Daily British Whig (1850), 21 Oct 1911, p. 9

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SEAR The YEAR 78-50 316, 'QUEEN OF ACTRESSES PRAISES PE-RU-NA, Pr PPP rrr PPPS a ---- MISS JULIA MA NY [y that benefits digestion strengthens the nerves. 'Berve centers require nutrition, ifthe tion is Impaired, the nerve S3hters hosp " snemie, and indigestion ilarune Is ant & neryine nor a 4 It benefits the nerves by benefiting digestion, . Peruna frees the stomach of eatarrhal 'sopgestions and normal digestion is the result. In other words, Peruna goes to the bottom of the whole difficulty, when she disagreeable symptoms diseppesr. Mrs, 3.0. Jamison, 61 Marchant street, pnvilie, Cal, writes: "1 was troubled with my stomach for Six years. I tried many kinds of medi- #ine, also was treated by three doctors, + '"Phey said that T bad nervous d: oss za > | ; By MARJORY { | Coa yright by Publishers' Press. Lid, i New L(ypés emérge more rapudly pew couutnies than they do in old 1) ine vopalation of the Dominion of ) | 4 anada at coufederation was a litule | over three millions, and confederation ? | took place only forty-five yesis ago. | Yet already in one, professional ecall- mg Canadian women have made so distinctive & position that the Cana- Her Upnadian accent called "American" hy from overseas and "Eoghsh" by Americans, The color in her cheeks is apt to be brighter thag if she Mad heen born south of the lime. Her eyes are likely to he blue or grey rather than black or brown, pe hair is generally yeliow- brown, dark own or auburn. Alto- gether ber (yj is a trifle more north- ern and less nervous than that of the young women of the United States, It is reckoped by historians that the first nurses cand to Quebec in national type. [is sometimes ser friends "I improved under the treatment, buf a8 soon as I stopped taking the medi cine, I got bad again. "I took the medicine for two years, then I got sick again and gave up all hopes of getting cured, #1 saw a testimonial of a man whose case was similar to mine being cured by Peruna, so I thought I would give it a trial. #1 procured a bottle at once and com- menced taking it. I have taken several bottles and sm entirely cured, | have in strength and. foel like a rent person. | be~ lieve Peruna is all that is claimed for it." ' a 1639, They were Sisters of St. Aun- Nervines, such as coal tar prepare , pustin, Mademoiselle Jennne Mauce ar- tions, are doing a great deal of harm, | rived at Montreal in 1641. Sleep medicines and headache powders ithe begimmings of the famous sod { tory of niirsmg in Canada. notable fact that i wake. 'MISS MARJORY MACMURCHY. his- i ja fnirly large proportion of thw war " men of Uapada who engage in profit: bo all right, if tho d ahle oecupations enter the nursing f { profession. The names of many (ana dian norses may be given who are regarded as lenders in their calling. Sach a ligt must include the names of Canadian nursés in the United States as well as in Canada since very many Canadian born women are among the leaders of the nurding profession in the United States. Mrs. Hampton Robb, whose lamented death took place not very 'many months ngo was a Canadian nurse. Her work will al- wave be remewberad in nursing an- | nelle, Miss Snively who was for more thun twéuly-five years at the head of the Training School for Nurses in the Toronto General Hospitnd, and who Hester pe without heat, The enameled heater alwa wo tanith a Darl An Innovation in' Oil Heaters 'The' Perfection. Smokeless Oil Heater, with its drums in turquoise, is an ornament fo any -room, whether in the country or city home. wu» No home is quite complete without a Perfection Oil ¢/, it is a necessity in the fall and spring, when it is too In the midst of winter it is often convenient as ' an auxihary heater, as there are always some cold corners in a house. presents a nice appearance, as the i It is not an "enamel paint," but it the énamel of your cooking utensils. has recently retived is another (ana- dian woman who is regarded as a ledder among nurses. Miss Nutting, joint suthor of the well-known "His tory of Nursing," is a native of New- foundiand. All through the various states of the union, Canadian nurses are to be found at the bead of train- ing schools and hospitals. Miss Lau- der Sutherland, an native of Cobourg, is in chatge of the hospital at Hart- ford, Coun. Miss Mary