. The Christian movement in the Japanese empire . ork she taught in a ChineseMission Sunday School. In the fall of 1902, accom-panied by her sister and mother, she came to Korea tovisit her brother. Rev. W. F. Bull, of Kunsan, and itwas here that she met her future husband. Rev. EugeneBel], D. D. They were married at Norfolk, Virginia,May 10, 1904, and arrived at Mokpo, Korea, thefollowing September. In December opened up KwangjuStation, living for eight months in crowded temporaryquarters while building their residence. She lived in j4^ KOREA Kwangju until her death, and always made her home


. The Christian movement in the Japanese empire . ork she taught in a ChineseMission Sunday School. In the fall of 1902, accom-panied by her sister and mother, she came to Korea tovisit her brother. Rev. W. F. Bull, of Kunsan, and itwas here that she met her future husband. Rev. EugeneBel], D. D. They were married at Norfolk, Virginia,May 10, 1904, and arrived at Mokpo, Korea, thefollowing September. In December opened up KwangjuStation, living for eight months in crowded temporaryquarters while building their residence. She lived in j4^ KOREA Kwangju until her death, and always made her home amodel of southern hospitality and culture. Mrs. Bell was an untiring and energetic worker fromthe beginning, early acquiring proficiency in the language^teaching regularly in the Bible Institutes, conducting aweekly Bible class in a nearby village, and teachingeach Sunday in the Sunday School. She also foundtime to teach her own children and conduct successfullythe work department of the Girls School at Kwangju. liji IVii 1^1 Nikolayesk «. CHAPTER XXIX KOREANS IN MANCHURIA AND SIBERIA By W. T, Cook This numbers of Koreans passing overNumbers and the border into Manchuria and SiberiaDistribution are so great that statistics are out ofdate before they are printed and availablefor use. This leaves room for speculation, but even soa general estimate will contribute considerably towardsa grasp of conditions. Last year in West Kando alonethere were estimated to be upwards of 250,000 consular official stated as his estimate that last yearalone more than 70,000 entered West Kando. Ourthoughts immediately ran to the large numbers who gotacross without being counted. These with this yearsincrease will easily give us 350,000 for West 400,000 for North Kando. And Northern Man-churia—that is on or north of the Trans-Siberian Rail-way—will in all probability yield 400,000 more as aminimum; making the grand total of 1,150,000 for theKorean exodus in the last t


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjectmissions, bookyear191