AFRICA.

—The United Presbyterian Church of Jamaica has sent Mr. H. G. Clerk, who has been educated in the college at Kingston, as a missionary to Old Calabar, Western Africa.

—Mr. James Stewart and party reached Livingstonia early in September to begin work on the road to be made between Lakes Nyassa and Tanganyika. Dr. and Mrs. Hennington and party were at Quilimane Oct. 25.

—Dr. Laws reports the removal of the mission from Cape Maclear, the previous chief settlement of the Livingstonia Mission, to Bandawa, on the road now being made to Lake Tanganyika.

—Rev. and Mrs. David Scott and party report themselves at Blantyre Dec. 10. All were suffering somewhat from fever.

—The C. M. S. Uganda Mission finds Mtesa again on his good behavior, and the missionaries are having all desired liberty and much encouragement in their work.

—Three members of the Livingstone (Congo) Inland Mission, Messrs. Clarke, Richards and Ingham, had succeeded in reaching Stanley Pool in safety about Christmas.

—The West Central African Mission of the American Board has experienced a severe loss in the death of Rev. Walter Weldon Bagster, the leader of the enterprise. Mr. Bagster had occasion to visit the coast frequently for the furtherance of the work, and on this account was more exposed to the African fever than those who remained at Bailunda, the principal station of the mission, the altitude of which is 5,000 feet above sea level.

—Lake Ngami, to which a native mission has lately been sent, is 2,500 feet above the level of the sea. It lies between 20th and 21st parallels of south latitude, and was discovered on Aug. 1, 1849, by Dr. Livingstone and his fellow-travelers, Messrs. Oswell and Murray.