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The American Missionary — Volume 43, No. 06, June, 1889 by Various
page 11 of 111 (09%)
Sunday-school or those who attend the preaching services. Must be
enlarged or no growth can follow.

ATHENS, TENN.--Growing town; nearly a thousand Northern people with no
church suited to their needs. Some Congregationalists need aid in
starting a church.

FORT BERTHOLD, DAKOTA.--Rev. C.L. Hall writes: "We have not at Fort
Berthold the necessary buildings for our work. Our girls are in an old
Government building out of repair, and a little cottage 16x22, and our
boys and industrial teacher are crowded into the missionary's house,
and a little one-story annex 14x22. There is no room for a guest to
stay over night."

CHINESE IN CALIFORNIA.--Dr. Pond, the Superintendent of our Chinese
Missions, makes a dollar go as far as any man in our service. He is
one of the most careful men in making ends meet. But he has been
caught in the cyclone and writes thus about the premature closing of
the schools:

"Nothing seemed left for me to do but to notify the teachers that I
could pay all bills for May, but could promise nothing more. When I had
resolved to do this, the workers passed before me, one by one: most of
our teachers are dependent on this slender stipend for their daily
bread--teachers that had been in our service for many years, never
measuring their service by their pay, but working in season and out of
season, and most of the time rendering help not bargained for fully
equal to that which I could have required. The helpers also passed
before me. Jee Gam with his wife and five children; our brave, unselfish
Low Quong; our faithful, almost saintly Chin Toy, our earnest and
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