o yel [ _ Tabmyp,.;3,, _ 3y 6/}~ UnNGer af "IN€ Afway from the habit of treating bushel. â€" Lethbridge Herald. brutally the very young, from makâ€" WHERE BABIES UNWELCOME ing criminals of youths who, with a Babies are unwelcome in Gibraiâ€"| little initial lenient treatment, would tar, which is not a rock, or island, but | avoid a criminal career for the balâ€" part of the mainland of Spain. Being | ance of their lives. Of course it is primarily a fortress, Great Britain | true that some children are vicious.l has no desire to encourage any inâ€"| But the vast majority are not, even trease in the population. _ For over| though they may be wild. It 83)'8’ tl]irty years no new residents have| much for the better traits of human been permitted to take up their abâ€"| disposition that in spite of condjt:ionsl ede, not even British subjects. â€" many badlyâ€"treated â€" children have’ Maclean‘s Magazine. grown up to be quite respectable l nascemnanencacth elements of society ,â€"Kingaton' f YOUTH AND AGE Jamaica Gleaner. I Youth has its virtues, and impaâ€" MORE THAN A sCHOOL tience with intolerable conditions is| When â€"will it be realised generally one of thom. Energy, generosity, idâ€".| in Australia that a university is an‘ ealism are others. All these virtues | essential part of a modern communâ€" will prove useful in achieving a soâ€" it{;lnd not merely a glovified school | Tution But they will not do it alone. | where advanced lessons are taught ? 1 They must work with the experience | The great universities of the old,l and wisdom of the older men. If | world owe their greatness to the 3 they can give edge and purpose and contributions they have made to the 9, strength to the older men‘s counsel so | increase in the sum of human knowâ€" 1 much the better. But the older men‘s |ledge and to the advancement of ciâ€" 2 counsel must give caution to the vigâ€" ) vilisation. Considered from this asâ€"! . or of youth. â€" Vancouver Province. pect the teaching side of the univerâ€" z5. .. ;. . â€" ellftiand of Spain. Reing primarily a fortress, Great Britain has no desire to encourage any inâ€" erease in the population. For over thirty years no new residents have been permitted to take up their abâ€" ede, not even British subjects. â€"‘ Maclcan‘s Magazine. C t e nereread Babies are unwelcome in tar, which is not a rock, or isla part of the mainland of Spain primarily a fortress, Great â€" 200 M EREUCEY WERVpety ing scheme to be ready one month beâ€" fore Christmas. It is the most preâ€" tentious effort made yet by lighting and other decorating effects. This year several intersections will be equipped _ with brilliantlyâ€"lighted Christmas trees, and the whole lightâ€" ing scheme is to be extended. Lethbridge _ started a couple of years ago to hang out the "welcome" sign to Christmas shoppers. It may be that, by giving the undertaking a little thought we might make the city still more attractive during Decemâ€" ber. Let‘s not hide our light under a bushel. â€" Lethbridge Herald. IT PAYS To ADVER Great Falls, Montana, be pays to advertise. Thi< season merchants of will spend $6.500 in a streei A LITTLE MORE CcOoURTEsSY In a recent issue of a widely read magazine, attentior is called to a byâ€" product of the automobile industry which ordinarily goes unmentionedâ€" the utter ruination of tempers â€"and manners which the automobile seems to have brought to millions of good. citizens. It is a point well worth conâ€" sidering. It applies to nearly all of us and in the last few years it has proâ€" duced a set of road manners which would seem to justify the complaint that we are a nation of barbarians.â€" Chatham News, If the ordinary passenger schedule maintained hitherto on the Quebecâ€" Montreal run can be cut nearly _ in two on the existing rails and with the present locomotive power, one may imagine what will be possible with the new locomotives when the rails bave been reâ€"constructed to meet the changed conditions. This city will be as close to Mont-J real as Three Rivers has been hitherâ€" to, and communications between the two centres will be stimulated â€" and multiplied correspondingly. â€" The Quebec Chronicle-Tclegnph. oInimAMâ€"LINED TRAINS Above all, when considered in conâ€" junction with the remarkable achieveâ€" ment reported in the news columns of this issue, in covering the distance from Montreal to Quebec with a speâ€" cial boat train in three and oneâ€"half, hours, it would be difficult to exagâ€" gerate the importance of the anâ€" nouncement just made by the Canadâ€" lian