2.00 |
Westminster Cong. Ch. Rev. I. Jacobus |
2.00 |
|
——— |
|
$26.30 |
|
——— |
Total |
$169.05 |
H. W. Hubbard, Treas.,
56 Reade St., N.Y.
[93]
Several unusually important books for Sunday-school and Parish
Libraries will be issued by D. LOTHROP & CO. during February.
NOW READY.
Hall in the Grove. Pansy’s new story. Price, $1.50.
To-Days and Yesterdays. By the author of June to June. $1.25.
Around the World Tour of Christian Missions. By W. F.
Bainbridge. $2.00.
Round the World Letters. By Lucy S. Bainbridge. $1.50.
D. LOTHROP & CO., Boston, publish the most Popular and Valuable
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The Congregationalist, one of our leading papers, says:
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page quarto, exquisitely gotten up in every detail of letter press
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THE PANSY,
A Pictorial Weekly Paper for Young People. Edited by Mrs. G. R.
Alden, author of the Pansy Books. 50 cents a year.
BABYLAND,
50 cents a year. It is full of large, gay pictures sweet little
stories and jingles, and very funny drawings for copying on slates.
Send subscriptions to
D. LOTHROP & CO., PUBLISHERS,
32 Franklin St., Boston, Mass.
Father Kemp
Originator of the world-renowned “Old Folks Concerts,” and
proprietor of the popular Boot and Shoe Store, 1,090 Washington
street, Boston, testifies by the following letter in the benefit he
received from using Hood’s Sarsaparilla.
Boston, Mass., Jan. 16, 1882.
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Hood’s Sarsaparilla,
Sold by all druggists. Price $1; six for $5. Made only by C. I.
HOOD & CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass.
NEW AND STANDARD
School Books
for every branch and grade of instruction. Full particulars given
in catalogues and specimen pages to any teacher. Among most recent
issues we call attention to
Barnes’ Primary Drawing Series | 18 cts. |
Monteith’s Popular Science Reader | 80 cts. |
Woman’s Pestalozzian French and German Books, each | 35 cts. |
Brief History of Ancient Peoples | $1.00 |
Dr. John Lord’s “Points of History” | 1.00 |
Scarborough’s Greek Lessons (by Professor of Greek in Wilberforce University) | 1.00 |
Carrington’s Battle Maps of the Revolution | 1.25 |
Sill’s Lessons in English | 60 cts. |
Ficklin’s Elements of Algebra | 80 cts. |
Supplementary Readers’ Six Books, &c.
Address
A. S. BARNES & CO.,
111 and 113 William Street, New York.
[94]
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☞There will be many important events occurring during the
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Witness. Do you know now, for instance, that a sober
and Christian young man, a private soldier of the U.S. Army,
has been thrown into prison and subjected to great privations
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the miserable wretch Guiteau—for writing a letter to the
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five for $6.00. Sample
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Ministers, Missionaries, Evangelists of all Denominations, and
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JOHN DOUGALL & CO.,
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17 to 21 VANDEWATER St., NEW YORK.
Case’s School Furniture.—Parties about to purchase School
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Camp’s Outline Maps.—Set of 9 maps, with key. No. 1,
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South America; No. 5, Europe; No. 6, Asia; No. 7, Africa; No. 8,
Oceanica; No. 9, Physical World.
Case’s Bible Atlas.—Embracing 16 full-page maps, quarto
size, beautifully printed in colors, covering the whole ground of
Biblical Geography; also 16 pages of Explanatory Notes on the maps.
Sent by mail on receipt of price; bound in boards, $1.; cloth,
$1.50. Agents wanted.
Circulars sent on application.
O. D. CASE & CO., Publishers
AND
School Furniture Manufacturers,
KELLY & JONES,
202 Greene Street, |
- |
New York |
LOW AND HIGH PRESSURE
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AND OTHER
HEATING APPARATUS.
We make a Specialty of
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Plans and Specifications of the latest and most approved methods
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Our apparatus is in operation in the following buildings:
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Reformatory, Elmira, N.Y.; Point St. School, Providence, R.I.;
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[95]
For beauty of gloss, for saving of toil.
For freeness from dust and slowness to soil,
And also for cheapness ’tis yet unsurpassed,
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No. 10 EAST FOURTH ST., |
- |
CINCINNATI, OHIO |
This house has furnished the American Missionary Association, for
their Colleges, Ranges and other Kitchen Apparatus, also Laundry
Stoves.
[96]
WEBSTER’S UNABRIDGED.
The following, from Webster, page 1164, shows the value of its
illustrative definitions.
1, flying jib; 2, jib; 3, fore-top-mast-stay
sail; 4, fore-course; 5, foretop sail; 6,
foretop-gallant sail; 7, fore-royal; 8, fore
sky-sail; 9, fore-royal studding sail; 10,
fore-top-gallant studding sail; 11, foretop-mast studding
sail; 12, main-course; 13, maintopsail; 14,
maintop-gallant sail; 15, main-royal; 16, main
sky-sail; 17, main royal studding-sail; 18, main
top-gallant studding-sail; 19, maintop-mast studding sail;
20, mizzen-course; 21, mizzen-top sail; 22,
mizzen-top-gallant sail; 23, mizzen-royal; 24, mizzen
sky-sail; 25, mizzen-spanker.
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Boiler, Castle, Column, Eye,
Horse, Moldings, Phrenology, Ravelin,
Ships, (pages 1164 and 1219) Steam engine,
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New Edition of WEBSTER has
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GET THE BEST.
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The Courts look to it as of the highest authority in all questions
of definitions—Morrison R. Waite, Chief Justice U.S.
Supreme Court.
GET THE STANDARD,
|
WEBSTER’S is the Dictionary used
in Govern’t Printing office, 1881.
