| aby d s A } Ls inst ep Soap ky a Aap CHRISTIAN MISSIONS CROGRKAPHY CHRISTIAN MISSIONS GEOGRAPHY. PREFACE. HE Christian Missions Geography is designed for Students ie of Mission Work, who desire something more than ordinary outline maps showing the location of stations. ‘The Geog- raphy is intended to show the relation of stations to the fields where they are located, especially to the larger towns and villages and routes of travel, including sufficient topography to distinguish mountains from rolling country or plains. The descriptive matter relating to India, being the first of the series, will indicate the general plan‘to. be followed with other coun- tries.. While inchiding a special description of the stations of the Presbyterian Church in the U.S, A., the basis of the description is so arranged that sectional maps with description of the fields and stations of the missions of any other church can be added as desired, Thus the Christian Missions Geography can grow into a comprehensive survey of the mission fields. with sectional maps descriptive of S| operations of each of the societies, The outline map of India on page 10; with the lst of societies with their stations in each division as noted on pages 11 and 12, is a distinet contribution to missionary literature and the simplest method of showing the relative strength and concentration of the different societies, Map of INDIA (Lodiana and Furrukhabad Missions) with gen- eral description, 10 cents. Corrections and suggestions as to matter and form will be ‘highly appreciated by the Editor. Portiolio of Maps of the Foreign Mission Fields of the Presbyterian Church. Containing Twelve Maps (ten engraved by Barthol- omew, Hdinburgh), Japan, Korea, and North China, Central China, South China, Siam and Laos Missions, India Missions, Persia, Syria and Africa Missions, Mexico, and South America Missions. These are the finest series of maps issued by any Missionary Society.. Portfolio and Twelve Maps, 50 cents. ) cents additional for each deseriptive paper when issued. India. GENERAL DESCRIPTION. Area, 1,800,258 square miles. Population, 287,223,431. India comprises one-thirty-third of the land area and contains one- fifth of the population of the world. Extending through 29 degrees of latitude and 36 of longitude, its extreme length north and south is 1,900 miles; its greatest breadth east and west is also 1,900 miles. It forms the central peninsula of Southern Asia and is shut off from the rest of the continent by a vast mountain region. There is room within its borders for all the United States east of the Rocky Mountains. This territory may be divided into three separate and well-defined tracts: I. Himalayas.—The first of these regions, the ‘‘Abode of Snow,” with a varying width of from 180 to 220 miles, stretches in a continuous curve for about 1,500 miles. and is the highest mountain system of the world. Its entire area maintains a mean elevation of from 17,000 to 19,000 feet. Mt. Everest reaches 29,000 feet, and forty other peaks are known to exceed 24,000 feet. The Himalayas, thus standing as arampart to the northern frontier, their summits crowned with eternal snow, form a boundless reservoir for the steady supply of the Indian rivers. The wooded foothills at their base, 7,000 to 10,000 feet in height, are the region of greatest recorded rainfall on earth—120 inches to 523 inches per annum—80 inches in Assam having fallen in one day. Il. Northern Plains.