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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1936-02-20, Page 6J. New Gunboat Floated CANADA - vi * . First in Radio Recently Denmark celebrated Its /tenth, anniversary of national ■ radio ■ broadcasting and on -that occasion a 'SUTTey ‘was made of the1 progrfess that v ■ han-been, achieved under [ that system, jt .praves to .be rather'astonishing. Ton years ago radio broadcasting, was made a public utility.' A national ‘ board of governors was setup and "a general manager, .appointed. The ma- - . nager operates.the system under the. direction of ■ the board. . When started- there "were 28,140 radio £ets in Denmark. Last year ,‘tihere were'583,109. That is 1G.4 per cent of the population. They, pay a license -fee, as in Britain and Canada- the amount being $2.50.. "These figures are somewhat ;aston- ,: ishipg. Many persons think the United '' States has tlie largest proportion of ■ /radios according to. population, .'but according to the international Radio . Office at-Geneva, Denmark, leads .with .'the United State's-.! second and, .Great . . Britain .thir.d. Sweden is fourth. —Sas­ katoon Star-Phoenix. ‘ Hotel Ruling •. • .An Alberta court has ruled that- a . //hotel keeper ‘‘is not obliged .to- accom-, • • ' mbdate a guest on trust,” but doubt­ less most gilests will still be accepted ? ■ / at fade value, plus- a. bit- of baggage. — /^ Toronto Globe. ' ' ' . :. - ■ • * $ Progressive Japan ■ . Japan’s entry of a. hockey team at . the Olympic games is just another "illustration that .tlie littl’6 country—. little until recently—never fnisses a I chance to demonstrate that she’s in' line with Western ■progressiv'eness-y- and then some. — Winnipeg Tribune.■ * * * * One Pig Arrived I f There has . been, more snow in the’ district about Stratford than we have had in this section. There’s a snow heli there^ which takes a strip up to- . ward Listowel, across through Brus- 1 .dels and' Wingham and then south, of Stratford as far as jKelly’s Siding. •Much show in there^ A/ " Roads have been blocked and far­ mers have not been able to get to the. | cjty. The pigs which are of 200 lbs, ■ ©r a little over the inafik .are due to. be off and play part in the develop- . > meat of .the.bacon |ndustry, but the pigs have had a few> days more to live ", . on account of the-blocked roads, r .„ . -§inj-th.,. Q.f-/the.. ^hyte-rBackjng Co., at'Stratford, says on a recent day only one lone pig. came to the .plant. ■ Just one. An. ordinary . day would- „ Taring from 4p0 to 500." - • L W© do know that if a person was the oue -lone guest-at a hotel where four or five, hundred people generally stayed-,, he could? if he desired,, have ? .. all manner of service. The folk fn the hotel, desiring t O'Sep pea? busy, would be romping all oyer ,the place to see. what each .in turn might do for the ' comfort and entertainment of the one' guest. Whether, it work's out that way With one Tdue pig. turning. up at ’a packing plant instead of four of five '• • hundred is something on which we . lack definite ijifo-rmatiop. It may be that onp Ione pig would just, have to go- in a room and wait until others . 1 came to join him. It is rather unlike­ ly .he Would be shown „over the-plant, because ?if he were there might be ( much about he would .:pot understand '’"and more still 'which he would have no reason to enjoy. >. Ttmre is no moral to- the story, but' Jus’, the sanje that one Ippe’pig which was taken to the .packing plant when the roads were blocked had'something 1 about him in the papervs. —r Pet'T'o''"/> ]?. ■ ,.r.cr Elusive Sleep The Di .imp babies em [to sleep, in a few s <-mds, -Dr.; Alan \Roy Dafoe testii'As. Before the fif'h' girl has been, bundif.-l in frnav'y outdoor clothes, the first i- ash-ep. Ma'ny will 'envy them this gift. How many ifisomiacs toss- ■ lrfi? on‘-b‘d.