Also included in the International Mission Photography Archive. and Mission des Peres Franciscains Francais au Chan-Tong Oriental(Chine) 6. Mgr WITTNER visite les oeuvres : les enfants et les vieillards de l'hospice The postcard has two photographs separated by text. The first photograph shows a priest posing with a Chinese child. The second photograph shows the priest speaking with a Chinese male. The back of the postcard is blank.
Also included in the International Mission Photography Archive. and Chinese Schoolgirls at Work, Hinghwa. Church of England Zenana Missionary Society, 27, Chancery Lane, London, W.C. 2. The photo shows two girls doing laundry. The back of the postcard is blank.
Also included in the International Mission Photography Archive., Captions for this set of lantern slides from the papers of Oliver and Jennie Logan, American Presbyterian missionaries in Hunan, were provided by their daughter Elsa., and Our gatekeeper, a special friend of Victor's, who used to talk with him quite often. I think he had lost his wife some time before, and had then married a fine Christian girl who, unfortunately, because of a terrible facial scar had not found a husband. 'Dzausy', as we called him, said, 'Why, I'll marry her!'...and the marriage turned out to be a very happy one, with the 3 children pictured here.
Also included in the International Mission Photography Archive., Captions for this set of lantern slides from the papers of Oliver and Jennie Logan, American Presbyterian missionaries in Hunan, were provided by their daughter Elsa., and This picture was taken by OTL [Oliver Tracy Logan] one day after the kids had followed him in to the hospital compound. From 'Little Stories of China,' pp.68-69: Dr. Logan loved children, and whenever he went from the first hospital...to the new one...3 blocks away, he would have a crowd of them following him and laughing and telling him, "Walk funny, Doctor, so we can laugh." The day he went down the street in his casket...the mothers and children were weeping in the doorways and crying, "We won't have anyone to make us laugh if you take our Doctor away."'"
Also included in the International Mission Photography Archive. and Chinese School Girls. Church of England Zenana Missionary Society, 27, Chancery Lane, London, W.C. The picture shows the heads of four young Chinese girls. All have on some type of native headdress. The back of the postcard is blank.
Also included in the International Mission Photography Archive., In a Buddhist Temple near Hai Chow. A hermit - The head priest. A hermit and the head priest of a Buddhist Temple are standing in front of the Buddhist Temple near Hai Chow [now Haizhou], China., and Lorenzo and Ruth Bennett Morgan were American medical missionaries in the Jiangsu and Anhui provinces of China, serving under the Presbyterian and Methodist mission boards from 1905 to 1946.
Also included in the International Mission Photography Archive. and Mission des Peres Franciscains Francais au Chan-Tong Oriental(Chine) 18. Ambulance nouveau modele qui porte un infirme a l'Hopital The photograph shows two Chinese men carrying a basket chair with an elderly Chinese man sitting in the chair. The back of the postcard is blank.
Also included in the International Mission Photography Archive. and New Women's Hospital, Foochow, China. Church of England Zenana Missionary Society, 27, Chancery Lane, London, W.C. (Series IX.-Medical.) The photo depicts six Chinese patients in the hospital. There are two women, four children, one male, and one Western nurse. The back of the postcard is blank.
Also included in the International Mission Photography Archive. and Mission des Peres Franciscains Francais au Chan-Tong Oriental(Chine) 2. Mgr. Wittner encadre de deux jeunes pretres chinois. The photograph shows three priests posed in full clerical garb. The back of the card is blank.
Also included in the International Mission Photography Archive. and Mission des Peres Franciscains Francais au Chan-Tong Oriental(Chine) 5. Le P. Irenee, le Pere chinois TCHANG et deux eleves seminaristes a Chefou" The photo shows one Western priest with two Chinese priests and one older Chinese male seated outdoors. The back of the postcard is blank.