La Junta Mennonite School of Nursing - Nightingale Yearbook (La Junta, CO)

 - Class of 1931

Page 13 of 68

 

La Junta Mennonite School of Nursing - Nightingale Yearbook (La Junta, CO) online collection, 1931 Edition, Page 13 of 68
Page 13 of 68



La Junta Mennonite School of Nursing - Nightingale Yearbook (La Junta, CO) online collection, 1931 Edition, Page 12
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La Junta Mennonite School of Nursing - Nightingale Yearbook (La Junta, CO) online collection, 1931 Edition, Page 14
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Page 13 text:

IW N ll hlf, W! HN ALLEN H. ERB A RHNISTER of the Gospel, called to this work at La junta in 1916. Consecrated, earnest, Spirit-filled, deeply concerned in the spiritual welfare of each patient, nurse and worker. Through his efforts and self-sacrifice, the institution has been enlarged and im- proved to our present new hospital and sanitariuln. Payzf Elffvfn

Page 12 text:

W ll N C A V 3 Z1 M FY m O -ew m G 'I FD 'J 5 ,J G 3 ,.. U' FD 1 im Q ,1 0 O v-f-. 4 D' O 5 ...i 5. 2-7 5 .1 FU D .i U' FD 1 O H-. f-r 13 O f N or C 3 fb :5 ,.. Pagf Tru '- '- .....l-aff I if .. il JI ill! 1212 BQARD QF DIRECTURS Kliller .......... ........ V ice President J. A. Heatwole .,...... ........... l 'resident C. E. Ebersole ....... ........ S ecretary A. W. Rhodes ....,, ............,................. 'l 'reasurer Allen H. Erb ........ ...... S uperintendent of Hospital Sanford Yoder ....... ......... C :eneral Board Director HE llennonite Hospital and Sanitarium is owned and controlled by the Klennonite Board of Klissions and Charities. The local Board Board. They meet once a month to discuss and decide the problems that arise. Their aim is to make the institution an asset to the Church and to the community by maintaining the Church standards, by cooperation with the medical profession, and by giving all patrons better and more efficient hospitalization. N MXN



Page 14 text:

TO THE ALUM AE cc U THE ALL'31NAIi, what a significant phrase! ,lust a little thoughtful imagination and pictures of 57 nurses in I5 states of the U. S., one in Canada and two in India come to view. VVhat an array of talent is thus displayed in this kaleidoscopic panorama. If our perspective were at sufficient altitude, we might behold this scene with our eyes at one glance, but because of the limita- tion of the senses we must be content with the psychological possibility of creating mental pic- tures. In this picture we see hospital superintendents and supervisors directing the nursing care of scores of sick folk, public health nurses providing for public health and sanitation, private duty nurses attending, with minute carefulness, the bedside needs of the patient and executing with conscien- tious precision the orders of the physician, and happy homemakers using their nursing education as a stepping stone to improved physical condition of all the members of the home. We see the super- visors at the nurse's desk and with womanly dig- nity receiving the physicians instructions or bend- ing in lowly service over the body of a suffering patient who needs just one more touch to relieve that aching paing or accurately weighing the pa- tient's diet and preparing the menus so that the nourishment taken may have a therapeutic value. VVe see the public health nurses going into the home of some indigent family where some con- tagious disease is suspected. Though exposing her- self, she heroically lifts this poor family out of their sickness and provides for protection against further contagion. Before she leaves she breathes a prayer to the Father above to bless that poor home with His presence and in passing she gives a smile and a word of encouragement to the struggling mother. We see the private duty nurse watching for the smallest symptom that may give any help in the treatment of her patient. She is careful about the little things the patient Wants and speaks with tenderness and acts with kindness. As the shades of evening descend, she brings to the dis- quieted soul of her patient the soothing music of the Shepherd Psalm and with a soft prayer she bids her patient rest for the night. We see the contented homemaker singing at her task of house- keeping, often regarded as prosaic. Her knowledge is put to practical use in the planning for each in- dividual member of the family. To this group of heroic, God-fearing, self- sacrificing alumnae your 'Alma Nlater wishes to Page Tfwflfvr express their appreciation. YVe would be pleased to give you this appreciation in person-face to face, but we shall use the medium which is now in the hands of every alumnae, The Nightingale, the annual of the class of 1931. VVe appreciate the three years of hard work you did here, both in theory and in practice, and the personal acquaintance which was established in the contacts which were made. The praises of our patients and the growth of our work reflect your toil and our recollection of your own special, par- ticular personality proves our personal acquaint- ance. Your personalities are the warp and woof of the fabric of our training school. Diversified threads in the fabric make the perfect cloth. So your individualisms go to make up the complete tone of our School of Nursing. Your work, your study, your love, your joy, your perseverance, your prayers, your worship of God are all wrought into the character of the School. The Hospital ac- knowledges its debt to you. But our dependence upon you did not cease when we gave you your diploma. Every factory is judged by its finished product. Also schools are not judged by their buildings, equipment, or cata- log, but by their finished product, the alumnae. Upon you rests the burden to prove the merits of your hospital. As you think in terms of f'The Nlennonite Hos- pital School of Nursing what are the predomi- nant characteristics which come to your attention? lf the institution has functioned in your life as it should these characteristics which come to your attention are the things which give your school its individuality and these are the ideals which we hold you responsible to maintain. While we are thinking about them let us review them. They are full obedience to God, reverence for the Bible as the Word of God, loyalty to the church, the high- est possible standards of professional efliciency, un- selfish devotion to the welfare of the sick, an atti- tude that regards menial toil as high and holy, and a consecration that holds our life not as our own. Dear Alumnae, dare we justly expect you to live this ideal in the stern realities of actual life? Is there not in it a reasonable and Christian standard of life? Are you not all carrying the responsibility of lifting this standard? Will you not all say, God helping me, I will lift high this banner in the world. For the degree of success you have already attained we appreciate you and thank you. To the degree in which you feel you have failed and want to step higher we support you.

Suggestions in the La Junta Mennonite School of Nursing - Nightingale Yearbook (La Junta, CO) collection:

La Junta Mennonite School of Nursing - Nightingale Yearbook (La Junta, CO) online collection, 1930 Edition, Page 1

1930

La Junta Mennonite School of Nursing - Nightingale Yearbook (La Junta, CO) online collection, 1932 Edition, Page 1

1932

La Junta Mennonite School of Nursing - Nightingale Yearbook (La Junta, CO) online collection, 1934 Edition, Page 1

1934

La Junta Mennonite School of Nursing - Nightingale Yearbook (La Junta, CO) online collection, 1936 Edition, Page 1

1936

La Junta Mennonite School of Nursing - Nightingale Yearbook (La Junta, CO) online collection, 1938 Edition, Page 1

1938

La Junta Mennonite School of Nursing - Nightingale Yearbook (La Junta, CO) online collection, 1941 Edition, Page 1

1941


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