> from Halifax to Victoria ■would not chang.-' pianos for a wtyle- with the q’inviple’s; Blissful rest; how-ofL-n B o!'.;dr.« >1?-. T'{ Imilton . Spectator. y '' r ■ i e Doesn’t Like Name "■Ymi 'ir/iy .I'link it ar nice friendly wav t.j CdB the I’tf.man porter "Geortre." but he df>f.;n't like j*. He much prtfm's 'flm quite tT'gnlflcu] term -of “Port'?.-" So says (L orgp A. K<d).v, vicArt. of the. Pull- ffiafi Company, a/L he mi'aht fo know. .Morf'fher, thorn ar^ a lot. Of white 'Gr><)t‘gcs w>’io-don't like the Pullman "Georg' s.’’ Tn fac-t, rnports Mr.. Kelly, they ham' a socRtv called the PoiUprs 'Goii'Ce I vol havr-mr. 'hers, /'u'ch on<- U<>)V ’.’|A white Gforgcc; Pul Imai? '’llPrevorftion..of (.'ailing Pullman ” a several t.h’o’1 .and Th'm- n ‘C'-.i’i itfim r;ii!i 1 ,f<B- >, -'z-rji' ■> d it is fpiirc act- '■Tn - ploy colored .gentlemen as porters seems “wropt in. mystery." There/is no foundation, for tb|» belief .that President Lincoln suggested it to George M., Pullman, mention of whose name may be tie reason 'why porters hr.e called “George.” -. At any pate, colored porterswere first, employed in tjhe late seventies- or early eighties. Six-or. seven years ago when the-rail­ roads were really prosperous the Pull­ man Company - gave- employment to 11,000 porters, chefs and waiters, but at the present time there are only about 7,000. The pay varies according '.to the-job onAhe -tjaihs- but the av- .erage m $90 a month. Those who come - contact with “the public, of course, do pretty well in tips, and the men in regular employment are comfort­ able.—St. Thomas-Times Journal, ■.1 ' t' * - ‘Type It Also! , If there is one petty annoyance more than another in the ordinary, of­ fice. humdrum, -it is. to gpt a- letter ;or document .with somebody's signature’ attached, which nohodyin the Office is able, to decipher. If the person in question‘lias a. tittle, occupying some position in a company or. organization, ife is passible'to address him in that, capacity, but that does not solve the question of the -name' of the man to whqm a?n answer, must- be sent,. Where there ;'is no. official'.position,, driven to a last resort, clipping off’ the signature, and pasting it on the answering letter may be one-way out,, but it.simply shifts the. burden on the post officb, and .in any event is an abominable , waste • of time and pa­ tience. . ... While appreciating the artistic in- .genuity -of devising a signature which is hard to copy, for perfectly obvious, reasons, legibilty should not bp sacri­ ficed im the process. ■ . </• ' Whatever else a man may write, he at least ought- to be able' to write his own namelo that it can be read, and if this is no't possible,, as is the case with some of these glorious hie­ roglyphics which suffice for a signa­ ture, then, In fairness to the man who has to read it at the other end, ,R might, at 'least be jiyped below - the apotheosis of his name. — Halifax Chronicle. / . Wrongfully Possessed The Inferiority complex Is like wealth. It would be a blessing if the right people had it/— Montreal Star. .1* J*’ . Driving People Crazy « Modern;business and social customs have’ su.cceedej'”Tn imposing"’ such"’a' strain on men. and women that they are breaking down mentally- at a rate that is, startling. t Dr:- Montgomery, director of' the Ontario Hospital at Whitiby, speak­ ing to the Women’s Canadian Club at. Bowmanvill.e recently, said that fifty per cent, of those suffering from mental diseases were victims 'of the excessive stress, thht modern civiliza­ tion entjails., . ' / ' In Ontario, "there -are about 2,000 new patients admitted to the mental hospitals in a year. There are many more., mentally-deranged individuals who Ido not get into hospitals Sarnia Canadian Observer/ Advertising Pays Tourist advertising pays. Mr. J, D. Burton, .chairman -of the Yarmouth tourist committee says an advertise- 'fnent in' a New York paper brought two" hundred di'toct queries, and on.e tourist faanily paid for the whole sea­ son’s advertising in goods purchased at Yarmouth stores. Direct evidence of that sort cannot be thrown lightly "aside.