Sith is at the head of The Babies hospital, New York: Migs Samuel once the tof $he Roosevelt Training School, is { now head of the Lakeside hospital, of Cleveland. These are but representa- tives of a large number of Canadian nurges. whose work has taken them to the United States. Among the most widely known names of nurses eminent in Canada are those of Miss Georgina Pope, who apparatus, and too cool to be ; | THE CANADIAN NUKSE. dian purse is generally accepted as a These are | MacMURCHY. Jeland to Victoria, Useadian sures are in charge of Nospitals in the ivarious cities and towns. . Typical among these are Miss Rows in Char: lottetown, Miss Malowy at the «J ofivey | Hale hospital in Quebec, Miss Men {derson, Miss Uilmowr and many others in Montresi, Miss Meikeljobn 0 Ut: tawa, Miss Stewart, Miss Brent, Mise | Scott and many others in Toraato, Miss Johns in Fort William, Miss Wil. son in Winnipeg and Miss MeFurlane in Vancouver. These names stand as | representatives of a hundred others jw hich might be mentioned. Schoo! nurses in Mostreal, Toronto amt } namilton are occupied in what is al ready a successful development of nursing. The work of the Canadian nwuse may take her as far east and north as Dr. Grenfell's mission te the fish- ing people of Labrador. . She may care for well-to-do, and somesimes for very wealthy patients in cities like Montreal, Forontp, Wipnipeg and Vancouver. She does district nursing among the poor in the same pros- perovs cities. She may organize new hospitals in hastily-built These shacks are succeeded yuickly by permanent hospital buildings aud the nurse, working single-handed one month, may find herself by the nest{ with four or five probationers and an! improvised training school for nw ses. The Victorian Order of Nurses was first instituted in Canada by Lady Aberdeen." 'The cottage' hospitals of the order were inaugurated by Lady Minto. the Lady Grey County Dis- trict Nursing Association is a further scheme of the same character design ed to serve u new und widespread country with trained nursing aid. Victorian Order nurses are to be found in every part of Canada. 'The head office of the Order is at Ottawa, These nurses often help to man--or rather to woman--the staff of a small hospital in a new town where a short time before there had been no means of affording - skilled atten tion to the sick. Further west still, Canadian nurses will be found at work in some little logging hospital where lumber-jacks and prospectors come fo be nursed back to health. 'Thus a study of nursing in Canada reveals {more intimately nom than an ac counit of any other occupation for women in this eduntry. thescanditions eee. MISS M. A. MACKENZIE, Vietortan Order of Nurses, Ottawa | ilikely to be experienced by seli-sup- porting women in Canada. Conditions for trained nurses = Canadian cities are fairly represented {by the fortunes of a typical nurse at work in Toronto. There are five train- ing schools for nurses in Toronto, one in each of the large hospitals. No dil fieulty is experien in securing good material for probationers, a signific- ant fact, considering that from twenty to twenty-five thousand young women are employed in the factories of Tor onto, while permanent advertisements on factory walls, calling for workers, show' that manufacturers need more women helpers than they are able to attract, Many nurses alter graduatidg from one of the Toronto training schools remain to nurse in the ity Others Te turn to their homes to enter profes sional life in the United States. Be sides nurses in hospitals and other institutions, there are over five hund- red trained women in private nursing in Toronto. The largest registry traived nurses has more than three A subordinate hospital position for a nurse in Canada carvies with it a sal ary of from twenty-five to forty do} lars a month. The superintendent ol nurses in a small ital i receives four hundred it «03 THURSDAY, standing of the Canadian purse is wo good that there is no discrimination aguinst her employment in the United States. There may even he said to be a prejudice in her favor. The more adventurous and except al work of the trained nurse in Ca ada is outside the cities, The life o such a nurse is also exceptionally ex- acting. The trained nurse of the Vie torian Order with Dr. Grenfell in Lab- rador, is a typical instance of excep tional