. Peking : a social survey conducted under auspices of the Princeton University Center in China and the Peking Young Men's Christian Association. cent)are over fifty years of age, while of the entire group of 49, 18are in the Old Ladies Home, ten are students in school, two aremission workers, two are servants, one is a teacher and one is inthe Womens Poorhouse. The Chi Hua Men has a particularlylarge proportion, nine out of 13, of single member familiesthat are women. In the Teng Shih Kou, a little over one-halfof the single member families are women, while in the Pei Tangthe proportion is on


. Peking : a social survey conducted under auspices of the Princeton University Center in China and the Peking Young Men's Christian Association. cent)are over fifty years of age, while of the entire group of 49, 18are in the Old Ladies Home, ten are students in school, two aremission workers, two are servants, one is a teacher and one is inthe Womens Poorhouse. The Chi Hua Men has a particularlylarge proportion, nine out of 13, of single member familiesthat are women. In the Teng Shih Kou, a little over one-halfof the single member families are women, while in the Pei Tangthe proportion is only one-third. It is rather striking that thefamilies with two, three, four, five and six members should eachrepresent 10 or 11 percent of the entire number of is, 10 percent of all the families have two members, 11percent have three, and so on. As would be expected from theaverage size of the families in the different churches, the ChiHua Men has the highest proportion of large families. Ninepercent of its families have ten or more members, while only fivepercent of the Teng Shih Kou families have more than nine CHURCH SURVEY. H-CHINCSC S-MANCHUS ||m-MONGOLS Figure 27: Distribution by Race members. None of the Pei Tang families have over eight mem-bers. Even in the medium-sized families, those with from six tonine members, the Chi Hua Men has almost as many propor-tionately as the Teng Shih Kou and more than twice as many asthe Pei Tang. Almost half (42 percent) of the Pei Tang fam-ilies are single member families, while only 19 percent of theChi Hua Men families have only one member. DISTRIBUTION BY RACE Of the families studied, 62 percent were Chinese, 35 percentManchus, and 3 percent Mongols. The average size of theChinese and Manchu families was the same, , but the Mongolfamilies had on the average 6 members. This last, however, canhardly be called a true average, as there were but ten Mongolfamilies included in the study. The race division by persons ispra


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1920, booksubjectsocials, bookyear1921