—St. John. Telegraph-Journal? . ’ - , * * Horticultural Hint Rhubarb, say.s an oculist,- is good for the eyes. Why not try Crossing it with a grapefruit.—Kitchener R1-cord. Look? Like a Safe/ Bet ' Tlie- claim that Queen Mary will /■’ ribbon of the- At- 32 knots -and’ 3’5 if / ..o-‘durable/ force .-?:i that Clydebank to bet on it. —. St. ’/■; : . George V. " —In him has pas-^-f] fiofn' the ^arth' thp very mould' and pattern of a con- st.itutiona-1 monarch., wise, courageous, considerate,’un’affe'-ted, siniple. Whe­ ther-'he was a great man' those who will may dispute. That he was a rnan great - in' kingship, if greatness' in kingship consists in a faultless dis­ charge of t'hht high cffice, belongs 'to .the r/alm of, facts indisputable. — London Spectator.' - * * ” Their Wheat Problem Too The millers’ proposal (that' South A^-i'-an Wheat suiplus should be Ire- ',Tiiro-< d f.from the market) ’could ' characteristics of a small .cruiser, pity* Displacing -2,000 tons, the staunchThe'man-of-war. Erie, latest type gunboat'having many cl: tured as she was .launched in Brookjm/ N.Y,,. N-avy Yard drydock. ^X^'liri'^rcrmfr'e-uns little hating ship is 382 feet long jud carries four six-inch guns and four afiti-airc.iatt guns. " ■ii................... 1 " " ' ' / z be carried out in oue way—by the Government agreeing in advance ,to buy tlie surplus at a high price. ^nd? dispose of itoverseas -for what it' will fetch. The'Government has made? serious blunders over wheat, .but we can scarcely believe’ it w.ill commit' this crowning blunder; the effect of which would.be to drive production" higher and higher.—The Cape Argus.: "‘/ ' ■ • A Forgotten Lesson It is distinctly disconcerting to find that aHhough prosperity has returned to ‘South ■ Africa in full, spate, people, are not' giving so- freely to, charity .now as they did during the..years of the .'-depression.' Poss-ibly this is due’ to an entirely mistaken; idea that there is. less .need - for. giving in good | times than' in ba.de Prosperity, uh^1, fortunately, is never as comprehensive as one would like it to be, and therp are- always vast number®’ to whom the-difference between ..bad' times and better times- is scarcely noticeable.—. Johannesburg; Times. . ; ■, * “7T rrr---------—:— , Officials of the Manhattan • um announced that their electric eel would be tickled -with a copper hook, and stimulated ipto lighting h. -neon, bulk in front ’of its tank, three times a day. Raid Trainer V. W. Coates: “He was glad to-light his bulb ' at' first, but . then he g-ot accustomed to. the wires and lefused to shoot juice -into them. Now I have to' tickle him. If he’s feeling right he lights two bulbs.” ' • Aquari- I ■ ■ /-Farm. Problems; Conducted by Prof;essor Henry G- Bell ■ ■ ■ , . :......'-^4-...---------------------------- with the co-operation of the various departments of ‘ Ontario Agricultural College. 'The.-business of farming■’'< is' yearly TecbMffiir more "Hnd-— uDou'tfacts 'that have .been gnthvfvd.re- x/rcliifc l'i restock land 1'r.vestvek .manafit­ ment, crop pr'Oduetkon,- soil, ni ana-gem ent. ■ d.ispase-’and in/e/t control and buSl.n.es'S organization . of ■ the- farming Industry. Individual- problems involving . one/ or more" of these,.'and many other phases of .agriculture, engage the attention ,-.©x- Ontario,'farmers froni d-ay to .day. Duty ing the winter months, there ,ist a little .-m^u^-vmLe/fxm_s.tudy of .the ■.m.Qsx.>aciiief problems. ’. "■ . Through this column secure the .latest.vinformation' Ing to their, difficulties. "A : _ this seifvice I'rofes,so|f Bell has prepared the fo'l/lowing typical • dicate tlie. information given -in order that' a. s.wer- c4h be nffide..