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“...Page, The By the Editor 16, 32, 48
64, 80, 96, 112, 128, 111, 160, 176, 192
China, Prize Essay on .... 102
Chinese Episode. By Lucy Soothill . . 8
< 'liinesc Stronghold of Idolatry. By J. W.
Heywood . . . . . 87, 101
Eakly Years in Ningpo. By Frederick Galpin.
Chap. I. Parting from Home . . 97
„ 11. First View of China . . 113
„ 111. The Study of the Chinese
Language. . . .129
„ IV.. Introduction to Foreign Resi-
dents ..... 145
,, V. Missionaries and Merchants . 161
„ VI. My First Chinese New Year . is I
Feast, A Chinese. By Lucy Soothill . . 166
Galpin, Rev. Frederick. By the Editor . 81
General Outlook, The 7, 22, 37, 51, 72, 86, 101
JIS, 135, 152, 161, 183
General Secretary’s Notes, The 6, 20, 36, 53, 70
84, 116, 132, 151, 1S1
Harvest Thoughts. By II. M. Booth . . 136
Henry Barton’s Missionary Book. By William
Yates ....... 170
History of our Hymn Book. By the Editor
II, 28, 12, 59, 74, 91
Letters from China . . 1.0, 73, 119, 120, 168
Literary Notices .... 159, 189
Little Treasure, The...”
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“...REV. H. T. CHAPMAN, GENERAL MISSION SECRETARY.
o
feeling tliat he owes nearly everything to her.
She was of sweet, affectionate disposition, tender,
womanly, and true. Her piety was deep, and her
faith was strong. Mr. Chapman was fortunate in
his schoolmasters. Tliey were stern disciplinarians,
understanding literally the dictum of Solomon,
“ he that spareth the rod hateth the child.”
Despite of this, Mr. Chapman revered them.
They were good scholars and excellent men, with
great force of character. They kindled in young
Henry’s mind a desire to be like them.
Some of his relatives were local preachers.
His grandfather especially attained to “a good
degree ” in this honourable vocation, his name,
for many years, being as ointment poured forth.
Converted at an early age, Henry soon began to
hold forth the word of life, and once, the superin-
tendent minister being ill, the quarterly meeting
accepted him as locum tenens, so that for a month
the young local preacher was circuit superin-
tendent...”
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“...South America. The other
Chapels are on the islands.
« «■ *
Mr. Proudfoot has now been ten years in the
Mission field. He is staying on at considerable
risk to himself, till he can be relieved. Through
the appointment of Mr. Halliwell, I hope that his-
foot will soon be on his native heath. He looks
forward to spending some pleasant summer days-
in the heather, on the Ochil Hills in Scotland.
W'N a letter to
j, ■ the Mis-
si on ary
y Secretary,
dated Sep-
tember
1 8 9 5,
10th,
R e v.
James Proud-
foot describes
the condition of
affairs at Bocas
del Toro. The
excessive rains
had caused quite
an epidemic of
fever, greatly
interfered with
their religious
services, and
reduced the
church income
to a very fine
point. Happily,
the rainy season
was passing a-
way, and better
times seemed in
store. The day
school progress-
ed slowly, as
the children
were suffering
from whooping
cough, which
CHINA.
D r. IIogg
writes to the
Missionary Sec-
retary, congra-
tulating him on
his appoint-
m ent, a n d
giving...”
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“...Editor, dated Wenchow, Sep-
tember 27tli, 1895, Rev. W. E. Soothill refers to
the outrages perpetrated on Christian Missions in
China, specifying those in Sz-chuan, Fo-kien,
and elsewhere. He continues “Coming to this
district three months ago, the China Inland Mission
suffered a re-
verse at Ping-
Yang, 30 miles
.from here.
Twenty or
thirty houses
were wrecked,
their occu-
pants driven
forth, a n d
though com-
pensation has
been made in
part, they have
not been able
to re-build,
and Christians
have to put up
with great
■opposition.
* * * *
to
“As to our
■o w n w o r k,
F u n g -L i n g
was going on
splendidly, till
the Mandarins
putoutanotice
forbidding the
sale of land to
foreigners.
"These officials
have enormous
power, and
whilespeaking
suavely as man
can speak, are
all the time
doing their ut-
most against
us. They are
at the bottom
of almost all
the riots in China. Soon after this proclamation
■appeared, I received warning of the changed
demeanour of the people. Through the British
Consul...”
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“...officers of our
Circuits, the officers and teachers of our Sunday
Schools, would take this question up, the circula-
tion of the Echo would double, and our income
would be greatly increased.”
Will our friends help us in this enterprise ?
I trust our young friends will do their very
best, the same prizes will be given for the largest
amounts as in other years.
