TO AMERICAS PRESBYTERIAN A2 n> GENESEE EVANGELIST. 4 *® l l*ton«and Famllyl®* eiWipaper, IM IB IVTXBBST OF Sp Constitutional Presbyterfiif Ohurch, PUBLISHED EVERT THURSDAY, AT THE PRESBYTERIAN HOUSE, 1334 Chestnut Street, (2d story,) Philadelphia. John W. Hears, Kdltor and Publisher. B* Hotchhin, Editor of Mews and Family Departments. Rev* C, P. Bush, Corresponding Editor, Rochester, M. T. Smmtatt JjraligMait. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1865. CONTENTS OF INSIDE PAGES. Second Page—The Family Cibole* The Oaken Cradle-SiiU,'Help Tour Worn™. WUI Y “ U «•“ Third Page Religious Intelligence; Presbyterian-Congregational-Methodist-Epiaeo farian-Sli B seena~ Sixth Page—Correspondence : Si a and a ? d Quaker Keith-Theologi ™S- l T^*^ tloa r.! Perl . odl< A? ls of Germany— PrMblrtarfan. Thlng6 “ circular Letter of Holston Seventh, Page— Scientific : aI r ty * n Eofland—The Frozen Well—Mannfae- Lerel Jf B ii£ n n en .f a one year .18 The following discount on long advertisements, in for three months and upwards, is allowed r Uver 20 lines, 10 per cent off; over 50 lines, 20 per cent.; over 100 lines, 33% per cent. off. looking for help from above. The South must not be left to the dreadful hallucina tion which its leaders still seek to keep alive in the people; it must not be allowed morally to rot as the mere caput mortuum. of a pro-slavery society; it must not be left in all the pitiable need of Bibles, religions books, and religious papers, of sanctuary accommodations and of educational privi leges in which exhausting war and crushing defeat has left it. The South, black and white, must be evangelized, and the greater part of the work mnst be done and will be done by the loyal North. CAN THEY TAKE CARE OF TIJEM- SELVES 1 We do not know whether any oandid man is yet asking this question in regard to the freedmen of the South. To most reflecting persons, it would have seemed superfluous to ask it of a race, which, as slaves, had been taking care of their masters and them selves too for two hundred years. Or, if it really seemed necessary, in order to keep the colored laborers of the South at steady and profitable employment, that their per sons should be under the control of a more intelligent class, that delusion must have vanished from every unprejudiced mind upon learning the eminently satisfactory results of the memorable experiment made with" the escaped slaves of South Carolina, on the islands of * the coast two years ago. That colony of escaped slaves will make the Sea Islands of South Carolina more famous than the long staple cotton which they produce. They have a hero to boast of, too, who could not only take care of himself and his family, but could bring them, with the rebel vessel he had in charge, right under the guns of Fort Sum ter, and deliver vessel, guns and crew to the national blockading fleet off the harbor. Robert Small, of the steamer Planter, proved his ability to take care of the vessel, and his bravery in employing it for Gov ernment uses, to be so superior to that of the white officer who for a. time had charge of it, that the'loyal black man was made master of bis own prize, and white men served cheerfully with him in managing the vessel. Almost any number of our dailies con tains evidence that the colored people of the South are far more independent of Gov ernment aid than their poor white neigh bors. In almost every instance in which a comparison could be made, the result has been most conspicuously in favor of the colored race. A newspaper correspondent writes that at Chattanooga, Tennessee, of 947 persons receiving Government aid, only forty-three are colored, and nine§ hundred and four are white. Supposing the popu lation to be half white and half colored, this would show the negro of Chattanooga to have more than twenty times the capacity of the poor whites for taking care of him. self. Which of the two classes has the best right to share in managing the affairs of a nation of independent, self-reliant free men ? The Government, which allows the thriftless poor whites of Chattanooga the right of suffrage, while it utterly refuses the privilege to their colored neighbor, simply because of a difference in the cuticle of the latter, will fifty years from hence be regarded as under a hallucination of the most amazing and perilous sort. The report of the Ereedmen’s Bureau for Mississippi, dated Vicksburg, August 15, contains the following statement: The colonies of freedmen working the land assigned them at Davis Bend, Camp Hawley, near Vicksburg, DeSoto Point opposite, and at Washington, near Natchez, are all doing well; their crops are maturing fast; as harvest time approaches, the number of rations issued is reduced, and they are compelled to rely on their own resources. At least ten thousand bales of cotton will be raised by these people, who are raising crops on their own account. The total number of freedmen in the State is estimated at 346,000, of whom only 3,000 are receiving assistance from Government. Important Judicial Decision. The contraband liquor trade of Massachu setts is thus far foiled in its last dodge for evading the prohibitory law. A Boston paragraph of August 29th says: In the case of the Commonwealth vs. Holbrook, which was carried to the Su preme Judicial Court, on the ground that the defendant had the right to sell intoxicating drinkß under a license from the United States, the court decided that payment to the United States of a fee for a license, and a revenue duty or tax, does not exempt the defendant from responsibility for violating the criminal laws of the Commonwealth.” The Central Church, Wilmington, has a new chapel building 20 by 54 feet, in a forward state on Rodney street, one of the most imposing sections of the’ city of Wilmington. This is the second chapel belonging to the Central Church, amd the third connected with our denomi nation in that city.