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قراءة كتاب The American Missionary — Volume 52, No. 1, March, 1898
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The American Missionary — Volume 52, No. 1, March, 1898
this office. In other Indian schools various industries are taught, especially those that relate to the care and improvement of homes.
As evidence that this industrial work is pushed forward, we may mention that in our most recently established school in the South, that at Enfield, N. C., the farm of more than a thousand acres of land (the gift of a generous Christian lady of Brooklyn, N. Y.), a large portion of which is under cultivation, gives ample employment to the student. Cotton, corn, potatoes, and the products of the field, the garden and the orchard are cultivated, while in the shops the boys are taught in blacksmithing and in carpentry, and the girls in the various kinds of domestic work, sewing, cooking and housework.
BOTH ARE RIGHT.
Mr. Booker T. Washington has written two very able articles in The Independent, setting forth the supreme importance of industrial training and work among the colored people of the South. On the other hand, Dr. T. J. Morgan, Secretary of the Baptist Home Missionary Society, has published in the same paper a carefully prepared article, emphasizing the absolute necessity of the higher education of the leaders of that people. Both these writers are correct. No people can rise unless they have the guidance and inspiration of highly educated ministers, teachers, thinkers and writers, and no people can rise if its masses are idle and unthrifty. The American Missionary Association aims, in its great work, to give due and impartial importance to both aspects of this great problem.
THE FIVE CIVILIZED TRIBES.
A peculiar history is that of the five civilized tribes of Indians. It was supposed for a time that they had given the brightest example of the success of the Indian on his reservation. These tribes had forms of government modeled after that of the States. They had governors, legislators, and judges, schools and churches. Many of the members were highly educated. But the outcome has been a failure. The laws are inadequately administered, and crime has been rampant and unpunished. But now the general Government has taken the one decisive and initial step in the matter by directing that the United States courts should have civil and criminal jurisdiction over all cases arising in the Indian Territory, irrespective of race. Thus the wedge has entered, and the reservation system and the dream of Indian autonomy—an empire within an empire—will happily soon be a thing of the past.
CHINA AND THE CHINESE IN AMERICA.
China, with her vast population, has stood almost unmoved for thousands of years. But now disintegration threatens, and the nations of Europe may yet divide that great country among themselves, and a new world may arise. In such a change, the influence of Christianity must be a vital force, to guide and strengthen.
The coming of the children of China to our Western coast may be a providential element in this change and the importance of the work of the Association among these peoples on our Pacific Coast, so ready to learn, and many of them so ready to return to their native land as missionaries, may be a very significant factor in the future.
ALASKA.
In 1847, California was almost as little known and valued as Alaska was last year. But the discovery of gold in Sutton's mill-race changed the whole aspect of affairs in California, and it is now a State with a large and thrifty population, and its western shore is connected with the Atlantic seaboard by railroads, towns and cities. The discovery of gold made the change. The recent discoveries on the Yukon River in Alaska are sending hundreds and thousands of people thither, and while Alaska may never become a California in population, yet a wonderful change is taking place, the end of which no one can predict. But the native population of that distant land must not be neglected nor crushed under the pressure of hordes of gold hunters. The work at our mission station at Cape Prince of Wales should be enlarged and made more effective.
American Missionary Association,
CONGREGATIONAL ROOMS,
Fourth Avenue and Twenty-second Street, New York.
THE FIELD.
1897-1898.
The following list gives the names of those who are in the work of the Churches, Institutions and Schools of the American Missionary Association.
THE SOUTH.
Rev. Geo. W. Moore, Field Missionary.
Mr. O. R. Brown, Builder.
Mr. Gilbert Walton, General Mountain Missionary.
DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA.
WASHINGTON. | |
THEOLOGICAL DEPARTMENT, HOWARD UNIVERSITY. |
|
Rev. J. E. Rankin, D.D., LL.D. | Rev. J. G. Butler, D.D., |
" John L. Ewell, D.D., | " T. S. Hamlin, D.D., |
" Isaac Clark, D.D., | " S. M. Newman, D.D., |
" S. N. Brown, A.M., B.D., | Right Rev. H. Y. Satterlee, D.D., |
" George O. Little, D.D., | Prof. R. B. Warder, A.M., B.S., |
" George S. Duncan, Ph.D., | Prof. William J. Stephens., |
" W. H. Brooks, D.D., | Rev. Charles H. Butler, A.M., |
Prof. George J. Cummings, A.M. | |
LINCOLN MEMORIAL CHURCH. |
|
Minister, | |
Rev. Albert P. Miller, | Washington, D. C. |
PLYMOUTH CHURCH. |
|
Minister, | |
Rev. A. C. Garner, | Washington, D. C. |
PEOPLE'S CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH. |
|
Minister, | |
Rev. J. H. Dailey, | Washington, D. C. |
TEMPLE PARK CHURCH. |
|
Minister, | |
Rev. S. N. Brown, | Washington, D. C. |
VIRGINIA.
CAPPAHOSIC. | |
GLOUCESTER HIGH AND INDUSTRIAL SCHOOL. |
|
Principal, | |
Prof. W. B. Weaver, | Cappahosic, Va. |
Teachers, | |
Mr. W. G. |