Pacific Railway that five "lightâ€" weight streamlined locomotives," to be placed in service between this city and the metropolis and capable _ of attaining a speed of 110 miles an hr. â€"the first of a new seriesâ€"are unâ€" der construction. " _ j1â€" ~â€"CTress our impotence to do anything about the situation. The pitiful part of it is that almost all accidents are avoidable. They are eaused by selfish recklessness, by a flat disregard for the conventions of eivilized people, by insane speed, by the failure of the human factor to measure up to the efficiency of thel machine. â€"« Ofttams Enmewal iiatnbatzn hh ralhh 36. a4 aaca l Earthquake hazards gligible in this part of every week eight or n the average, are killed Ontario, and two hu and we confess our in anything about the si In the first eight months of this year, the department points out, 6,â€" 836 accidents were reported from Onâ€" tario‘s streets and roads, with 291 deaths, injuries to 6,038 persons; and with 9,304 vehicles involved and susâ€" taining in the aggregate damage to the extent of $656,000. WwE sHOULD vIEw WITH ALARM DEATHS ON THE HIGHWAYS The Ontario Department of Highâ€" ways is amazed that the people should become tremendously excited about a minor earthquake that inâ€" jures nobody and causes almost no property damage while at the same time they contemplate with apparent indifference the continuing toll _ of deaths and injuries in highway acci-‘ dents. STREAMâ€"LINED VOICE is a point well worth conâ€" applies to nearly all of us last few years it has proâ€" ~~, _ ~"" /Cere 1k N&Ss pPrQâ€" of road manners which to justify the complaint i nation of barbarians.â€" THE WORLD AT LARGE intersections will be th brilliantlyâ€"lighted s, and the whole lightâ€" to be extended. CANADA U Ior the conventions of ple, by insane speed, by of the human factor to to the efficiency of the Ottawa Journal. e hazards are almost neâ€" his part of the earth. But eight or nine persons, on are killed on highways in d two hundred injured, ADVERTISE a street decoratâ€" believes it that city _ _ _ ___"* "Cverely punished for other offences. After sixteen, presumably, e all become old persons, or _ at any rate old enough to be hanged or imprisoned like anybody else. This new law is an improvement on the existing one. We are gradually getâ€". ting away from the habit of treating . bfl“&"y the very voung fram s2an d of the The Canadian War Memorial which has been erected at Vimy Ridge to designs by the Canadian sculptor, Mr Walter Allw=rd, is now practically completed. The work has been go‘i» forward for some ten years, has inâ€" volved the use of some 70,000 cubic feet of stone, specially quarried in Yugoslavia, stand: 138 feet high on a base 237 feet long and contains the names of 11,700 men of the Canadian forces who were reported as missing and also bears a tribute to the soldâ€" iers of France who laid down their lives on Vimy Ridge. Their sacrifice is symbolized in a series of twenty figures grouped between and around two enormous pylons. Each figure alâ€" one is twelve feet high and weighs 30 tons. As the chairman of the Proâ€"Paiâ€" astine Committee of the House of Commons, his engaging personality and his keen analytical mind did a great deal to build up Zionist sentiâ€" nt. He was a tower of strength in that direction and we venture to say that he has left ai. indelible mark upâ€" on that organization. â€" Canadian "ewish Chronicle. ‘ A TOWER OF STRENGTH ’ We Jews of Canada cannot however altogether disassociate His Excellenâ€" cy from John Buchan, who sat in the British House of Commons, To the world at large he has given a rich literary productiveness, but to the Jews he has also given another part of himself, the humanitarian, the alâ€". truist, the fearless champion of‘ man‘s rights. Adequate old age pensions for all who have done their bit, provided by the Dominion, are wise, and nationalâ€" ly economical, but only a limited proâ€" portion of men are old at 60 years. â€" Moose Jaw Timesâ€"Herald The better plan is to pursue those policies that tend to provide â€" work and wages for all who are able and who are more happy producing and earning than they would be on "penâ€" sions‘" commensurate with their earnâ€" ing power, or existing on a "dole." At first glance it would seem reaâ€" sonable to put the younger men to work and retire the older men, but on second thought this would put a heavy burden on the shoulders _ of youth who would be compelled to proâ€" vide the "pensions" in lieu of the waâ€" ges the older