- If answer is desired ...... - stamped--and ■ ..addressed, .envelope ■ for reply./ Address all inquiries to ■ Pro­ fessor Henry G. Bell," Rooni' 4.21, 73, Adelaide^ St.' \V Farmers may ./ ■ pertain1-- To introduce' 1 problems to ih.- whicl'i should be satisfactory an- by letter enclose.. _. / 'r ;. all "inquiries ' to Pro- Henry G. Bell," Rooni ' 421, '73, '//.. '/V., Toronto'. Ontario, ' ' ♦ * - Questionit— ' . • ... . .. ■ J, E.H., . York — Last summer our grain was full of mustard,’ although ' this has not been a bad weed in • our neighborhood .for many years. . What can I do to'clean it out?.. Answer,: Owing to. the great' vitality- of the seed, Mustard is a "very‘hard • wedd to eradicate. The seeds once" :he ‘ground, -.live for/years and i win back the th: ntic by doing. n-eceg.’icrv' ea.r. - when it is kr.-?.1 Scots willing Catharines Stand Something “Springy1 / I- in bl continue to germinate, as they are *' brO * r. zs r, cnnfaAa Uonna.i' Xak bor l ight neaWhe .surface. Hence- it . As- patience, a. great deal .of Ja- ■ and. a long t.ipne to get'rid of the weed • when it' once gets-^possession of the land, When present only in< bes? .method, providing the pulling is. dope before seeds'have formed/, and (fas person's pulling in a; hurry cabMt wait to examine fo.r seed, it. is / best .to put the weeds, as "they cahppi If ’pulled, in- bundles wlier’e they be burned when.'dry. -Wben fields are/ overrun, with be weed;, it" is best do proceed as, ows:-Harrow s.tubble-ground ea'rly a^t-er "harvest, -or gang-plow 11 only You’ll be won over immediate ■|y by the charm of the model pat; . terned for to-iay. / It has daring and ch’.c- in tne hew collar and’ sleeve'. Decora­ tive Invert'd pifi>tucks give youth­ ful fulness to the bo<iicc and the- skirt. ‘ •■■ ' • , / ' It ■ look’ so young and, fresh .. ’nea'th your tjark winter Zoat in ■ gay print '.«ilk' as pictured/ - Amaziiwgly quick to make it, and ipf&rxinsive, too. . Stvle No. 2,&2;0 is de/igned for . sizes’j4, -10,. J-8 year«, '36, .38 and- 4'0-indhes bust. Size 16 requires 3% yards of 39-inrh material. Write your' m-me and address plain!;, of paft< . stamps wrap 1 ' o,fder' 73 W 1'0 ORDER PATTERNS ' .. ’ ~ l^rqss , giving number and- size ern wanted. Enclose 15c in or coin (coin ,preferred/; . c'lrotully, and addre®^,-yOtlf Wilson /Pat?er-n--^3erv.c^,'■ sjf A d e I a hl/?S'! n-et,, Toronto. junction with -a system of ouItL 'vation /A3~"pT^’Vi'b'ccs'iy""“0'ut'H'n'e'd7’"'-u3-; •ing a copper sulphate spray whan the Jield is under Cereal crop. -~ ■ PTof. J. E. HoyTtt Deptr-pf-Botahy;; - OtA-Cf’ ■ . ' Girl Guide Garb i May be Changed i s’5 ‘ *■*"* - 4 ■ 1 — Annual Meeting to be Held • May 22 - 25; Seniors to Have Smart New Uni­ forms; Juniors ‘ Seek Similar Regalia '/ EDMONTON.—Proposed change . in uniforms to permit' better' pression of personalities of th* young&r girls will be discussed at / the annual meeting of the Dominion ' command of the .Canadian Girl Guide . association to be held' here May St to " ', ' . 1 ‘ Mrs. H. D. Warren, D.R.E., LL.D., £hiei. Comihissipner, ‘ will, pr&id^ and approximately. 150.. prominent! workers in -the movement, D'.o.m *Ui parts of the Doihinion are expected! to attend/. v, Senior girls, known as Ranger^ are already* rejoicing in the change*j in thejr uniforms which will become: effective-February 1. Previously the. <irls-had worn-a uniform similar, .toi that' of their juniors, but the new' pattern will set the style wjth a smart navy blue hat bearing a soft' marrow brim. , The older girls ex­ pressed annoyance- with the former wide-brimmed, stiff hat. Another change in .the regulations, passed by Guide ■ authorities/ peif-: mits the senior girls to wear a new. /silk four-inrhahd ..tie as. an ...alterna­ tive To the broadcloth triangular one. All members of a company however, must be dressed alike.'