Title |
Correspondence of missionaries in Shantung Province, China, 1926 |
Scanning Technician |
Nicole Antal |
Collection Number and Name |
Accn1107 bx 3 fd 7 |
Description |
Correspondence and reports from missionaries in Shantung Province, China, 1926: 1) North China Kung Li Hui: Report of the General Secretaries to the Council, May 1926 / H.C. Chang, Robert E. Chandler (3 pages); 2) Notes on Staff Meeting, June 3, 1926 (2 pages); 3) Letter dated 7 June 1926 from Mrs. Lyman V. (Muriel) Cady at Tsinan, China, to Mrs. (Minnie Case) Ellis at Lintsing (2 pages); (4) Letter dated 12 June 1926 from B. J. Scoville in Saratoga, California, to Rev. Emery W. Ellis at Tehchow, China (1 page); (5) Letter dated 15 June 1926 from Minnie Case at Techow to friends (2 pages); (6) Letter dated 21 June 1926 from Robert E. Chandler to Emery W. Ellis, with an undated letter (but summer 1926) from Minnie Case begun on its verso and continued on 2 further leaves (6 pages, 5 scans total); (7) Letter dated 1 July 1926 from Helen Chandler at Pei Tai Ho to Mrs. Ellis (9 pages); (8) Letter dated 7 July 1926 from Maud M. McGwigan at Tsingtao to Miss (Edith) Tallmon and Dr. Susan Tallmon Sargent (4 pages); (9) Letter begun 14 July 1926, continued 15 July upon arrival at Pei Tai Ho, addressed to Dr. Francis, unsigned but perhaps by Emery W. Ellis, as author seems to be from Tehchow; (10) Letter dated 24 July 1926 from Maud M. McGwigan at Tsingtao to Mrs. Sargent, enclosing Dr. Cooke's letter describing the storm in Lintsing; (11) "Order of worship, Sunday, July 25, 1926; (12) Williams-Porter Hospitals, report for 1926, by Lois Pendleton (3 p.), with a note from Minnie Ellis asking recipient to send on to the Sargents; (13) Letter begun 28 September 1926 from Edith (Tallmon) Park at Morgan Hill to her sister Clara Jones (8 pages, photocopied); (14) Last page of a typed letter from Myra L. Sawyer |
Creator |
Chandler, Robert E.; Chang, H. C.; Cady, Muriel P.; Scoville, B. J.; Chandler, Helen; McGwigan, Maud M.; Ellis, Emery W.; Tallmon, Edith C.; Sawyer, Myra L. |
Subject |
Missionaries, Medical--China--Correspondence; Missionaries--China--Correspondence; Hospitals--China--Linqing; Hospitals--China--Dezhou |
Digitization Specifications |
Original scanned on Epson Expression 10000 XL and saved as 400 ppi TIFF. Display image generated in CONTENTdm |
Publisher |
Digitized by J. Willard Marriott Library, University of Utah |
Date |
1926 |
Format |
application/pdf |
Type |
Text |
Identifier |
1107-03-07 (Correspondence, 1926) |
Rights Management |
This material may be protected by copyright. Permission required for use in any form. For further information please contact the Manuscripts Division, Special Collections, J. Willard Marriott Library, University of Utah. |
ARK |
ark:/87278/s63t9hzw |
Setname |
uum_sbts |
ID |
1013212 |
Reference URL |
https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s63t9hzw |
Title |
Page 34 |
OCR Text |
Show Page two. But the committee has learned much from the first step and is wisely waiting until Spring to reopen the clinic for weekly examinations and health lectures. The plan now is to have a large opening day with a play illustrating the value of Child Welfare Work, accompanied by a tea, with invitations to the influential people of the city. We are hoping that this work will lead to regularly established Pre- and Post-natal clinics in the city, a field of service greatly needed, and with large opportunities. If this can be financed it will grow to be one of the most vital parts of our work. Health of School Children. The usual semi-annual physical emaminations of students of Porter Middle School and Wyckoff Memorial School were put through more promptly than heretofore at the beginning of the fall semester. And the follow-up work, especially in the radical treatment for trachoma, has been more thorough than previously in Porter Middle School. A regular series of Health Talks was given in each of the two schools during the fall term. Foreign Personnel Changes. We have missed during the latter half of the year the strong leadership and tireless devotion of Dr. and Mrs, Tucker who built up the hospital and have carried on so splendidly these years. We also have missed Miss Sawyer, the mother of our Nurses Training School, And we trust all are benefiting from their sojourn in America. Dr. Parsons has been acting as Superintendant of the Hospital and trying to spend half time in language study, (and this is net always easy for an executive to do). And although the time has not come for the second year language examinations, he has made splendid progress both in the language and in * things Chinese', Dr. Pendleton returned in July accompanied by her mother and little sister who spent four months visiting Techow and North China, Forward Steps Professionally. We have taken at least two forward steps professionally this year. In the first place we have established regular formal Surgical rounds of the whole hospital once a week, and general Medical rounds once a week. Also we have a weekly doctors' seminar where all fatal cases are discussed and a paper presented each time by one of the doctors. Material Improvements. The past year has shown no notable material improvements, but a good start has been made on the fund for our much needed X-ray machine. Dr. Parsons has signed up to take the X-ray course at P. U. M. C. this coming Spring in faith that we may be able to purchase the X-ray plant this coming summer. The present rehabilitated electric plant will run the X-ray providing we purchase storage batteries, In-patients, 1925 1926 Men - 502 627 Women and Children - 133 408 Average stay in days (men)--- 16.6 20.6 H M (women)--- 15,7 12.9 |
Format |
application/pdf |
Setname |
uum_sbts |
ID |
1013200 |
Reference URL |
https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s63t9hzw/1013200 |