Each One in His Place
      
      
        The physicians of the Health Institute should not feel compelled to
      
      
        do work that helpers can do. They should not serve in the bathroom or
      
      
        in the movement room, expending their vitality in doing what others
      
      
        might do. There should be no lack of helpers to nurse the sick and
      
      
        to watch with the feeble ones who need watchers. The physicians
      
      
        should reserve their strength for the successful performance of their
      
      
        professional duties. They should tell others what to do. If there is a
      
      
        want of those whom they can trust to do these things, suitable persons
      
      
        should be employed and properly instructed, and suitably remunerated
      
      
        for their services.—
      
      
        Testimonies for the Church 3:177, 178
      
      
        (1872).
      
      
         [361]
      
      
        376