/. The junior Guides, .watching their ' big sisters'parading in’ their' stylish ./modern..uniforms,....will foilo>w .-^ha proceedings of the Dominion meet­ ing with close attention.with close attention. Question;-^- J. G., Simcoe I have . three.cows. that.,ar,e lame .and not ■' doing w.elli When they came. In from, pasture ■ last fall, they were chewing bones and boards.'■ I be- . lieve they ate troubled with Bot's. One of my heifers, .due ’ in early March, has a "swollen udder. Answer.:—. Indications are deficiency. in ph<jApfioru3 arid, lime, ■ ‘Feed -"'Steamed Bone Flour—one handful daily per head. If Warble Flies are troubling the cattle, apply any of the Berris compounds as a wash according to instructions; If horses- are troubled with Bota, have them trea'ted .with Carbon. Bisulphide—given in capsule . for Bot removal.- ' ■ ■ For the heifer that has a swollen udder, you had better haye your herd tested for Bang’s disease. —- Dr. L; Stevenson., Ontario Vetei*- ■^dnary College., an ba'le. 1/ad time to sprout.’ cultiyate it» ■■■ at douty/e mould-board, plow the last thintf itr the fall'. Put in cimj/,either roots or corn, lb? ng spring,' and cultivate it ■thoroughly throughout the growing season. Cultivate ahiUharrow well two or three times aftr->r roots or c/irh'. l-;/V- ■ f')' t ,‘rhn >jie- plow ong eifeh of corn, roots to rut." fie roots :i: <1 1'i;-;i. th< m up; aiu]Jjjb up -m'f/'.-' the frost. (If the plow 1'3' usp'l sifter roots or corn, it is like­ ly to/bring more s> <-d to -the/Fur- Sow,a crop of grain th? -foi? /lowij-ig h; ring ;ml cr.r.fj w/h c'q.' Ver/ Pull we?ls by hand ()f tlm- / g|ra.n ciop; take a crop or .two of I ' -bhy. nr pasture and break up’the ,. Hover, sod. After the- clover sod j.' > plpugii'-fl it ^sho'uld be given fro-- qiMnt-. ct/lfivatidn, un'tll the last- r.hirig in t.bh fall so as to'' destroy. . • ivo. crops of v<.r;ng'MiiSfaro p’arits. ' / thi? field Mu-tar,] n.ay'b/- px-. miite/1 • from seeding j'n ('evoa] I'l • Ci^p/I .by./sp:ayin.g with-a ’wo.pin' ’ cent C.opfter 1 lied at. t ie rat.ejif--'ldp?gal)ohs per ? debe Mustard is'mm. k iWjud^Tflower. This, mint ion ,i« ha’Ro'Vv. /As soon as the -seeds' ho/oughly; : ’d's; and. rib up repeat t cultivation, with a. a hoed the fol- it fww nr .! lmve'r \ bftjrnm. mp, no permanent injury |. »ill o' u,. a pu.iwtTf) sprayer fan le fitted with a' special brood-art aitachr^cai' for ,spraying large Areas, or an orchard apraHr, that p *TiipIi.c!d-Wlth a cluster of ho'^ lies'^or broom cap be used effect. Jvo'-y. Bp.-aylng fs Wt used In cod-' 21 t -- Into. Strange World AV hat the pilotdoes in‘a display of aerobatics will, be told to.the publia by the pilot himself at the R.A.F. Display at Hendpn, Eng., on Jun* 29th. The pilot will speak a descript­ ion of. hi3 movements into a micro phone hung round his-, neck. Whether he . is ups ide down or rolling’’o r spin- . ni-ng his wireless set- will continue to work and »• receiving set on - the ground will pass on his remarks to loudspeakers/ ' a ' ' ■ .\ • .. . ’ A “cheerfulness’ tax, v^jch moat workers will have to pay^-is being' introduced. in Portugal. Money ool- lected will ’be'devoted to a “nationelr fund for the promotion, of cheerful-’ fnes3' in - work.’'’ t An unemployed Alsatiap has spent) five days in' prison in place of an; innkeeper who had been sentenced. A year ago he took the same man*e place in prison, but on that occasion' he was not/found'out. * * w ■. The great-great-grandson of"? tSe? _ _rn-an---vdr-o--fowd-ed--'-Bi'-i-sba-ne>---onW--:---Qf- Australia’s .greatest cities, is a paint­ er in a /Stirlingshire village. Hi» ..name is Brisbane. / . • \* ! ♦ * A baby., has been born in Kuriszent- miklos, Hungary, with a complete net of thirty-two teeth. ■ ' • A plague of flying ants stopped a cricket, match for half an hour at OuLwood, .Surrey. Armed -with stumps, the players drove them off and the game was resumed.'