IN WESTERN AFRICA. 
301 
Mrs. Mair is now in the employ of the Wom- 
an’s Missionary Association, and has charge of 
their station at Rotufunk. She is teacher, and 
in one sense preacher, lawyer, doctor, house- 
keeper, — everything necessary to be done in a 
foreign mission-station. May God grant that the 
Woman’s Missionary Association may long be 
favored with her services. 
SECOND VISIT TO MANOH 
Sabbath morning, March 7th, 1880, at 4:00 A. 
M., Mr. Wilberforce and myself had the boat 
Sandusky” and a crew of four men, including 
one of the mission-boys, in readiness to go to 
Manoh, which place we reached at eight o’clock. 
Mrs. Curtis and other missionaries here thought 
a church ought to be organized there; and we 
concluded to meet the people and learn their true 
condition. 
Mrs. Curtis had a list of fourteen names, which 
she said represented persons who came regularly 
to all the meetings and were living good lives. 
We reminded her that five things must be abso- 
lutely given up by all who became members of 
the Church; namely, polygamy, slavery, Purrow- 
ism, the liquor-trfiic, and working on the Sab- 
bath. She said all that had been told them ; but 
she was glad that we had come to tell the people 
ourselves. 
