REVEREND EZRA FISHER
122
become discouraged and morals of the
efforts to cultivate the
minds and
generation should prove less successful than in older and better graduated communities. Although rising-
our school has failed of exerting that direct and salutary influence on the denomination which was anticipated, yet it has done much to elevate the views of the Baptists in Oregon and has shed its blessings, both direct and indirect, upon hundreds of our fellow citizens. I fear, however, that we shall be compelled to make another change of teachers, however much such a change is to be dreaded. Br. Post has already manifested discontent and I fear that it may before long ripen into a removal. I do not know that it is possible to find a thorough, self-sacrificing teacher who will merge all the interests of the school into the interest of the denomination
so as to worthily claim the name of a missionary school teacher. Yet that should be the case with our teachers as well as with
our home missionaries. Br. Boyakin is doing well at Portland, is popular with his I have but little doubt that the church and the world. Masonic fraternity373 sympathize with him and lend him their aid as a brother of the same order. I hope he will not overrate the privileges of that order.
He
quent and abounds
epithets.
him abundantly.
I
and
in figures
expect to
Shall be able to take up
is
energetic and elo-
May God
bless
go south in three or four weeks.
some
collections for the
Home
Mis-
sion Society. Deacon Failing has engaged to take up a collection monthly in the Portland church for the Home Mission cause.
Br.
Boyakin
will
probably report the amount
quarterly.
Yours with Christian esteem,
EZRA FISHER. Received Aug.
11.
373 The first Masonic lodge in Oregon was organized at Oregon City in 1848 under a charter granted by Missouri, Oct. 19, 1846. By 1855 and 1856 lodges had become quite numerous. George H. Himes.