*■ ♦ ; * T._1 .Hailstones as .big as ■ golf balls have fallen on- Montevideo, smashing windows and skylights ,to such an extent that only ten per cent, of th® /he glass has sent * * y Any man er woipan who has ever fought a losing ..battle; with a strip of wall paper will agree heartily with the dic.tlim df a yourt in New York state that-“paper hanging is an art, t,o which talent may aspire but in .wljich £ su'rcncss,” ■ Humorous writers ' riches in "paste. , pots paper. Vaudeville artists a responsive chord in their .audien­ ces by depicting whole families bdt- 'tlin-g step-ladders; paste brushes and yard' and yards of writhing wall paper. For man. loves to laugh at his fellow’s mishaps. ' .. A malignant spirit slumbers With­ in every roll of .'. Wall paper and awaits' onlp the uncertain touch of, the amateur to atpike. Like a dead-' ly viper, the paper must be'gripped firmly jurt behind, t.he ears' if. one would escape its coils. But. it the grip be too' 'harsh ."dh-asle.r is swift and complete, for the miserable stuff collapses into pulp within 'bne'£ very own hand- ■■ The' wise y.wls of the .New York' ,c.o.urt were evoked when the. referee •visited a large room recently paper­ ed by.-a man who professed to b'e an expert but..'.whose ’ efforts, had dis­ pleased the lady of the house. She refused to pay him; ho •sued.. Equip­ ped with thp bitter experience of his efforts to paper his own hohle in, his. alad days/1 ho judge’'found that the paperhangm- ‘. jhshing his thumb mwl 0f | nis . pipe^j£yjig---Uifir?nnre thumb f j/ryj-sy'th'e paper into .place., • “The? fruits, of the plaintiff's 1 hors,” he remarked, “remind rhe 1 my- own experience when, pressed by j I papered the ceiling -of .my own J rest,-' dining room. 1 , “' ‘ „ 1 th's'was t0 the I meeting of. the Victopian-Older of irregular .proportions of the room/’i' ' -- - * JEle had tric'd to cover the deficien-1 c;es by placing a. large border'around , the room, f“but it |wasn?t iiuich use/’ i . Yes, if one would appreciate, the' “genius that alone' move-, with sure-1 ne/s” in flincim.’: .--trips of'paper on a ceiling it is only . ne-('0..->ary to' try1 "to do iuone’s, pdf. ' The attempt? however, had h<ttCr be made in an old bathing suit, , with u hot bath ready to‘ .deal with those eventual!-' ties vy-hich_,may ' be preditt/ed w’th confidence, , .... genius alone moves with 54, have found and rolls of ; have struck damage cap be repaired by the glass available. The Government has sent ’ an emergency-'Bill.to Parliament urg­ ing the remission of all customs dues o'n imported glass. 1 ' ♦‘i, • * A free fight at an Egyptian beauty competition led to one of the com­ petitors losing an eye. Two sisters- in-law1 entered for the same com­ petition, spoke disparagingly of.etfch other's attractions, a'nd engaged,, in a violent fight.' Bj the time they werg separated, one of them had lost the-sight of one eye, and the 8th er. he? beauty. . ■ t '•---;--- ----*---- -----------r— r Average Nova Scotia ' Practical Training HALIFAX.*—The average nurse turned out by Nova Scoti^UTi-aining1 to j la-, pf I schools oftcrr'has a greater practical! <> years- hgo. knowledge of certain diseases'than* need of economy, many^ young‘dolors. Dr.' W. D, For- T ■’/■;. . ••'?-■ ...... mt-' superintendent of-the HalifaxLjnr.a!nC‘lL'l°. Health, told the. annual Jg.of. the Victoman* Older of Nui'ses in Halifax recently. . Often cases diagnosed as rneablaa we're found to be scar^L/ever when patients were brought cj infectious diseases hospitals, he said, replying to a suggestion of Dr. H. Bence Ai-’ lee of Halifax that training school# should turn out, highly : specialized Purse's', rather than ones with only general knowledge. The -ordinary Sova Scbtian nurse, Dr-.. Atlee satd>’ was excellent ffn -a general case but 'IbLiW hitvp flkni in eating ' '' ' < . fain <li ea os, >