234 
MISSIONARY LIFE 
— four males and two females. There .are 
now thirteen on the seekers’ list. The 
Sabbath-school average for the quarter was 
seventy-nine; daj^-school, thirty eight. We have 
now in the mission at Shengay ten boys and two 
girls. They work from 6:15 to 9:00 A. m., and 
from 3:30 to 5:30 p. M. I had to stop work on the 
hoys’ home to clear ground and plant, but will re- 
sume again next week. At present they occupy 
rooms in the laborers'' houses, which are finished. 
May 28th, Rev. Mr. Hero went up to Mambo to 
labor as a school-teacher and a preacher. I was up 
there on the 16th instant and visited three of the 
villages near there. On account of the Furrow 
being in session, not much could be done in the 
way of teaching and preaching. A little boy, 
a son of the chief, told me that the devil came 
into the meeting one Sabbath. 
W e have made out a plan for itinerating in the 
villages near Shengay— -the farthest not more than 
twelve miles away. The plan includes ten villages 
outside of Shengay. Five of our young men, 
members of the Church, have volunteered to go 
out, each taking their regular turns. When I 
have more time I will send you the plan. 
At Mambo the woman’s work is prospering, 
though the school is small and the teacher has 
no proper house to live in. The people are 