—Extending from the Indus to Burma, at the foot of the Himalayas. are watered by three distinct river systems and contain three-fifths of the whole population of India. The Indus, 1,800,miles in length, drains a basin of 372,700 square miles into Arabian Sea. On account of its great breadth, the ancients called it the Ocean. The Brahmaputra drains Bengal and Assam, and is navigable for about 800 miles. Every kind of craft is seen upon its broad surface. The Ganges.—Of all the great rivers on earth, none can compare in sanctity with the Ganges; her banks are holy; to bathe in her waters at the great annual festivals washes away sin, Until the railways were constructed, the Ganges formed the channel of traffic between the interior and the coast at Calcutta. Throughout the river plains, two, and in some provinces three harvests are gathered annually. These plains, the seat of earliest civilization, have been the theatre of the race problems of Indian history. Ill. Sonthern India, including the Deccan—the southern central plateau,— is triangular in form and covers the whole country south of the Vindhyas, the Eastern and Western Ghats forming the coast boundaries. The rivers of this region, though mighty torrents in the rainy season, dwindle at other times to small streams The greatest mineral wealth of the Empire is found in this section. Christian mis- sions have been longer established here than elsewhere. Probably twice the num- ber of years of missionary labor and double the amount of money have been expended on the Southern third as have been given to the Northern two-thirds of India, with the result of a more established Christian community. The History of India is a succession of conquests. How long the Aryan or Hindu conquerors were left undisturbed history does not tell us, but we know that the Persians, under Darius, and the Greeks, under Alexander, forced their way into India before the Christian era. From the seventh to the sixteenth centuries India was invaded by the Mohammedans, under the Caliphs of Bagdad and their fanatic Arabs. Tamarlane proclaimed himself Tartar Emperor in 1397. He and his successors destroyed the temples and converted the inhabitants to Islam. His 1 2614 descendant, Babar, became the first Mogul in 1526. The reign of Abkar, the con- temporary of Queen Elizabeth, and his three successors, was the period of India’s greatest splendor. The temples, mosques and tombs of exquisite beauty, dating from this period, are not surpassed in any age or country. Internal strife and invasions from Central Asia and Persia weakened the Empire, which finally was overthrown in 1857, and the Mogul banished to Burma. This result was aided largely by the Marathis. a low-caste race dwelling in Central India, who were overcome by the British in 1818, after three great wars. The Portuguese. in 1498, were the first Europeans to establish trade with India, monopoly of which they enjoyed for more than a century. The Duteh East India Company was formed in 1602 and remained master of the Eastern Seas until 1757, when it surrendered to the English under Lord Clive. The Danes possessed little power, but their settlements, established in 1616, are immortal in missionary annals. The French began to gain power in India in 1668 and for a century made heroic efforts to found an Indian empire. This power was crushed in 1760-61 and France holds to-day only 178 square miles. The East India Company, which was to win India for England, received its original charter from Queen Elizabeth on the last day of the year 1600. Under British rule, which began in 1757 and was fully established in 1857, peace has taken the place of former internal conflicts, crime has