REPORT. In presenting the Fifth Annual Report of Friends’ Associa- tion for the Aid and Elevation of the Freedmen, we wouid re- mark that, owing to the want of funds, our field of labor has been greatly limited; but our interest in the cause has not abated. In entering upon this year’s labor, it was concluded to devote our efforts exclusively to the education of the people. With an exhausted treasury, early in the fall, in answer to the earnest appeals of the colored people, we opened the follow- ing schools, in the faith that Friends would contribute to their support: Mary McBride, Fairfax C. H., Fairfax Co., Va. Kate E. Hall, Vienna, 66 662 eG Ida Brinkerhoff, Herndon, “ 6 Helen A. Hurly, Gum Spring, “ ae Cee Sallie E. Loyd, Woodlawn, Cer CGT Oe Harriet Jenkins, Falls Church, od 6 ae B. F. Grant, Centreville, “ 665051, 48 Sarah A. Steer, Waterford, Louden Co., “ Jennie Speer Manassas, P. William “ = Cornelia ack, Mt. Pleasant, South Carolina. Fanny E. Gauze, “ “ “ ‘“ Lizzie E. Heacock, < “ 7 Isabella Lenair, se ‘6 ‘6 ‘6 In the autumn, when the labors of the Asscciation where re- sumed for the winter, an appeal was prepared and sent to each of the Monthly and Preparative Meetings, pressing upon Friends the necessity of pecuniary aid, and asking if ‘ the six hundred aspirants after knowledge, who earnestly entreat for an oppor-