L due form. This land was reclaimed from the bush by the students themselves, who raise yams, taro, and bananas in abundance, and have also planted several thousand bread-fruit trees, cocoa-palms, and other fruit-bearing trees ; so that this noble institution... A Lady's Cruise in a French Man-of-war - Page 162by Constance Frederica Gordon Cumming - 1882 - 365 pagesFull view - About this book
| 1882 - 594 pages
...educational business by the purchase of fifty acres of land, quite apart from all existing villages. This land was reclaimed from the bush by the students...is almost, if not altogether, self-supporting. From it« commencement to the present day, fully two thousand teachers and native Ministers have here been... | |
| Laulii Willis - 1889 - 304 pages
...quite apart from all other settlements; so Malua was selected, and thirty acres of land purchased in due form. This land was reclaimed from the bush by...abundance, and have also planted several thousand bread fruit trees, cocoa-palms, and other fruit-bearing trees; so that this noble institution is almost,... | |
| Mrs. Laulii Willis - Samoan Islands - 1889 - 255 pages
...quite apart from all other settlements; so Malua was selected, and thirty acres of land purchased in due form. This land was reclaimed from the bush by...abundance, and have also planted several thousand bread fruit trees, cocoa-palm*, and other fruit-bearing trees; so that this noble institution is almost,... | |
| Laulii Willis - Samoan Islands - 1889 - 318 pages
...quite apart from all other settlements; so Malua was selected, and thirty acres of land purchased in due form. This land was reclaimed from the bush by...abundance, and have also planted several thousand bread fruit trees, cocoa-palms, and other fruit-bearing trees; so that this noble institution is almost,... | |
| Arminianism - 1882 - 1008 pages
...educational business by the purchase of fifty acres of land, quite apart from all existing villages. This land was reclaimed from the bush by the students...thousand bread-fruit trees, cocoa-palms, and other f ruitrbearing trees ; so that this noble institution is almost, if not altogether, self-supporting.... | |
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