greatly diminished, infanticide, the burning of widows, thuggee, slavery, torture and many other barbarous cus- toms have been abolished. Domestic arts have been encouraged; sanitary measures have been adopted and education has made rapid strides. The construction of railways and other public works, including irrigating canals covering vast districts, have increased productiveness and interchange of commodities. The British Possessions are included in twelve provinces, covering an area of 1.157,693 square miles. with a population of 221,438,370. Each province has its own Governor, subject to the supreme government of India, which consists of a Governor-General, or Viceroy, assisted by a Council of six. The Viceroy is appointed by the Queen of England; so also are the Governors of Madras and Bombay. The heads of the other provinces are nominated by the Viceroy. The Native States, 153 in number, are governed by native princes, British officials appointed by the Viceroy, termed Residents, acting as advisors. The authority of the native States is limited by treaties in which they acknowledge their ‘‘ subordinate independence” to the British Government. Internal communication is being rapidly developed, and is making India equal in this respect to other civilized countries. In 1895 there were 21,855 miles of railroad. In 1891 18,000 miles of canals for navigation and irrigation had been constructed, to which the Government is constantly adding. Before India came under British rule there were scarcely any roads, now 50,000 miles of macadamized roads bring allthe great cities into direct communication. There were in 1892 30,000 miles of telegraph and the country is connected by cable with the Western world. Cities and Towns.—One remarkable feature of India is the small number of cities or towns of large size. Those having 100,000 inhabi- tants and over number only twenty-eight. They are: Bombay . : : : ; 821,764 Poona : : : . 161.890 Calcutta . : : , . 741,144 Jaipur . : d : : 158,905 Madras . ; : 5 : 452,518 Ahmedabad : : : > 14343 Haidarabad : : : . 415.089 Amritsar F , , : 136, 766 Lucknow 4 : : : 273,028 Bareli. A , é : . 1215089 Benares : | ee. AG ie eer ui ; ; ‘ . 119,390 Delhi : : ‘ ; : 192,579 Srinagar . ; : ; ., 118,960 Mandalay . 2 : ; . 188,815 Nagptr . F : d ; 117,014 Cawnpore ; ; ; . 188,712 Howrah . : : : . 116.606 Bangalore . : A : . 180,366 Baroda . 5 f . 2 116.420 Rangoon 3 ‘ ; : 180,324 Surat. : : : : > l09e229 Lahore : ‘ ' : 5 in@ishyh ikeyeacint: - j . : : 105,199 Allahabad ; : 3 : 175,246 Gwalior . ; ‘ ' . 104,088 Agra . : : ; : . 168,662 —— ieehmeh ‘ : ; ; 165,192 Oval : : ~ el 83s 28 Towns.—Out of a total of 2,035 towns 227 have a population of over 20,000, 407 have between 10,000 and 20,000, and 1,401 have less than 10,000. Villages.—There are in India 713,925 villages, 259,834,813 people—nine-tenths of India’s whole population. Each of these villages is a miniature republic, presided over by a ‘‘ head inhabitant, * aided by a clerk and council of five. There are also the village priest, the schoolmaster, watchman and many other function- aries. Each village is self-sufficient and has little to do with other villages or the central government. The houses of the poor are usually about twelve feet square and one story. They are constructed upon a raised floor of hardened earth with walls of matting, wattles or moistened earth. The roof is of reeds, grass or palmyra leaves, fastened to rafters of bamboo or jungle wood. Kabul Pest shan /AFGHANISTAN £9 ee nee eae ‘ : ‘(atta gS ye Za \BALUCHISTAN, Le ay a at Che » x S47 me