OSAKA-KOBE (HYOGO)
51
METHODIST EPISCOPAL CH. SOUTH, U.S.A. MURRAY, Rev. D. A., M.A., Teacher, Gov-
Rev. B. W. and Mrs. Waters
Miss N. B. Gaines
Miss L. Strider
KYOTO
AMERICAN BOARD MISSION
Rev. Geo. E. and Mrs. Albrecht
J. C. Berry, M.D. and Mrs. Berry Edmund Buckley
Mrs. Sara Buckley, M.D.
Rev. C. M. and Mrs. Cady
Rev. J. D. Davis, D.D. and Mrs. Davis Rev. D. W. Learned, PH.D. and wife Rev. A. W. and Mrs. Stanford
Miss Mary F. Denton
Miss M. E. Wainwright
Mis Mathilde H. Meyer
G. C. Foulk
A. W. Beall
Miss Helen E. Frazer
Miss Eliza Talcott
AMERICAN PRESBYTERIAN MISSION
Rev. J. B. and Mrs. Porter
Rev. J.P. Hearst, PH.D. and Mrs. Hearst
FRENCH CAtholic MISSION
L'Abbé H. Vasselon, vicar general L'Abbé A. Vagner
GULICK, Dr. THEODORE W. and Mrs., Dai- san Koto Chu Gakko, 2 Yoshidamachi
HAMILTON SHARP, E. and Mrs., Dai San
Kote Chu Gakko, Yoshidamachi
1
ernment School, Ainomachi, Marutama- chi, Sagaru
NAGOYA
AMERICAN BOARD MISSION
Rev. Claude M. Severance
AMERICAN METHODIST EPISCOPAL MISSION
Rev. J. C. and Mrs. Ambler
METHODIST PROTESTANT MISSION
Bev. F. C. and Mrs. Klein, 101 Minami
Buheicho
Rev. L. L. and Mrs. Albright, 99, do. Rev. E. H. and Mrs. Van Dyke, 99, do. Miss A. L. Forrest, 84, Minami Kaji-
yacho
WYCLIFFE COLLEGE (Church of England)
MISSION (Toronto)
Rev. J. Cooper and Mrs. Robinson, 43,.
Higashi Katahamachi Sanchome Rev. J. Macqueen Baldwin, do.
ΟΚΑΥΑΜΑ
AMERICAN BOARD MISSION
Rev. J. H. and Mrs. Pettee Rev. S. S. White Miss Alice Adams Miss Nina Stewart Miss Carrie M. Telford Miss Ida A. McLennan
DAVIS, A. B., B.A., instructor, Chu Gakko
KOBE (HYOGO)
Kobe is the foreign port of the adjoining town of Hyogo and was opened to foreign trade in 1868. It is finely situated on the Idzumi-nada, at the gate of the far-famed Inland Sea. The harbour is good and affords safe anchorage for vessels of almost any size. The two towns face the landlocked water covered with white sails, while behind, at a distance of about a mile, rises a range of picturesque and lofty hills, some of which attain an altitude of about 2,500 feet, and the steep sides of which are partly covered with pines. Kobe and Hyogo stretch for some three miles along this strip of land between the hills and the water. The Foreign Concession at Kobe is well laid out, the streets are broad and clean, and lighted with gas. There is a Municipal Council consisting of the Prefect, the Foreign Consuls, and three elected members of the community. The Bund has a fine stone embankment and extends the whole length of Kobe. The foreign houses are neatly built, and the Sannomiya railway station, within three minutes' walk of the Concession, has a very English look. The railway terminus is at the other end of Kobe, where it meets Hyogo, and there are extensive carriage works adjoining the station. A rice-cleaning mill was started here in 1885. The foreign concession at Kobe is the “model settlement" of Japan. There is a good Club and a spacious recreation ground at the East end of the settlement. The Union Protestant Church and a French Roman Catholic Church are in the Concession, and there is also a native Protestant Church in Kobe town. The Hyogo Hotel is situated on the Bund, at