ar sorrmrraremmmsom tanita bss AA tlt Oo dads tedden quarters,” and stating that we had all the appli- ances known to modern science, and so forth. 1 suppose we did have some things better than anything else there, such as the electric-light bath, sprays, etc. But anyway we felt that it was by the blessing of the Lord that we got into that eighteen-room house as we did, without a cent of help from outside. We soon had a demand for a country place— another big proposition; more rent, more facili- ties, more expenses to meet. It is fashionable to have 2 country place there, and those things come high. But it seemed very essential to the work to have a place out of the city, so we took the matter to the Lord. Within one week we had secured a favorable location at a reasonable rental. We got a couple of family rooms furnished. We needed furniture for patients’ rooms. Then there fell due a note for $200 that must be paid at | once. It happened that a patient came to us | who was recommended from Skodsborg, Den- mark, and we made an agreement for a year, se- curing the amount in advance. This gave us enough to pay the $200 and get the furnishings for another patient's room. No more had we gotten the necessary furnishings than in came another patient to occupy it. Then we got an- other room ready, and along came another pa- tient for that. In this way we have had to get along, putting in a little here and there, and making it go the best we could. God has supplied our needs, not our wants, and we have found that it is just as much his blessing to make fifty cents do the work of a dollar as it is to give us the whole dollar. . Now then we come to offer you a share in this work. You can’t perhaps go South yourself, but you can help just the same. The workers who do go must have something to do with. They can’t make bricks without straw. We have —14— tn vt i 0 ened oh I Are BAGH BR KEPT ol On Ri - BAAS Bo + ol I NE EE Wm pairs (AY BA Mh We Beem Ban Br WOR 8