experience in work. Working un- der a physician who has four bundred miles of coast under his care, the nurse sometimes is compelled to as- same great and varied responsibility. In wne of her letters to the chief super intendent of the Order, she writes that there are two things which make the Labrador people easy <G deal with, their faith in the power and know- ledge of the nurse, and the absence of liquor. It is not only nursing care which os regjuired from the nurse in the Canadian Labradbr. She teaches. the young girls of the settlement to cook, Lo nurse, and to sew, Two years ago she instituted a flower show and of: fered prizes for vegetables; flowers, bread, enke, pies, and the more strict. ly Labradorean requirements, hooked mats, skin boots, models of komatik and dogs, model of boat with sails, and litter of puppies with their moth- er. Much of the philosophy of life for a4 woman in a mew country is con tained in this list of prizes offered by a Canadian nurse in Labrador, The greatest need for trained nurs ing in Candas is among the wtlers' wives of the West. Hundreds of Can- adian young women go to be troined in the hospitals of the States and re main in that country. One of the lead- ing New York hospitals has in a train- ing sehool of one hundred end over, ne less than thirty-six (.anedisn born women. One hundred sud mney of the graduates of the same boapioal are Canadians A training school in a Boston hospital has thiety-dour Cane adian gicls in a school of abou: hundred nurses in trainiar. Out of a stall of twenty-three sralids nurses in this hospital no less them 'eleven are Canadians. Even with this great drain on the nursing resources of the country, the majority of trained pur- ses in Western Canada are still Can- adian women. So far there is but one Lady Grey Country District Nursing Associalion in Southern Alberta. The nurse makes one rauch where she is needed, her headquarters and rides on horseback to make calls on patients within riding distance, Scheme offers riding distance. The scheme offers great possibilities. Many districts are one MAKES STOMACH FEEL FINE Indigestion, Gas, Dyspepsia Leave utes, Theve would not be a case of indi gestion heye if readers who are sub- ject to Btomach trouble kuew the tre mendous anti-lerment and digestive virtue eomtained in Diapepsin. This harmless preparation will digest a heavy meal without the slightest fuss or discomfort, and relieve the sourest acid stomach in five minutes, besides overcoming all foul, nawseous odors from the ath. Ask your pharmacist to show vou the fatale; plainly printed on ench . case Pape's Diapepsin, then vou will 'readily understand why this promptly cures Indigestion and re moves such symptoms as, Heartburn, a feeling like a lump of lead in the stomach, Belehing of Gas gnd Fructa tions of i food, water brash, Nausea, Headnche, Bilipusmess and many Other symptoms; and, be Heartburn, and in Five Min. 3 bad of sides, you will not need laxatives to ike Pape'r Diapepsio, whicn rf ot daytime or dur- A SCENE IN "THE GIRL FROM 1 BCTOR'S," SECOND PART ---- - _ - AT THE GRAND ON OCT. 20TH, 80 sparsely settled that a nurse would find difficulty in obtaining enough employment for support. A trained nurse would need at the least an in Some of fine hundred dollars. The Country District Nursing Association i® one way in which this difliculty Jill be overcome. A woman journal- Wt in Winnipeg made the suggestion last year that the women in town and country should form clubs and employ a trained nurse to care for the members of the elub. Conditions in the west are changing steadily. But trained nursing did has still t6 be brought within reach of many of the women of Western Canada. There is no keen demand for addi tional trained nurses - in cities like LADY TAYLOR, HAMILTON Takes a warm, active Interest In a branches of women's work Toronto and Montreal. Yet it is true that there is no place in Canada where a competent, well-trained, able nurse will not find it possible to make her way. In the large cities especial ly, she will need some little capital until she gets an opportunity to show that she ean do good work. But if she is an excellent nurse she id cer tain of employment. Trained nurses are needed in the west. But patients jar widely seattered and government aid, 8 woman's club, or 'some mursing order like the Victorian Ovder of { Nurses is