Every state purchase of Dictionaries
for Schools has been Webster’s.
Books in the Public Schools of the
U.S. are mainly based on Webster.
Sale of Webster’s is over 20 times the
sale of any other series of Dict’s.
THIRTY-TWO THOUSAND have been put
in the public schools of the U.S.
Each new edition has become more and
more The Standard.
Recommended by the State Supt’s Schools in
36 States, and 50 College Pres’ts
|
|
IS IT NOT THE STANDARD?
Published by G. & C. MERRIAM, Springfield, Mass.
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ESTABLISHED 1780.
Set Complete in Terry, $58. Set Complete in Plush, $64. Parlor,
Lodge and Church Furniture. No charge for packing. Sent for
Illustrated Catalogue.
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27 Sudbury St., Boston.
BRAIN AND NERVE FOOD. VITALIZED PHOS-PHITES.
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As musical culture increases it demands in musical instruments for
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SEND FOR ILLUSTRATED CATALOGUE.
LESSON COMMENTARY
On the International Lessons for 1882. Covering not only the
lessons for the whole year, but the entire book of Mark, and
accompanied by the “Revised Version Text,” a revised reprint of
the “Cambridge Scholars’ Commentary.” Prepared by G. F. Maclear,
D.D., and J. J. S. Perowne, D.D. Price, 10c., postpaid. Book
is put up in strong postal card covers. No similar work for less
than $1. Large sales are expected, and orders will be filled in
turn. We also publish a complete Bible Dictionary of two thousand
complete articles, 512 columns, and nearly 100 illustrations, for
10c., postpaid; The “Teachers Compendium,” nine books on teaching,
in one; The “Ideal Sunday-School;” “Sunday-School Management” (a
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each for 10c., postpaid. Address,
DAVID C. COOK,
148 Madison St., Chicago.
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60,000 TONS USED IN 1881.
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Washburn & Moen Man’f’g Co.,
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Send for Illustrative Pamphlets and Circulars, as above.
THE AMERICAN MISSIONARY ASSOCIATION.
AIM AND WORK.
To preach the Gospel to the poor. It originated in a sympathy with
the almost friendless slaves. Since Emancipation it has devoted
its main efforts to preparing the Freedmen for their
duties as citizens and Christians in America, and as missionaries
in Africa. As closely related to this, it seeks to benefit the
caste-persecuted Chinese in America, and to co-operate
with the Government in its humane and Christian policy toward the
Indians. It has also a mission in Africa.
STATISTICS.
Churches: In the South—In District of Columbia, 1;
Virginia, 1; North Carolina, 6; South Carolina, 2; Georgia, 13;
Kentucky, 7; Tennessee, 4; Alabama, 14; Kansas, 1; Arkansas, 1;
Louisiana, 18; Mississippi, 4; Texas, 6. Africa, 3. Among the
Indians, 1. Total, 82.
Institutions Founded, Fostered or Sustained in the
South.—Chartered: Hampton, Va.; Berea, Ky.; Talladega,
Ala.; Atlanta, Ga.; Nashville, Tenn.; Tougaloo, Miss.; New Orleans,
La., and Austin, Tex.—8. Graded or Normal Schools: Wilmington,
N.C.; Charleston, Greenwood, S.C.; Savannah, Macon, Atlanta, Ga.;
Montgomery, Mobile, Athens, Selma, Ala.; Memphis, Tenn.—11. Other
Schools, 35. Total, 54.
Teachers, Missionaries and Assistants.—Among the
Freedmen, 319; among the Chinese, 28; among the Indians, 9; in
Africa, 13. Total, 369. Students.—In theology, 104; law,
20; in college course, 91; in other studies, 8,884. Total, 9,108.
Scholars taught by former pupils of our schools, estimated at
150,000. Indians under the care of the Association, 13,000.
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 numbers 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 here
and missionaries to Africa—a pressing want.
Before sending boxes, always correspond with the nearest A. M. A.
office as directed on second page cover.
THE AMERICAN MISSIONARY.
We are anxious to put the American Missionary on a paying
basis. We intend to make it worth its price, and we ask our patrons
to aid us:
1. More of our readers can take pains to send us either the
moderate subscription price (50 cents), or $1.00, naming a friend
to whom we may send a second copy.
2. A special friend in each church can secure subscribers at
club-rates (12 copies for $5 or 25 copies for $10).
3. Business men can benefit themselves by advertising in a
periodical that has a circulation of 20,000 copies monthly and that
goes to many of the best men and families in the land. Will not our
friends aid us to make this plan a success?
We nevertheless renew the offer hitherto made, that the
Missionary will be sent gratuitously, if desired, to the
Missionaries of the Association; to Life Members; to all Clergymen
who take up collections for the Association; to Superintendents of
Sabbath-schools; to College Libraries; to Theological Seminaries;
to Societies of Inquiry on Missions; and to every donor who does
not prefer to take it as a subscriber, and contributes in a year
not less than five dollars.
Subscriptions and advertisements should be sent to H. W.
Hubbard, Treasurer, 56 Reade street, New York, N.Y.
Atkin & Prout, Printers, 12 Barclay St., N.Y.
Transcriber’s Notes:
Corrected obvious printer’s punctuation errors and omissions.
Inconsistent hyphenation retained due to the multiplicity of
authors. Period spelling (including Spokan) retained.
“Steet” changed to “Street” on the inside cover. (56 Reade Street)
Missing “a” added in “adopt” on page 66. (adopt some such system of
giving)
Missing space added between “weeks” and “in” on page 73. (some
weeks in Fisk University)
“Talledega” changed to “Talladega” in the Winsted entry on page 88.
End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The American Missionary -- Volume 36,
No. 3, March, 1882, by Various
*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK AMERICAN MISSIONARY, MARCH 1882 ***
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