The Spirit of missions . rch membership. Thereforewe ask in favor that you let us have a own place to worship God and ap-point a priest who can speak us by our own language. This is our anxious hope. (210) A Korean Call 211 The Board of Missions is alreadymaking a small appropriation for aKorean catechist. There is no Koreanclergyman on our Honolulu staff. Ifthe Board had the funds to bring onefrom the English mission in Korea andmaintain him until the HonoluluKoreans could support him, a suitable man could no doubt be secured. Doesthe Church wish the Board to do this? Bishop Bestarick says: O


The Spirit of missions . rch membership. Thereforewe ask in favor that you let us have a own place to worship God and ap-point a priest who can speak us by our own language. This is our anxious hope. (210) A Korean Call 211 The Board of Missions is alreadymaking a small appropriation for aKorean catechist. There is no Koreanclergyman on our Honolulu staff. Ifthe Board had the funds to bring onefrom the English mission in Korea andmaintain him until the HonoluluKoreans could support him, a suitable man could no doubt be secured. Doesthe Church wish the Board to do this? Bishop Bestarick says: On January24th I visited St. Elizabeths, Korean men were baptized. Wehave a good class of Koreans and somevery good men. ^ ^ ^ ^ ^1^1 I s? ^1 i ^ ^ ^1 *i ^ ^ ^ n=) ^ ^1 5l ei| v^-i f J| i t % cL.,^ ^1 t -I i ^-f 1 ^ e-1 2^ i^i^ t 1 ^l I 1 ^3 /2 i (?) % 1 (®.,- 1^ % (I) l^!- 12 0 Q) ^- ® ^tt. (!) (?) ^^ 1 (® -n @) 1 THE LETTER OF THE KOREANS TO BISHOP RESTARICK, V^ITH THE NAMES OF THE FIRST TWENTY SIGNERS. (213) THE MATANZAS VESTRY, THE REV. FRANCISCO DIAZ SITS IN THE CENTRE A RESURRECTED MISSION BY THE RIGHT REVEREND ALBION W. KNIGHT, FOR more than itwenty years therehas been a Church mission inMatanzas, a city heautifullysituated on the north coast ofCuba, about sixty miles from , too, we had our flourishing Asy-lum, which cared for more than sixtyof the girls who had been orphaned dur-ing ithe war of the revolution againstSpain. It was the mission to whichthose who were interested in the Churchin Cuba gave most of their attention,and more money was spent upon it thanupon any other of the Churchs mis-sions. The work seemed to have warrantedit. Large classes were confirmed byBishops Young and Whitaker on theirvisitations. Property was bought forchapel, rectory, asylum and cemetery,and the Church possessed the one work-ing n^ant that it had in Cuba up to theI year 1903. It seemed that the mission and congregation were permanent insti-tutions in


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