Many of the children who attend our Sunday school do not come from Christian homes. Sometimes their parents don't want them to come, but they come anyway. Occasionally their parents come in to the Sunday school and take away their children. I pray that God may give us a real ministry among the children of Haiti, and that many of them may be saved! Port-au-Prince is quite modern in many ways- the buildings aren't, but there are lots of cars and most streets are paved (about half of them since we've been here). A missionary to Haiti doesn't live in a mud hut with straw-thatched roof, at least not regu- larly! His way of life will be different but not an awful lot different from the way he lives at home. A missionary will probably find Haiti very intriguing, exasperating, charming, and confusing during his first few months. But he will like Haiti. And the tremen- dous needs of the people will pull on his heart. Truly "the harvest is great" and "how great is the darkness." "Difficulties loom large, but God is greater than the problems." We believe that God has a great work for the Church of the Nazarene to do in Haiti. July 13-I've been sick 'with a cold or flu for about a week. It hit me kind of hard and I'm not fully over it yet. I didn't have Bible school classes last week except on Tuesday and I stayed in bed most of the time. This morning I had promised to have a baptismal service at Bethel, a station about 25 miles from P. Pce., so I got up and went. Mary made me a baptismal robe out of an old sheet. That's the custom here, and they don't think it's legal if you don't have it- not only for the preacher but for the "baptisees" too. Well, I didn't exactly know what to expect because the fellow in charge of this station isn't too much on the ball anyway. I took three of the Bible school boys