men earn. \ The church roof stood u strain, but it will not b if it leaks a little during months. â€" Timming AAv. Each of the citizens in that group of six may be termed as genuine oldâ€" timers of the North, but it is safe to say that never before were they ever at church together. It is doubtful, inâ€" deed, if any two of them were ever in church together or singly in the one year. as if he were sl-lepheirrtvi‘i'nâ€"gmt.h.t; ;zvt‘l,lers into the church. CONGREGATION SURPRISED The congregation at a local church on Sunday were astounded when â€" a body of six prominent and popular gentlemen of the town walked into the church all in a body. _ One of them carrying a cane brought up the rear of the group of six, and it looked CANADA‘S MEMORIAL THE EMPIRE PRES S AS TO RETIREMENT aks a little during the éominE" «â€"â€" Timmins Advance. CANADA, THE EMPIRE will not be _surprisigé‘ up under the sity becomes a secondary essential, ’a medium for distwibuting the new ‘intellectual currency which the uniâ€" | versity should be continuously minâ€" ing. The attempt of the new viceâ€" ’chancellor of the University of Melâ€" bourne, Dr. R. E. Priestly, to spread this gospel in Australia is worthy of the widest support and encourageâ€" ment. The improvements which he has planned for his own university appear costly only because the comâ€" munity has neglected in the past to maintain adequately its source of intellectual vigour, â€" The Australâ€" asian. It is easy to assume: habit; when you try to cast it off, it take skin and all.â€"H. W. Shaw. _7 ,f° °692 AgnCZIOn of a governâ€" ment is to make it easy for people to do good, and difficult for them to do evil.â€"Gladstone. ed into any hands." Another physician asked: "Who is going to be the ultimate court of appeal? _ Often," he said, "people who are adjudged on the verge of death by the best authorities recover by some miracle, and a good many mistakes are likely to be made in an inexact science. My opinion is that it would be a very dangerous thing to put the amount of power suggestâ€" Wg se p108 oh l pr Ottawa.â€"Ottawa physicians last week expressed disagreement with principles of the "right to die" doecâ€" trine being sponsored in London by a society headed by Lord Moynihan. One widely known doctor said the doctrine was a "highly dangerous‘ Oone and its application might lead to many unforseen abuses. In granting the privilege of taking life it would be hard to decide where to draw the Ine, and, as a human eleâ€" ment would have to be contended with, the precedent would be a danâ€" gerous one." The proper function of Refuse to allow the mind to stiffen the muscles by the suggestion of age limitations. Age is a mental state, brought about by mental conviction. You are only as old as you feel. Don‘t let anything interfere with your regular hours of work and rest, but get plenty of sleep, especially before midnight. Pure air, both indoors and out. doors, is absolutely essential to health and long living. Never allow yourself to remain in a poisoned or vitiated atmosphere. Don‘t be top ambitious; the cank. er of overâ€"valuating ambition has eat. en up the happiness of many a life. Keep busy; idleness is a great friend of age, but an enemy of youth. Regular employment and mental oc. cupation are marvellous youth pre. servers. Don‘t live to eat, but eat to live. Many of our ills are due to overeat. ing and eating wrong things, also to irregular eating habits. Keep mental cobwébs, dust and brain ashes brushed off by frequent trips to the country. Avoid excesses of all kinds; they are injurious. The long life must be a temperate regular one. Don‘t allow yourselt to think of your birthday, that you are a year older. Hold your thoughts persistently. Avoid fear in all its varied forms of expression. Simply refuse to grow old by count. ing your years or anticipating old Do You Want To Keep Young? K "Right to Die" Mrs. Woodrow Wilson, wife Scouts, receives a salute as she vi of Girl Scout Week. The girls der hups o0 0 .20 00 ®wNe o AAnC $HIe GEmonst baking, making beds and washing dishes e TORONTO you feel but will ‘"My hope is that the people of On. tarip have sufficient of the spirit of the old pioneers that when they see how things are going they will really take hold. Great Britain has done it. She has balanced her budget â€" the only country in the world that has. We have not balanced any budgets in Canada â€" and only a few municipali. ties, and the best records have been made by rural municipalities. But 1 think, being a chip off the old block, we