* * *
The £200 that we want extra for the New
Medical Hospital at Wenchow, are not yet to
hand. Will our friends take this great need of our
Mission at Wenchow seriously to heart! I do not
doubt getting the money, and that, apart from
our ordinary income. But it is a case of urgency.
There is an old saying, “That he who gives early
gives double.” It will hold good in the case of
our Medical Hospital. We must not discredit the
faith of our own Missionaries; they are confident
that if only the friends at home knew how great,
urgent, and blessed the Medical work of our
Mis?ion is, the money would be given at once I
After we have the money, it...”
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“...well-attended
and deeply interesting meeting was held in
Hamilton Road Chapel on the 3rd to take leave of
our two friends. The chair was taken by Mr.
Bate. The meeting will long be remembered by
those present for its deep spiritual tone. I be-
speak for our dear friends the prayers of our
Churches.
7^ *
Just as these “ Notes ” were being sent
to the Press, we received a telegram saying,
Mr. Galpin would sail for England on the follow-
ing Saturday. This is sad.
(HOP MAPLES, of the Universities
Mission, has been drowned in Lake
Nyassa, just as he was reaching the
centre of his work. He had been a
Missionary for twenty years. Rev. Jos.
V illiams was drowned with him. No particulars
of the sad occurrence had come to hand at the
time of this writing.
* * *
Rev. Hugh Goldte, who laboured at old Calabar
for nearly fifty years, has entered into rest. He
was connected with the United Presbyterians.
* * *
A most interesting Babylonian tablet has just
been deciphered. It is inscribed on both sides
with...”
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“...have the notes of
beautiful little episode lain in my drawer,
and time after time have 1 put them aside,
because I feared to spoil a touching story
with the rude strokes of an untutored pen.
But in our sinful old world it would seem
almost another sin to keep locked up, away out of
sight, either in heart or desk, an incident which
brought ourselves great joy and encouragement,
when we might give it a further opportunity of
appealing to the highest sympathies of others,
by showing that even in China there is “ Holy
Ground.”
The subject, of this sketch was a woman of fifty—
and old at that (but Chinese women are all old at
fifty), her dress of the simplest, most countrified
description, of dark blue coarse home-spun cotton,
though clean and tidy withal.
Her feet were big, as compared with the tiny
“ golden lilies ” of her city sisters, nor had her
yellow homely face any beauty that we should
i desire it.
Her home is in a village buried amongst the...”
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“... yielded to
our delighted vision scenes of ever varying beauty.
It was part of Mr. Galpin’s mission to secure a
number of these views, to be reproduced on
lantern slides, to illustrate a lecture which you
may have the pleasure of listening to, and I can
assure you, beforehand, that there is a treat in
store. Each day our morning prayers were made
the occasion of a little service, which was generally
well attended, more interest being taken in them
this year than has been known before. The hill
people made up their minds to have nothing to do
with the “ foreigner’s religion.” But they cannot
resist the “joyful sound,” and already the Gospel
is “ half-way ” to many of their hearts. After
prayers came medicines, at times there was quite
a rush. Cases of ulcer, abscess, cancer, etc., were
brought for treatment, keeping Mr. Galpin busy
sometimes all morning. Dr. Grant, of the American
Baptist Mission, who was staying in our house,
had his hands full of interesting cases. One was
the case of...”
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“...especially that which relates to the
Christian Church, to discriminate very carefully
between the merely human and the truly divine
elements, and accord to each its proper place and
share of influence in any given historic episode.
And it is because so many men have not done this,
that they have come to such erroneous conclusions,
and delivered such glaring misjudgments concern-
ing the part which Christianity particularly has
played, in the evolution of history during the past
two thousand years.
CHINA.
WN a letter to the Missionary Secretary, from
Rev. R. Woolfenden, dated October 17th,
1895, the writer tells of a visit he had paid
to a new station, which had been established
J
<^5* through the efforts of converts who had been
blessed physically and spiritually as patients in
Dr. Swallow’s Hospital. A native preacher had
been sent, and at length Dr. Swallow proposed to
visit the place, but at the last moment he found it...”
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“...plans whereby
a greater interest and sympathy might be created
amongst the younger portion of our Home Churches
towards us and our work. I am willing to write
a quarterly letter to any Sunday School or Christian
Endeavour Society, who would make known to me
their desire for such a letter. I would give the
latest news about our Wenchow Mission, seeking
to make the letter as interesting as I possibly could.
Through such a medium, I believe great good
might be done, and a greater sympathy begotten
towards Missionary labour.”
* * »
In the same letter, Mr. Heywood states his be-
lief that the official class is to blame for all the
trouble that arises in China about foreigners and
Christianity. “ The Foreign Office does not yet seem
to have grasped this fact. The sooner it is known
by Englishmen, the better will it be for all
foreigners in this country. The true culprits will
be brought to account for deeds that have made
the civilized world shudder.”
