Page:Hot Springs School District v. Sisters of Mercy Female Academy of Little Rock.pdf/2

498 for public charity." Const. 1874, art. 16, § 5. The evidence shows that in the hospital there is one large room with ten or twelve beds, and four rooms with three beds in each especially for charity patients; that there are other rooms for patients who pay; that the institution is open to any worthy sick person not afflicted with a contagious or infectious disease; no one being refused on account of religious belief or inability to pay. A drug store is maintained in which prescriptions are filled and medicine furnished for those in the house. Those who are able pay for articles got at the drug store; those who are not able are furnished free. None are ever refused, whether they have money or not. A free operating room and a free clinic are maintained in the hospital, and the drug store furnishes bandages and anesthetics, and fills prescriptions for them. The institution also maintains a school for nurses. It employs, at a salary, an educated nurse and instructor in nursing from Chicago; and also employs a number of girls who are instructed in nursing by her and by the doctors at the clinic, and who assist in nursing the patients. At the time of the trial there were eight girls in the training school, besides the teachers. None of these sisters receive any compensation. All money received from any source goes to maintain the institution. They had originally a small frame hospital, a gift to the order about twenty years ago, and they have recently erected a large and expensive building, partly through donations and partly through borrowed money; and whatever surplus money might arise from any source would go to pay this loan. No funds are diverted from that institution, and it in no sense involves an idea of profit to anyone. Whatever profit is realized from those who pay goes to the benefit of those who can not pay, and to extend and enlarge the charity done there.

The articles of association or incorporation are not in the transcript, but it is a matter of general information, and the evidence shows, that the Sisters of Mercy are a benevolent and charitable organization, to teach the young, to nurse the sick and take care of the indigent and poor. It has no aim of gain or profit, and whatever it receives from any source is expended in promoting its primary objects.

Argument for Appellant
Wood & Henderson, for appellant.