The Spirit of missions . of Anvik. The Eev. 0. E. Eice, of Circle for appointments in Depart-ments 5 and 6. Deaconess Deane, of Ketchikan, inApril and May. Miss L. J. Woods, of Fort Yukon. China The Eev. D. T. Huntington, of Eev. E. J. Lee, of Anking (afterEaster). Miss Steva L. Dodson, of Ida Porter, of Tsingpoo. Japan The Eev. L H. Correll, , of Osaka. The Eev. H. St. George Tucker, ofSt. Pauls College, Tokyo. Miss B. E. Babcock, of for Departments 5, 6 and 7. Work Among Negroes in the South The Eev. S. H. Bishop, Secretary ofthe


The Spirit of missions . of Anvik. The Eev. 0. E. Eice, of Circle for appointments in Depart-ments 5 and 6. Deaconess Deane, of Ketchikan, inApril and May. Miss L. J. Woods, of Fort Yukon. China The Eev. D. T. Huntington, of Eev. E. J. Lee, of Anking (afterEaster). Miss Steva L. Dodson, of Ida Porter, of Tsingpoo. Japan The Eev. L H. Correll, , of Osaka. The Eev. H. St. George Tucker, ofSt. Pauls College, Tokyo. Miss B. E. Babcock, of for Departments 5, 6 and 7. Work Among Negroes in the South The Eev. S. H. Bishop, Secretary ofthe American Church Institute for Ne-groes, 500 West 122d Street, New York. The Eev. P. P. Alston, of St. MichaelsSchool, Charlotte, N. C. Address directat 2010 N. 17th Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Archdeacon Eussell, of St. Pauls,Lawrenceville, Va., and the Eev. A. , of St. Augustines, Ealeigh, , are always ready to take appoint-ments, especially when a number of en-gagements in the same neighborhood canbe THE WAITING CHRISTIANS AT TAWARAMOTO, NEAR SAKURAI THE TRAVELLING SECRETARY NO. VIII.—IN KYOTO WHEN one visits with BishopHare on the South Dakotaplains, and recalls whatthey must have been whenhe first saw them, it will seem most nat-ural that the seventy-second psalmshould be dear to him. They that dwell in the wildernessshall hneel. And he must have felt itsblessedness increased as he travelled inJapan in 1889 and remembered its otherwords of hope: The mountains also shall hring peaceand the little hills righteousness untothe people/ His dominion shall he also from theone sea to the other. The kings of the isles shall givepresents/ So it is not strange in this winter of1908-1909 that, as the Bishop of Kyotogoes from place to place in his district,the often repeated words of this samepsalm should sound as an inspiring re-frain, encouraging him to look beyondthis present to a certain future of bless-ing for Japan. Missionary travelling in the East donot wea


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