a yoo NIE MO U_N ay dake | oe el eS Y, Lt (9) ouDy We es f ; ws IND JR UTA N , aint eal “es : H : GWialion San! Karac if ts Nee ‘Di ar vt, Ne a ee Sears are de eK a z "CENTRAL , ain eet LF ae xe >} PROVINCES = “eet ‘ at ms Bs 1% 2 Ves te Page AN oe ol + 3 ; ih Bombaty ~< Rg Q \ Arp GPX “i “ARABAD? |ARABIA N Glapur ° ; QO, | : i e MYSORE, W ‘ BrAsY (ese B. EIN GyASe Ss E A OS Agere. O|Madras Cochinys, ¥ INDIA °* 10 LIST OF SOCIETIES AS COMMONLY DESIGNATED, WITH DATE WHEN MISSION WAS FOUNDED. A.1, American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions, 1813. B.1. American Baptist Missionary Union, 1840. B.4. Baptist Foreign Missionary Society of Ontario and Quebec, 1877. (ya. Free Baptist Missionary Society (American), 1836. B.10. Baptist Missionary Society (British), 1793. B.12. Strict Baptist Missionary Society (British), 1866. Ba. Basle German Evangelical Missionary Society, 1884. C.2. Foreign Christian Missionary Society (American), 1882. C.M.S. Church Missionary Society (British), 1813. C.Z. Church of England Zenana Missionary Society, 1880. p.10. Danish Missionary Society, 1861. yl. Protestant Episcopal Church in the U.S. A., 1835. Feit: Friends’ Foreign Missionary Association (England), 1874. L. London Missionary Society, 1805. L.1. Evangelical Lutheran (General Synod), (American), 1842. L.3. Evangelical Lutheran Society (General Council), (American), 1869. L. Br. Breklum Missionary Society (German), 1882. L.&. German Evangelical Lutheran Mission (Gossner), 1848. L.H. Hermannsburg Lutheran Mission (German), 1866. L.L. Leipsic Evangelical Lutheran Mission, 1841. L.Sw. Swedish Evangelical Lutheran Mission, 1881. L.10. Mission to Lepers in India and the East, 1874. M.1. Methodist Episcopal Church (American), 1858. M.11. Wesleyan Methodist Missionary Society (England), 1817. Mo. Moravian Society, 1856. P.1. Presbyterian Church, U.S. A., 1834. P.3. Presbyterian Church of Canada, 1875. ah Presbyterian Church of England, 1862. P12: Established Church of Scotland, 1828. P.13. Free Church of Scotland, 1828. P.14. Presbyterian Church of Ireland, 1841. P35. United Original Secession Church of Scotland, 1871. R.1. Reformed Church in America, 1857. R.5. Reformed Presbyterian (General Synod), (American), 1836. 5. FE. Society for the Promotion of Female Education in the East (British), 1834. Sak. Society for the Propagation of the Gospel (British). 1726. U.P .1. United Presbyterian Church in North America, 1855. U.P.11. United Presbyterian Church of Scotland, 1860. W.C. Welsh Calvanistic Methodist, 1841. W.U. Woman’s Union Missionary Society of America, 1863. Z. Zenana Bible and Medical Mission, 1852. Zenana Mission of the United Presbyterian Church of Scotland, 1880. Cambridge Mission (Delhi), 1852. Christian Disciples (Calcutta), 1849. Christian Woman’s Bible Mission (Baptist), (Bilaspur). Christo Somaj (Calcutta), 1887. Dent Mission (England), (Calcutta), 1858. Faith Mission (Basim, Akola), 1878. Independent Mission (Calcutta), 1886. Indian Home Missions(Rapt.), (Haripur), 1867. Kurku Mission (Betul), 1890. Oxford Mission (Calcutta), 1881, Punrutti Mission (Arcot). Society of St. John the Baptist (England), (Calcutta, Poona). Christian Vernacular Education Society. Bengal Evangelical Mission (Presbyterian), (Faridpur), 1874, ASSAM, B.1. Garo Hills, Goalpur, Kamrup, Lakhim- pur, Naga Hills, Nowgong, Sibsagar. P.13. Sylhet. S.P.G. Cachar, Darrang. W.C. Jaintia, Khasi Hills. BURMA. B.l. RANGOON, MANDALAY, Amherst, Bassein, Bhamo, Henzada, Meiktila, Mone, Myin-Gyan, Namkam, Pegu, Prome, Sa- gaing, Sandoway, Shwe-gyin Taung-ngu, vate Tharawadi, Thaton, Thayet-Myo, hibaw. L.10. MANDALAY. L.L. RANGOON. M.1. RANGOON. MANDALAY, Kyankse, Monywa, Pokokku. 