* * *
Mr. Heywood continues, “ I am sorry...”
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“...years. The Mission is now too large
for the present staff, and I seem to be needed in
several places at once.”
* * *
Mr. Proudfoot then details what is being done
towards the erection of a chapel at Cricamola, and
another on a small island called Nancy’s Cay.
» « *
Mr. Proudfoot continues, Bogue’s Mouth
Station has a very pretty chapel, but the popula-
lation is small, and will continue so until the land
across the channel (or mouth), is taken up. A
Vanilla firm has got a concession of eleven miles
of coast line there, and there is a good prospect of
a large village on the mainland, and of the de-
velopment of Bogue’s Mouth too. I have been
j promised all the land I' need for a Chapel and
I Burying ground, whenever the prospects are such
as to justify settling a Chapel there.”
CHAPEL AT RIBE.
Mission House in which Mrs. Wakefield died, on left hand.
A'/?./
So
JVCIjSlSIOJ'^y £Ee^E'l'£]Sy>
HE past month has been one of very great
anxiety. The news from several of our
Mission Stations...”
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“...”
& &
Our latest news from East Africa came to hand
on January 12th. The state of the country was
not much more settled at the time of writing.
* * *
There are two things we can do for our brethren
in East Africa. 1. We can pray for them, and let
our prayers have the element of agony in them.
2. We can express our deep sympathy with them
by making a special contribution to aid them in
this grave crisis, a contribution which shall not
diminish our regular one, but rather increase it.
CHINA.
The news from China has for the most part
been of a painful nature. After our last “ Notes ”
had been sent to the Editor, we received a cable-
gram saying, Bev. F. Galpin would sail for
England three days later. The day before this
came we had received a lettei' from Dr. Swallow
informing us.that Mr. Galpin was better than he
had been, and the hope was that he would be able
to stay and finish his term of service. Clearly our
dear friend must have become much worse after
Dr. Swallow’s letter was written...”
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“...Bocas is rapidly
growing, and if we are to maintain our position
there, we must send out more agents.
* * *
Will our friends in all our Circuits lay our
Mission work to heart. Doors are opening, the !
work is growing; if we are to enter in and do our
work, we must have larger funds.
* * *
Mr. W. Lancaster, Roundhay Road, Leeds,
has sent through Rev. W. Vivian, two valuable
books to our friends in West Africa.
* * *
“ A Friend ” at Baillie Street has prepared a
case of dolls and other toys for our West African
Mission, and two parcels have also been sent in
from Rochdale friends for Mr. and Mrs. Howe.
To all these friends we are deeply indebted, and
beg to tender to them our heartiest thanks.
* * *
Will all our Churches set apart some Sunday
in February for addresses on Missionary subjects, .
and for earnest prayer for our several Mission
Stations and all our Missionaries ? Will the
schools also take the subject up, and the Y. P. C. E.
Societies. We never had a graver crisis in the
history...”
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“...the Plymouth Mercury contains
the following paragraph :—“ Canon Jacob, the new
Bishop of Newcastle, sets a good example to his
brother Prelates by his warm espousal of the
British and Foreign Bible Society. He spoke at
the South Kensington auxiliary meeting the other
night, and told the audience he had become a sup-
porter of the society. As a young clergyman his
attention had not been directed to it at all, but in
1872 he went to India as Chaplain to the Bishop
of Calcutta. In visiting the mission stations in
company with the Bishop, he was struck with the
fact that wherever he went the people seemed to
have a Bible, and no matter what the language
there was, the Word of God in the vernacular, and
in all cases from the British and Foreign Bible
Society. He asked his Bishop whether, when in
England, he had been a supporter of the society ?
He replied he was sorry to say he had not been,
but he was now, and he took the chair each year
at the Calcutta meeting. ‘ So,’ said Bishop Jacob
to...”
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“...schooner which
occupied four-
teen days in the
course covered
by the “Harold”
in an equal
number of
hours! It is
awful work beat-
ing up this coast
in a schooner in
the months of
July and August,
when winds are
light; the cur-
rent being so very strong and adverse. We had, I
remember to go about forty miles N.W. of Bocas
and then try to cut across the coastal current so as
to make one of the two entrances to the port of
Bocas, and we drifted past the first, and only by
COCOANUT
GABLE END OF BAPTIST MISSION HOUSE, BOCAS-DEL-TORO, WITH YOUNG
TREES.
the skin of our teeth, as it were, managed to
make the second. Now, in fourteen hours from
the time of leaving Colon I was at Bocas-del-Toro.
