ITEMS FROM THE FIELD.

—Rev. Evarts Kent, of Atlanta, Ga., took his vacation in Vermont visiting his father, Rev. Cephas H. Kent, of New Haven, and preaching a historical sermon at Benson. He met a warm welcome upon his return to his field.

—The brothers, Rev. A. W. and Rev. C. B. Curtis, of Marion and Selma, Ala., having had their vacation in the Northwest, are back again upon their chosen spheres of labor.

—The health of President E. A. Ware’s wife having been greatly threatened, upon medical advice he spent the summer with her in the Adirondacks and is much encouraged by the improvement attained. He is now back at his post, as are also Professors T. N. Chase and C. W. Francis.

—Rev. Dr. Horace Bumstead and wife, of the Atlanta University, have been afflicted in the death of their youngest child, a son, which occurred on Lookout Mountain, whither they had fled for relief in the pure air of that locality.

—Prof. R. D. Hitchcock, of the Straight University, having been called to the presidency of the Southern University, New Orleans, has declined the same and remains at his post.

—Prof. Albert Salisbury, Superintendent of Education, having taken as a wife Miss Hosford, a teacher in the Whitewater Normal, Wisconsin, has installed his family in their Atlanta home, and he is now going his Southern rounds.

—The “Cassedy Hall” has been built this summer at Talladega for the use of the primary department and named for Mr. J. H. Cassedy, of this State, who gave the $5,000 needed for its erection.

—The “Whitin Hall,” at New Orleans, has been built this summer as a boy’s dormitory and named for the late Deacon J. C. Whitin, of Whitinsville, Mass., whose estate paid in $10,000, which, for the erection, was put with $5,000 given by Deacon Seymour Straight, for whom the university was named.

—Prof. J. A. Nichols, lately Superintendent of Schools at Yonkers, N.Y., has been made Principal of the Avery Institute at Charleston, S.C., in the place of Prof. A. W. Farnham, who resigned.

—Rev. Milton E. Churchill, a graduate of Knox College and of the New Haven Divinity School, a son of Prof. Geo. Churchill, of Galesburg, Ill., has been made Principal of the Emerson Institute, at Mobile, Ala.

—The Le Moyne Institute, at Memphis, Tenn., has been enlarged at a cost of $2,000, one-half of which, upon the solicitation of the Principal, A. J. Steele, was furnished by white citizens of that place.

—At Macon, Ga., to accommodate the library, which Rev. S. E. Lathrop has been gathering, a Library Building has been erected, with a basement for an industrial department. For this project, citizens of Macon, both white and colored, contributed liberally.

—Rev. B. A. Imes, pastor at Memphis, Tenn., having received an appointment in the Alcorn University, Mississippi, with a tempting salary, has decided to remain with his chosen people. He is popular in that city, and the teachers of the Le Moyne Institute seem to be as fond of their preacher as the parishioners who make up the body of his church.

—At Little Rock, Arkansas, a school has been opened this fall in the Congregational Church of Rev. Y. B. Sims, under Miss Rose M. Kinney as Principal, a lady of large experience in our work. This school is the precursor of the Edward Smith College, which is to go along in that city. Miss M. E. Keyes is associated with her as missionary.

—The new church at Mobile, Ala., was dedicated on the last Sabbath of September, Pastor Crawford and Revs. J. C. Fields and F. G. Ragland participating.

—Rev. O. D. Crawford, who has this summer had the supervision of the erection of the new church at Mobile and of the Whitin Hall at New Orleans, has resigned his pastorate at Mobile because of the incompatibility of that climate with the health of his family. He will be greatly missed upon the field. He will return to some pastoral charge at the North.

—Theological students, who have been supplying churches during the vacation, have now returned to their studies—Rev. S. N. Brown, from Florence, Ala., where he participated in a revival, to the Fisk University; Rev. F. G. Ragland, from Mobile, to Talladega; Rev. J. R. McLean, from Savannah, to Talladega.

—The A. M. A. has appointed Rev. J. C. Fields to labor for one year as an evangelist among the churches at the South. For the last year and a half he has labored in this capacity, much to the satisfaction of the churches. He will supply the church at Mobile for a time.