8.P. RANGOON, MANDALAY, Akyab, Amherst, Pyinmana, Shwebo, Thayet- Myo Toung-ngu. 11 BENGAL AND ORISSA. B.7. Midnapur, Nadiya. ORISSA, Balasar,. B.10. CALCUTTA, Bakarganj, Birbhum, Bogra, Chittagong, Dacca, Dinapur, Fa- ridpur, Howrah, Jessor, Khulna, Maldah, Monghyr, Patna, Purniah, Santal Parga- nas, Serampur. ORISSA (Cuttack, Puri). C.M.S. CALCUTTA, Bardwan, Bhagalpur, Nadiya, Santul Parganas Serampur. C.Z. CALCUTTA, SBardwan, Bhagalpur, Howrah, Maimansingh, Nadiya, 24 Par- anas. L. CALOUTTA, Murshidabad. L.10. CALCUTTA, Bardwan, Bhagalpur, Darjiling Lohardaga, Manbhum, Rani- ganj. L.G. Hazaribagh, Lohardaga, Manbhum, Muzaffarpur, Singhbhum. } M.1. CALCUTTA, Bardwan, Tirhut. M.11. CALCUTTA, Bankura, Maimansingh, 24 Parganas. P.11. Rajshahi. P.12. CALCUTTA, Darjiling, Kalinipong. P.13. CALCUTTA, Bardwan, Hazaribagh, Hugli, Monghyr. R.5. Midnap EDS S.P.G. CALCUTTA, Faridpur, Hazaribagh, Howrah, Khulna. Lohardaga, Manbhum, Singhbhum, Sunderbans. W.U. CALCUTTA. Z. Patna. ORISSA, Balasar. CALCUTTA. Additional Societies. Chris- tian Disciples, Christo Somaj, Dent Mis- sion, Independent Mission, Oxford Mis- sion, Society of St. John the Baptist. NORTHWEST PROVINCES AND OUDH. B10. Agra, Allahabad, Ghazipur, Muttra. C.M.S. Agra, Aligarh, Allahabad, Benares, Dehra Dun, Faizabad, Gonda, Gorakhpur, Lucknow, Meerut, Muttra. L. Almora, Benares, Kumaun, Lalitpur, Mir- zapur. L.10. Allahabad, Almora, Dehra Dun, Ka Kamaun, Muzaffarnagar, Rohilkhand, Saharanpur. L.G. Ghazipur, M.1. Agra, Allahabad, Bareilly, Buland- shahr, Cawnpur, Dehra Dun, Etah, Faiza- bad, Hardoi, Kumaun, Lucknow, Meerut, Moradabad, Pilibhit, Rohilkhand, Sitapur, Uano. M.11. Bareilly, Benares, Faizabad, Lucknow. P.1, Allahabad, Etawah, Fatigarh, Fatipur, Jhansi, Mainpuri R.5. Meerut, Muzaffarnagar, Rohilkhand, Saharanpur. S.F.E. Agra, S bP. Banda, Cawnpur, Saharanpur. W.U. Allahabad, Cawnpur, Naini Tal. Z. Allahabad, Aligarh, Almora, Benares, Faizabad, Ghazipur, Gorakhpur, Jaunpur, Lucknow, Sultanpur. PUNJAB. B.10. Delhi, Gurgaon, Simla. C.M.S. LAHORE, Amritsar, Bannu, Dera, Ghazi Khan, Dera Ismail Khan, Gurdas- pur, Jehlam, Kangra, Multan, Peshawar. C.Z. Amritsar, Dera Ghazi Khan, Dera Is- mail Khan, Fathgahr, Gurdaspur, Pesha- war. L.10. Ambala, Amritsar, Chamba, Kangra, Rawal Pindi, Sialkot, Simla. M11. Ambala, Rawal Pindi. Mo. Kangra. v1. LAHORE, Ambala, Dehra Dun, Firoz- pur, Hoshiarpur, Jalandhar, Ludhiana, Saharanpur, Simla. P.12. Chamba, Gujranwala, Gujrat, Jammu, Sialkot. R.5. Gujranwala, Patiala. S.F.E. Ludhiana, Multan. S.P. Delhi, Gurgaon, Hissar, Karnal, Roh- tak, Simla. U.P.1. Gujranwala, Gurdaspur, Jhang, Rawal Pindi, Sialkot. Z. LAHORE, Sialkot. KASHMIR. Srinagar. Kashmir. Kyelang, Ladakh, Leh, Poo, RAJPUTANA, AJMERE, INDORE, GWALIOR. -M.S. Udaipur. -10. Ajmere, Bhopal. -1. GWALIOR (Morar). .3. Dhar, Gtealie (Nimach), Indore, Mhow, Ratlam. S.P. Ajmere. U.P.11. Ajmere, Alwar, Jaipur, Jodhpur, Kotah, Merwara, Udaipur. CENTRAL PROVINCES. Sampalpur. 