will probably balance our budget. I have a great deal of hope that will happen. Anyway, if it does not hap. pen, we deserve all we are going to The quotation is recalled here be. cause there was something in the nature of a sequel to it in the speech of Dr. Horace L Brittain, of the Citizens‘ Research Institute, before a board of trade meeting dere. He‘ was not alluding to young people so much as adults â€"â€" in fact to tax. payers. The latter are inclined, he said, to take an adequate interest in municipal affairs only when times are hard and something hurts their pockets. Dr. Brittain sees hard times still ahead, but he has some confi. dence that the spirit of the people will lead them to "take hold" and perhaps bring a long overdve balaneâ€" of budgets. He said: is too great a tendency to wait for government or organizations to cre. ate favorable opportunities, and too much dependence upon services and conveniences and environment which exist only because of the toil which ‘ others performed many years ago." \ "Students of Canadian history have been impressed of late by the thought that many present difficulties would disappear if young people were preâ€" pared to face pioneer conditions and make a way for themselves as earlier generation did in this country. There Or is no reason for farmers allowing cattle to become a menace on our highways. Practically every farmer is driving a car himself and appreciâ€" ates the danger. This law should be enforced by the provincial police in the interests of public safety." to allow cattle to stray unattended on the highway. Quite recently a Perth doctor driving at night wreckâ€" his automobile when he struck a horse loose on the road. If the horse broke out of a pasture then it was pure accident but if it was allowed by its owner to forage for a living along the sides of the highway the owner was guilty of a grave breach of the law. He might even have facâ€" ed a charge of manslaughter had not the occupants of the car been ex. ceedingly fortunate. _ One road that seems to be infested with wandering cattle is that between Carleton Place and Perth. Seldom does a moâ€" torist pass over it without being forced to crawl through a group of cows. _ Last week a motorist met a full fledged bull on the highway near Innisville and for a time it looked as though Mr. B. was going to dispute the right.ofâ€"way with the car. There| The Pioneer Spirit or the law was in error because it is palpably absurd to state that a farâ€" mer can‘t drive his cattle on a country road. _ What we suspect is that the learned judge was misquoted in the papers. What he probably said is that it was against the law "Some time ago the judge raised the question of whether or not it was strictly legal to have cattle on the road even though they were accomâ€" panied by a driver. Either the judge The Almonte Gazette in its last issue made the following pertinent observations : Cattle on Highways Constitute a Menace Girl Scouts Welcome The background of this fabric is blue. Not "Marina" or "babyâ€"boy" blue; darker than those but not quite as deep as navy. On it are patterned cone â€" shaped shells, in white, each about six inches long. Night Nursery Furnishings Everything is white, in fact, exâ€" cept the patterned glossy chintz which covers the chairs and forms the curtains. The floors of all three rooms are close covered in a white rubber comâ€" positionâ€"%4 in. thick, soft to tread on, warm and washable. The walls, too, are all painted in a slightly shiny whiteâ€"white with the glare taken out of it by the slightest tinting of yellow â€" “ofl'â€"‘ white" the decorators call it. It contains no extravagent detail, no unnecessary luxury . . a backâ€" ground fit for a prince, but equally fit for any wellâ€"loved baby. _ And the first quality which was _demanded of every item of furnishâ€" ing and decoration was washability, The floors, the tables and chairs, the curtains and chair covers, can all be kept spotlessly cleanâ€"casily. White and Blue That point and the soothing lightâ€" ness of the rooms make this nursery one that will be copied by mothersl throughout the world. nniainlst n lih «cglicedits: Senabbdactllie: buscichcs d _ It was the Duke of Kent who deâ€" cided on the planning, the colors, and the general layâ€"out of the suite, alâ€" most a private flat, which was preâ€" pared long before the arrival of the new Prince. The three roomsâ€"day and night nursery and bathroomâ€"are on the third floor immediately above the Duchess‘ own bedroom, overlooking the treeâ€"tops