26i TO START 



SANITARIUM WORK 



vision, and when they see the results and get 

 the whole proceeds for themselves. Get a piece 

 of land; ten acres will do, and fifty is not too 

 much; it should be near a town or an institution 

 where the product may be sold. 



It is better to pay five hundred dollars for an 

 acre of land close to residences than a hundred 

 dollars an acre for outlying land, because it is 

 cheaper to get stable manure to it, and it is more 

 accessible to the cultivator, besides being easier 

 to show and closer to the market; and because 

 the rise in the value of the land is greater and 

 more certain. 



A temporary shelter or house should be put 

 up for superintendence and storage; tents and 

 shacks will serve for the cultivators who desire 

 to live on the land. But most of them will go to 

 and fro from their residences. 



Everything depends upon the superintendent, 

 who should be capable of undertaking the whole 

 affair; finding the land; raising the money; hav- 

 ing the land plowed and getting stable or other 

 manure put upon it. Then let the superinten- 

 dent see all those who might help to buy seeds 