required to organize a sys tem of country naming. To those who have worked for some solution | of the nursing problem in the west of Canada, it is good to recognize in | the trained nurse of the Country Dis- j trict Nursing Asgociation, riding across the dipping and rising prairie g vith her supplies on the saddie-how, a new and ft «isciple of the Lady of the Lamp. In the prairie country the advent of the trained nurse on horse back brings with it a promise of better conditions for the women on farms and ranches. ~MARJORY MACMURCHY. Just His Luck. The lady bather had got into a hole and' she couldn't swim. Nor could the young man on the end of the pier; but whien she come up for the first time and he cought sight of her face, he shrieked: "Help!" A burly fisherman sanntered to his dide. "Wat's up?' he hoarsely cried. "My wile! Drowning! I can't swim! Twenty pounds for you if you save her!" In aA moment the fisherman was in the sen. In another moment he was out of it with the reseusd Indy bath eo o : i ar. Swelling with expectation he ap- proached the y man again. "Well nbnt aliout the twenty quid?" he asked. Bat if the young man's face had been ashed grey before, it was now lonely pale gu he gazed upon the feat- ures of the pecovering dame. "Fron, 1 know!'! he gasped. "Bat when 1 made the offer | thought it was my wife who was drowning, and now-now it terms out it was my wile's mother! The fisherman pulled s long face. "Jui. my leek!" be mutiered, thrusting bis hands into hin trousers. {porhet. "How puck do I owe youl" | It's Baker's and It's Deliciou Made by a perfect mechanical process from high * cocoa beans, scientifically blended, it is of the finest quality, full strength and absolutely pure and healthful Sold in iB HB, 14D, 172. and 1 1b. cans, net weight Booklet of Choice Recipes Seat Free Walter Baker & Co. Limited Established 1780 Montreal, Can. Dorchester, Mass. FREE'SEWING. GIRLS atom for your ie fa Ln machinery ie Ay Lo use te 1h we give & sath Sotaining antre THE CHANGE OF A Ren ty Katiaual soafiees poten buyel y are so beantitul a low vil with them. Ci WE PAY ALL MACHINE RIGHT TO Y! o SATIONAL SALES CO., Lid. Dept. § 10s Yoronte, KILLED MISSIONARY. Natives Resent the Attacks Polygamy. British Guiana, Oet. 21, In endeavoring to convince the ab Indians of British Cuiana of tue sin of polygamy, * Elder' Davis, an American Seventh Dav Ad ventist missionary, met his death by poisoning. It appears that on getting to a settlement near the froatier "Ei der" Davis began to preach to the natives. the doctrines of the church he represented. He seems to have laid special emphasis on the sin of a man having several wives. The new doe trine proved obnoxious to the abori gimals, who have their own views on this quéstion, and in their wrath they have administered poison to as the most effective him from doing The on Georgetown, original soem to the missionary way of preventing what they evidently considered "mis chief '- among them. Thereafter they left him to his fate, Soms other In dians came along, however, and, either having more hiimenity in their soul or not having heard the mm siomary preach against polygamy, they conveyed Mma in 4 hannoek to the hut of the chief of a tribe known 'ad the ArMbomas. The chief, "Jere minh," by name, allowed the dying man to be carried into his mad house, and shortly afterwards "Elder" Davis expired, Sometimes what goes hy the vame of love is nothing more or less than a fool's paradise. So far as private matiers are con cerned, it ix best to earn the title of being exclusive. BAD SCALP What Parisian Sage Win Do. A bad wealp is no eredit to snyone, especially when it ean be remedied by consistent use of Parisian Sage, the great scalp and hair tonic. The cause of dandruff is a germ. Parisian Suge will kill these pests in a few days and thereby remove the eause of baldosss. Faliing hair is caused by the dand- roff germ. Py killing © these Parisian Sage al once restores vitality to the hair foots and commences s vigorous growth, Parasian Sage Grows Hair. H the roots are not gone, Parisian Sage will grow hair. It streagthens thin, scragey hair, and makes it heal thy dnd luxurisnt. Stops itching scalp 'after one or two applications, in fact is gusrnntesd by J. B. Mes Leond, to do this, or your money back Filty cents a large bottle,

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