of Belgraveâ€"square. Fitted for a very modern young prince is the suite which has been prepared for the Duchess of Kent‘s baby son, writes Zoe Farmar in the London Daily Express. Suite Prepared for Son of Duke and Duchess of Kent Extremely Simple MODERN NURSERY FOR INFANT PRINCE ’ Rome. â€" Sanctions have stolen Italy‘s siesta hour. Premier Mussolini told his people recently they must work a full day in <he daytime and do their sleeping at night to save of. fice light and heat. They must work on a schedule from 9 a.m. to 4.30 p.m., with only a halfâ€"hour for lunch. The latter regulation may prove the most bitter disciplinary lesson Black Shirt patriots have yet faced. For centuries they gmve been used to at least two hours at the heat ot‘ the day for eating and dozing. Siesta Period In hatred, Of Britain, Canada and the Unitâ€" ed States. No country will have them, So they are training, training, training, And becoming more restless and aggressive. Anything may happen. The one safe course Is in preparation for defence (Hon. ~__ of Europe. Sovietism, Facism and Nazism Are now trained military camps. The people are bottled up Boiling with envy which bree States f Makes the position more complex. The whole trouble is the jealousy, _ of Eurone. is right BR Britain is in danger. The neutrality of the United day, sb w 3 Britain must arm and arm heavily, Pacifist Prime Minister Baldwin lon. Frank Carrell in Quebec Chronicleâ€"Telegraph) Much as we advocated world peace Through the League of Nations, Longe ago we forsaw What is developing in Europe toâ€" Can We Wait? Italy Is Cancelled envy which breeds Somebody tossed a gourd â€" a l(indI ’ot melon â€"â€" into a garden at Wlker-’ ing, Essex. It burst, and the seeds | yielded 3 cwt. of fruit, the‘ largest | weighing 3/4cwt. There were seven.! teen gourds from the seeds. One root came up in a neighbour‘s garden‘ twenty yards away and a 601b. goura with it. 4 don Zoo‘s three vampire bats. : night they consume at least } pint of horse‘s blood which ‘has beaten with an egg whisk. 9. Never throw down a lighted match or cigarette. Put out your camp fire. 10. Love nature and its denizens and be a gentleman. 8. Study and record the natural history of game species in the interest of science. 4. Respect the rights of farmers and property owners. 5. Always leave seed birds and game birds in cover. _ 6. Never be a fishâ€"hog. 7. Discourage the killing of game for commercial purposes by refusing to purchase trophies. | Study and record the natural hu.i tory of game species in the interest ‘ of science. | 2. Never kill wantonly, or lessly, or brutally. 8. Obey the laws, work for laws, and uphold the enforcin thorities. 1. Never in sport life. » The Kitchener Record published a sportsmen‘s creed, as issued by an association which aims to preserve the wild life and the denizens of the woods. Whipped blood is the diet ' knew it, You could te!! it from wheir stride, | While the Brass Hats took the credit l Almost bursting in their pride. The band was on the side lines , It was playing Kerry Gowâ€" But that was many years gao, A long far road from now. I saw him only yesterday ‘ __On a sunâ€"drenched city street, _ Where scorching pavement sweltered ' And blistering shuffiing feet. He wouldn‘t let them count him out Although he might be down ; He wasn‘t wearing Khaki Just a suit of rusty brown, At sight of him and many more, The Grandstand rose to checer, For here as something novel To be seen but once a year. Said one sweet lipâ€"sticked maiden, "What are those medals for," "I guess," said scarlet fingerâ€"tips, "There musta been a war." ~â€"Canadian School Journal. BHo was stepping out right smartly As I glimpsed him years ago, For the Brigadier was fussy Over putting on a show; And the boys came up in column Shifting smoothly inty line, With the rifles sloped correctly And the buttons all ashine. They were spearâ€"head troops _ and And that is about all it takes to make the perfect nurseryâ€"except, of course, the baby. The whole place is kept at an even temperature by central _ heating, though there are the screened electâ€" ric fires in both the nurseries for exâ€" tra cold days. The bathroom fitments are white, wit_l3 chrpmium~plated taps. No Direct Lighting There is no overhead lighting, only low standard fittings with white bases and blue and white shades. An armchair for nurse and plenty of room for play. Then there is the centre table, white with its blue lines, square but with the corners snubbed off. Around it four plain chairs with no