On her last term of service in Korea before her retirement, she went to superintend the building of Wonju Hospital. She set up a tuberculosis hospital to which four hundred patients were soon admitted and Iter work in the treatment of leprosy gained a reputation throughout the country. Her return to Canada in 1962 upon retirement was not permanent. She was invited back to Korea by the World Mission of Lepers for two years and has since remained in that country. In 1966 she received the Elizabeth Blackwell award give by the Medical Women's International Association for "outstanding service to mankind". Included in this service was her establishment of mobile tuberculosis clinics and a leper mission in for triweekly treatments of sufferers from the disease. MARION ( MACLENNAN ) JARDINE Mrs. Jardine was born 1910 in Glen Valley , P. E . 1. and grew up in Charlottetown where she was an active member of Zion Church. She taught school for a year and then entered the Prince Edward Island School of Nursing. However after one year of training and due to illness, she was forced to leave. Marion graduated from the Presbyterian Missionary and Deaconess Training School (later Ewart College) in 1936, and was designated to work in the " Chalmers Jack Mission " located in a place known as "the Tank" near Colonial Mine, between and Sydney Mines , . In 1938, while still with the Mission, she married Andrew Jardine . Marion and her husband moved to Freetown, P. E. I. , moving then to East Royalty where they became members of St. Columba Presbyterian Church in Marshfield . Through the years she was a strong supporter of the Women's Missionary Society. In 1952 Mrs. Jardine was instrumental in re-organizing the South Granville W.M.S . and in 1954 she and Miss Mary MacKenzie (her first cousin, see below), who was also born in Glen Valley , organized the Churchill W.M.S. Mrs Jardine currently resides at the Atlantic Baptist Nursing Home. DR . MARGARET WEBSTER Dr. Webster is the only child of the late G. Carlyle Webster , minister of Zion Church (1931-1953). Margaret was called to a ministry in education. Educated at Prince of Wales College, Charlottetown and University of in London. She served the Presbyterian Church in several positions: National Girl's Work Secretary, Organization Secretary for the W.M.S ., and the Canadian Council of Churches National Secretary for Canadian Girls in Training. Her outstanding contribution to the Presbyterian Church in Canada , came through her association with Ewart College. She was Professor of Christian Education and Principal from 1957 to 1983. During her years at the College, many exciting changes took place. The name was changed from "The Presbyterian Missionary and Deaconess Training School" to 131 -