2. Bilaspur, Damoh, Harda. C.M.S. Jabalpur, Mandla. F.11. Bhopal, Hoshangabad. Jehlam, C.M.S. C.Z. Mo. eS X B 10. Cc L.10. Hoshangabad, Mandla, Wardha. L Sw. Narsingpur, Sagar. M.1. Berar, Hoshangabad, Jabalpur, Nagpur, Nimar. P.13. Amraoti, Bhandara, Nagpoor, Wardha. BOMBAY AND SIND. A.1. BOMBAY, Ahmednagar, Kathiawar, Poona, Satara, Sholapur. B.10. BOMBAY. Ba. Bijapur, Dharwar, North Kanara. C.M.S. BOMBAY, Nasik, Poona. Haidarabad, Karachi, Shikarpur. L. Belgaum. L.10. Kolaba. M.1. BOMBAY, Baroda, Gujarat, Nasik, Panch Mahals, Poona. SIND, Karachi. M.11. BOMBAY, Jabulpur. P.1. Kohlapur. Miraj, Ratnagiri, Sangli. P.13. BOMBAY, Jalna, Konkan, Poona SIND, P.14. Ahmedabad, Broach, Kaira, Kathia- war, Palanpur, Surat. S.P. BOMBAY, Abmednagar, Dharwar, Kohlapur, Ratnagiri. Z. BOMBAY, Ahmednagar, Nasik, Poona, Ratnagiri, ‘Sholapur. HAIDARABAD. Ba. Indore. B.1. Kamamet, Nalgonda, Secunderabad. C.M.S. Aurangabad, Kamamet. C.Z. Kamamet. M.1. HAIDARABAD, Bidar. awa HAIDARABAD, Medak, Secundera- ad. S.P. Bolarum, Secunderabad. Z. Aurangabad, Bidar. MADRAS. A.I. Madura, Arrupkottai, Battalagundu, Dindigul, Manamadura, Melur, Palani, Pasumalai, Periakulam, Tirumangalam, Tirupuvanam. B.1. MADRAS, Coimbatore, Ganjam, Kar- nal, Kistna, Nellore. B.4. Godavari, Vizagapatam. B.10. Ganjam. B.12. MADRAS, Chengalpat, Tinnevelli. Ba. Malabar, Nilgiri. C.M.S. MADRAS, Godavari, Kistna, Mala- bar, Nilgiri, Tinnevelli. C.Z. MADRAS, Coimbatore, Godavari, Kist- na, Nilgiri, Tinnevelli. D.10. Chengalpat, L. MADRAS, Anantapur, Bellary, Coimba- tore, Cuddapah, Vizagapatam. L.1. Kistna, Nellore. L.3. Godavari. L.10. MADRAS, Malabar, South Kanara. L.B. Vizagapatam. LH. Cuddapah, Nellore, North Arcot. L.L. MADRAS, Chengalpat, Coimbatore, Madura, Pudukottai, South Arcot, Tan- jore, Trichinopoli. M.1. MADRAS, Salem. M.11. MADRAS, Chengalpat, Tanjore, Trichinopoli. P.12. MADRAS, North Arcot. P.13. MADRAS. Chengalpat, Nellore. R.1t. Cuddapah, North Arcot, South Arcot. S.F.E. MADRAS, Coimbatore, Nilgiri. S.P. MADRAS, Bellary, Coimbatore, Karnal, Madura, Pudukattai, Salem, South Arcot, Tanjore, oie y aa Trichinopoli. Coimbatore, Z. Bellary. MYSORE. Bangalore -B.1., B. 12, C. Z., L. (and Kolar), Tie Teg VCaL (Kolar), Soe M li (and Hassan, Kadur, Mysore, Shimoga Tumkur). TRAVANCORE, COCHIN, COORG. Ba. COORG, Merkara. C.M.S. Allepi, Kotayum, Tiruvella. CO- CHIN, Trichur. C.Z. Mavelicara, Trivandrum. COCHIN, Trichur. L. Nagercoil, Trivandrum, Quilon. L.10. Trivandrum. LODIANA anp FURRUKHABAD MISSIONS. _ | ee Pa NUCLEON Pied eR eer ry ih MS aa ns GanwaliorS* AEE a TA wen jean Dha Rinot Ffonokeah ye S ’ A A M ‘ a = 5 oMiarade bwirdad iw <0, ¥ hex ha ‘ FP go Miceat ee GU LE isis) 74 INT. f Se Ly , » Dingo * la Ft : mee ik & j Lea, \ ~ Phaticn Xt ma R - fe. andherx Wiroka 4 Faris ° iA be ¥ ok = S Gay ushak) op eS Kndinabe i? Ga § eels, Mitha Tivennigeo Meth” Peo Mees Lalyant | Akaloathh RSC Keika Ket 0 SHARE Se Oe LN . Texpilesresisctee Q Ahunabipur A F “Kot-Kan Dye * = cz = et 4 rilice 3 ar. yaaa i 2s : arn - pine, ’ ahiwa fiend Khast Neve rns \O ¢. Rhah Dadehwalse > — ef ( Barrana gee 2 x Mani? ly y \ SS, ahad ~~ ingcanetl\ Hy re Marker ara aay | S PD ~wy ° ; Headarhad | | hl /¢Xaror : [ e A mi Vion zAYome»ry ) 9 Kang 6Khairpur } Khanpur .43°/ / \ A | aX ¢ ee | Baswvala Tob Bharyanpwialer * . ~ = é a7 mw / \Dekhairgarh | \ bhai % \ os Cl | if 25\— + i 3 as v1 °Rasalsarwala 4-9 } S ; be | »~ Vie , a Thenggarks pe iB. 7) Her bem Kalas ar | | apres SNawaloot ee: | \ i ‘i Bhutisiping?, Mangaryaia Regsar Ei : hoe st 3S a aulemacoia) a ae silpry ¢ tmarpura Bingrala, } / °Larmewala Toba } Gunoe ft san Bikaner, - GupMrd, i Goxthur Hiadicaryh \ 4 Ne. uthiger ‘ ff ua j = DhaniwaliToba \, Ua (3 cay \ Serra (_, ne Sid Thy \Bawani Eh ers o oO 4 Cwanl, Baen~ Bhadi, ue Toshamy hh ° ae f : é Pak Islamgarh \ a | ( Bangalea® x 2 sBithnrok, / ‘Sed arndru Pe pe

gas ae a. “Eka arr: ‘ ( Sataod Ch samt; A aad Ambea Domb 80 x “4 4 * Jahren rinks ‘tag Mish ly FON of A: \ anita 1 Mi RUSHEAR Secs y A, oe = " So a Mission Stations underlined in red. Outstations with red dot. 3 ‘John B, & Co..Edimr