included. The acts of the Conference, like the 
utterances of a Congregational Council, have only the authority of the 
reason that is in them; yet it is wonderful what an influence this 
peculiar body has had on public sentiment. Its utterances have been 
discussed and have had their weight in the pulpit, the press, in Congress 
and in the White House. The Indian and the Nation owe much to the 
Mohonk Conference. 
The Sixth Annual Conference, which closed September 28th, sustained 
the interest of past years in the importance of the topics discussed, in 
the divergency of opinion at first, and in the complete harmony at the 
end. The points agreed upon in the platform were arranged under five 
heads. The first relates to the establishment of Courts of Justice in the 
Reservations and accessible to the Indians; the second to the important 
need of education, demanding that the Government shall undertake at 
once the entire task of providing primary and secular education for all 
Indian children; the third urges that this education shall be compulsory, 
under proper limitations; the fourth emphasizes the duty of the
churches to furnish religious instruction to the Indians, and the 
immunity of their work from all governmental interference where 
sustained wholly by missionary funds; the fifth approves of the 
co-operation of the Government with the missionary societies in 
contract schools during the present transitional condition of the Indians. 
We append the last two items of the report. 
4. In view of the great work which the Christian Churches have done in 
the past in inaugurating and maintaining schools among the Indians, 
and of the essential importance of religious as distinguished from 
secular education, for their civil, political and moral well-being, an 
element of education which, in the nature of the case, the National 
Government cannot afford, the churches should be allowed the largest 
liberty, not, indeed, to take away the responsibility from the 
Government in its legitimate sphere of educational work, but to 
supplement it to the fullest extent in their power, by such schools, 
whether primary, normal or theological, as are at the sole cost of the 
benevolent or missionary societies. And it is the deliberate judgment of 
this Conference that in the crisis of the Indian transitional movement 
the churches should arouse themselves to the magnitude and emergency 
of the duty thus laid upon them in the providence of God. 
5. Nothing should be done to impair or weaken the agencies at present 
engaged in the work of Indian education. Every such agency should be 
encouraged and promoted, except as other and better agencies are 
provided for the work. In particular, owing to the anomalous condition 
of the Indians and the fact that the Government is administering trust 
funds that belong to them, what is known as the "contract system"--by 
which the nation aids by appropriations private and missionary 
societies in the work of Indian education--ought to be maintained by a 
continuance of such aid, until the Government is prepared, with 
adequate buildings and competent teachers, to assume the entire work 
of secular education. In no case should the Government establish 
schools to compete with private or church schools which are already 
doing a good work, so long as there are thousands of Indian children 
for whose education no provision is made. 
 
ORDINATION AT NEW ORLEANS. 
A council of Congregational Churches was held in New Orleans, Sept.
16th, for the purpose of ordaining Prof. Geo. W. Henderson, A.M., 
B.D., to the Christian ministry. Rev. R.C. Hitchcock, President of 
Straight University, was chosen Moderator. Mr. Henderson sustained 
an excellent examination, and was installed Pastor of the Central 
Congregational Church. The entire service was impressive, and Rev. 
Mr. Henderson enters upon a very responsible charge of a large church 
with many encouragements and hopes of great success. 
 
OUR SCHOOLS AND THE YELLOW FEVER. 
We have been extremely gratified with the manifestations of faith and 
courage on the part of our lady teachers in the South during the time of 
fear and panic because of the yellow fever. Some were already at their 
stations and in their schools, and some were on the way, subject to the 
trials of quarantine. Not one hesitated in the path of duty. Many 
teachers from the different parts of the North were ready to go when the 
reports of the pestilence were most alarming, but not one of the 
teachers who had previously been in the work, failed to await 
instructions to go forward whenever we should speak the word. We 
have been grateful to God during all these days of the autumn for the 
splendid qualities of consecration and courage which have come out of 
our correspondence with our honored teachers. Never did their fathers 
or brothers, years ago, when deadly war called them to face the perils    
    
		
	
	
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