290 ' SOUTHERN AFRICA. 
field; and whilst the former of these have push- 
ed their Missionaries furthest into the interior 
deserts of Africa, the work of the latter, more 
particularly in Kaffirland, has received the most 
manifest blessing, and has yielded the most 
satisfactory and abundant fruits. 
In confirmation of this it may be mentioned, 
that, besides eleven Missionaries and sixty-eight 
lay-teachers in the Cape districts, together with 
five Missionaries and thirty -two lay-teachers in 
the Natal and Amazulu districts, the Wesley- 
ans have twenty-four Missionaries, and one hun- 
dred and twenty -three lay-teachers in Albany, 
Kaffirland, and the Bechuana country. Whilst, 
in these latter localities, the number of full and 
accredited church members, according to their 
last returns, is 2869, with 3884 attending 
schools. 
If no more positive good was accomplished 
by these self-denying pioneers of Christianity 
in Africa, than that which their printing press 
has effected, it of itself is a mighty boon to all 
Missionary labours. This establishment, which 
is now located at Mount Coke, near King 
William's Town, has been kept in constant 
work, and, within the last year, has issued a 
new and revised edition of 2000 copies of the 
Kaffir New Testament. In addition to this 
it has also completed 6050 copies of the first, 