I may here say that I find this plural form of
the name, meaning “ Mouths of the Bull,” is the
one generally used at the place itself, and it is not
inappropriate, as there are two mouths or channels
adjacent to each other leading directly to the port,
though one is very shallow and little used.
These are in addition...”
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“...BO CAS REVISITED.
25
the people are not quite capable of coping with.
They have a mission-field in the literal, earthly
sense of the word —a small banana farm, which
they cultivate in the interests of the church, and
which has helped them very considerably in their
church finance. So they are quite easy about the
small burden of debt which rests, not on the
shoulders of the minister, but on those of a few of
the sturdy, independent men of the place.
I brought out copies of a service of song,
“ Golden Deeds,” which I hoped to get up at this
place and Bocas during my stay, and I had a first
practice with a few of the choir on Saturday night,
but it was wet and we only had a few, besides
which they were getting up a Sunday School
Anniversary, which was to have been held on that
first Sunday (the 28th July), but which had to be
postponed on account of the unreadiness of the
children, and was fixed for the 11th August.
Sunday morning, 28th July, proved very wet,
the rain continuing till nearly...”
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“...heart, for
I could not de-
tect any trace of
malice or crime ;
on the contrary,
meekness, gen-
tleness, and
sufferingseemed
to be enshrined
in this shattered
BUDDHIST PRIEST, CHINA.
th e
ex-
there
and sickly hu-
man form.
I asked the
poor man a few
questions, and
soon knew his history of beggary through opium
smoking. Meanwhile, as I asked my questions,
the other Chinaman remained silent, and appeared
indifferent to the tale of poverty which the suf-
ferer was unfolding to me.
Presently, I asked the beggar a question which
required him to give me the name of some China-
man who could confirm his story ; then, to my
surprise, he appealed to the other man to corro-
borate his tale, calling him “ his sister’s husband.”
To this request the brother-in-law granted an
answer as full of cruel indifference as only a China-
man knows how to give. I turned then to him,
and said, “ Is this man your wife’s brother ? ” and
he answered “ Yes.” I must add also, in justice to
him, that he agreed to my...”
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“...The quarrel is a political, not a religious
one, but there is no doubt that our missionary
aggressiveness is one cause of deep-seated hatred.
It so happens, too, that the only blow the rebels
can deal the Government, is an attack upon some
Mission station. They are not strong enough to
attack Mombasa or any of the other garrisoned
coast towns, and the Mission stations are the only
outlying European settlements anywhere near the
coast. They might make an attack upon some
caravan passing into the interior, but the Govern-
ment have now taken the precaution of keeping
back all small caravans, until a large number of
men are ready to start for the interior, and then
they send them up a certain distance under a mili-
tary escort. It is because the Mission stations are
the vulnerable points that, for the time being,
military garrisons have been placed in each. In
this district, Rabai is the depot, where there are
about one hundred native asikaris under an English
officer. At Ribe, there were...”
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“...us. We have not
yet supplied his place, but it is proposed to send
there Fundi Thomas Mwavale, the native teacher
now stationed at Jomvu, and to place half-a-dozen
lads, under special instruction here at Jomvu, with
a view to making them fundis. Mwavale, himself,
is but a very young man, but I have tried to teach
him a little during his two years’ work here. He
is by no means a bad preacher, and I think his life
gives evidence of the workings of Divine grace in
his own heart.
Our work on the Mission Station has been going-
on as usual—day school, daily morning prayers,
Sabbath preaching services—but outside work has
been much interfered with during the troublous
times through which we have been passing. The
open-air services in Mohammedan Jomvu have been
discontinued, but none are more anxious (ap-
parently) than the people themselves, that they
should be resumed. They are continually urging
upon me—“ Come again and preach to us.” “ When
are you coming to read to us again.” We hope that...”
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“...East African Missions,’ ‘ A trip to East Africa,’ and
‘ A visit to Western Africa.’ Sets of slides (with-
out readings), may also be had on China and
Jamaica, as well as on Greenland and North
America. For Sunday afternoon meetings, sets
of coloured Diagrams may be had on ‘ A peep at
Sierra Leone,’ ‘ East Africa and its Missions ’ (2
sets), ‘ The Gospel in New Zealand,’ and ‘ China
and the Chinese.’ There are no readings with
the Diagrams, though the titles of the slides are
given, and suitable books are recommended to
those addressing the meetings.” For particulars
as to open dates, application should be made to
Rev. Robert Brewin, Cornholme, Todmorden.
plO'fEg.
CHINA.
HOUGH all will regret the cause of Rev.
F. Galpin’s sudden return to the home
land, all will rejoice that he has arrived
safely. Physically, he is much better
than when he left China; he is a good
sailor, and the long voyage did him good.
Though much better physically, his nervous
system is in a very shattered condition ;...”
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