Our other Bible school students are also making progress. In addition to studying during this summer session, they have been active in practical work. There are seven regularly attending now, and they have been carrying on station meetings, cottage prayer meetings, and visitation evangelism. They have been winning people to the Lord right in their homes. Of course, our boys have a lot to learn; but they continue to be the most heartening aspect of our labors here in the south. In the north we have a dozen who have started taking a correspondence course of Bible study. September 15-This finds us back in Port-au-Prince after three weeks' vacation in the mountains, just 14 miles south and 4,000 feet up from our home. We enjoyed the delightful change of climate and had a good rest at the home of an elderly lady missionary, affectionately known by the many missionaries she entertains in her home as "Granny" Holdeman. We did some reading and writing, Mary accomplished quite a lot of sewing, and I even started to learn to play the trombone-maybe next vacation time I'll find time to practice again! Last week I began the last month of the Bible school summer session. We have also been busy mak- ing preparations for the fall semester which will start October 7th. We will continue to run the Bible school part-time, each afternoon, Tuesdays through Fridays -we just haven't enough time to do more. Then our two primary day schools will open in October. They are requiring quite a bit of planning-making bench- es and tables and blackboards, deciding on books and methods, buying supplies. One primary school is located in Port-au-Prince, held in the La Saline church; the other is at Canal Bois, just outside of Gonaives in the north.