to say that the work has advanced in every
direction. The year has been a very unhealthy one and fevers have
simply flourished, so that our nurses have been kept very busy
caring for patients often in a critical condition. During the year
we were enabled to make four visits into the country. Miss Stanton
has been more free to do evangelistic work and take long trips than
previously, and it has been a privilege for one of us doctors to
accompany her on the journeys. By taking turns, one of us could
always attend to the regular work. People are awakening everywhere,
and crowds flock to us to hear the truth and receive medical
treatment. Sometimes we dispense medicine to one or two hundred
people a day. Our stock of medicine usually gives out, and many
people have had to be turned away for lack of drugs. Everywhere
they begged us to come and visit them again. At one place a party
of women came at night to the boat where Miss Stanton and I were
staying, inviting us to go ashore and organize a church. They told
us: 'Men can hear preaching sometimes on the street; but we women
never have an opportunity to hear anything except when you ladies
come to teach us.'"
During that year, the second of their practice, the young physicians were
able to report 90 patients treated in the hospital, 134 in homes, 3,973 in
the dispensary, and 1,249 during country trips, making a total of 5,446.
Their third year was also a very prosperous one, not only in their work
among the poor, but also in the number of calls which they received from
the class of people who were able to give them ample compensation for their
services. This money was always turned into the mission treasury by the
young physicians, who also, for four years, gave their services to the
Woman's Missionary Society without salary, in return for the four years of
training which they had received at Ann Arbor. An interesting glimpse of
the impression they made upon their fellow-workers is given by a letter
from one of the missionaries written at this time: "None who know our
beloved doctors, Mary Stone and Ida Kahn, can do otherwise than thank God
for raising up such efficient and faithful workers. It is difficult to
think of any desirable quality which these two ladies do not possess. To
this their growing work gives witness."
Dr. Kahn was honoured in the latter part of the year by being appointed as
the
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