Missions and missionary society of the Methodist Episcopal Church . ng, PungoAndongo, the fourth station. Here they obtained a goodbuilding which cost over $1,000, and started a schoolwith no industrial department, where all hands benddown to honorable manual labor. On the same path sixty miles farther to Malange,they opened the fifth station with less costly yet com-fortable houses, and began school, farm, and mechanicalwork, with what preaching they could do with their,as yet, imperfect knowledge of the languages of thepeople. In settling his people on that line of one hundred andfifty miles


Missions and missionary society of the Methodist Episcopal Church . ng, PungoAndongo, the fourth station. Here they obtained a goodbuilding which cost over $1,000, and started a schoolwith no industrial department, where all hands benddown to honorable manual labor. On the same path sixty miles farther to Malange,they opened the fifth station with less costly yet com-fortable houses, and began school, farm, and mechanicalwork, with what preaching they could do with their,as yet, imperfect knowledge of the languages of thepeople. In settling his people on that line of one hundred andfifty miles, from Dondo to Malange, the Bishop walkedto and fro an aggregate distance of over six hundredmiles, over a rough narrow path, the caravan trail ofages. The hundreds of thousands of slaves sold in Eo-andafortwo hundred years trod this weary way with tearsand blood—poor captives whose fathers had been slainbecause they dared defend their homes and their agedkindred who were burned in the destruction of theirtowns. On each side of this path is a continuous grave-.


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, booksubjectmission, bookyear1895