dust rests, And a good and roomy toy cupâ€" board over against the wall. ; In front of the electric fire in the day nursery is a deeply handâ€"tufted wool rug, rightly colored _ with houses and little men. Nice and soft to crawl about on and with plenty to interest the young mind. ‘ The only other furniture in the room is a long chest of drawers, also in white washable paint, outlined with blue, which houses the early wardrobe of the young Prince; an armchair; and the royal cot. Rooms Interâ€"Communicate ; One door leads in direct‘y from the landing, another into the lobby, so that the suite is really selfâ€"contained and the baby need not be carried out on to the landing in order to go from the day to the night nurâ€" sery. ® | A Good Creed The nurse‘s bed is a divan with overspread and headrest of the chintz. At each side are small tables. In the night nursery there is a dressing table over against the winâ€" dow. A square one, topped by a layer of glass and with skirts of the seaâ€"skhell chintz draped round it. sne'aking draughts. There are no pelmets. C * C Though the windows start about four feet from the floor (as nursery windows should) the curtains are all ground length. They look better that -vny as well as léeep_i_ng out any three vampire bcisj -Every Warrior‘s Day 8, work for better the enforcing au. at least half endanger human of Lon. been lc ds wPAly youth; lament its departed ©pportuni. tes. They are wrong. _ Before the youth of today thero opens up a vista of almost incredible opportunity, the vista of a world which, on the thresh. old of mighty change, beckons a}l who would strive and adventure. others who, beginning life ing but their own courc," dustry, achieved fame, in and industry, And not only in England one of the members of the « aristocracy, but a Mussnl The list could be extended inde. finitely. It could take in the leaders of the Labor party, who, coming from pit and factory, rose to gov. ern England; take in _ countloss others who, beginning life with noth» Inud Kok s l4 er levelling of Classes. But it is a denial of all history, of all facts, to assume that Europe denies achieve. ment to brains and character, that success there depends wholly upon the accident of birth, Take the case of Englant. _ Time was, perhaps, when her ruling class. es were recruited from the aristo. cracy â€" but not now. Her great War Prime Minister, David Lloyd George, was the son of a penniless clergy. man, began life as a briefless solici. tor. One of his successors, Ramsay MacDonald, was the son of a Scottish cottage. ‘The â€" great Lord Reading, Rufus Isaacs, was a poor boy, began life at sea. And Lord Birkenhead rose to the _ Lord Ohancellorship from poverty and obscurity. a poor draper‘s ass‘stant, drove in a ’golden coach in triumphal procession from the Aistoric Guild Hall to the Royal Law Courts in the Strand, there to take oath as the Lord Mayor of London observes the Ottawa Journal. It is something worth noting. Many of us have been accustomed to think of this EOntinent as the home of opportunity; to speak of and pity Europe as the home â€" of caste and class. Which is wrong. This contin. ent, still, in a sense, a pioneer con. tinent, still, in a sense, a pioneer continent, necessarily has more of opportunity than older lands, a great. er levelling of elagcae ~COu P n TRERE‘S ROOM AT THE TOP said at Guy‘s Hospital, "in the ï¬ght for better national health the genâ€" eral practitioner was in the front line." The requirements of more exact knowledge may be bringing back the bedside maner from under the cloud which has tended to hide it. It has its place. So, too, the layman may think, has the general pracâ€" titioner. He is not only peculiarly fitted by his intimacy with family conditions of health and illiness, but, as the British Minister of Health The British Minister of Health probably means his plea for the reâ€" turn of the bedside manner to be qualified, and does not for one moâ€" ment advocate the reinstatement of the medical gentleman whose sole equipment often was only a good bedside manner, whose soothing inâ€" fluence unaccompanied by curative knowledge was too _ frequently fatally negative. In l The more the doctor goes among men of all kinds, the fuller he comâ€" prehends the conditions of life inâ€" timately related to the health of a patient. The doctor, in short, "may learn about (and should learn about) bones, morphology, patholâ€" ogical processes, and so on, but let him always remember that he was treating a human being and not a universal robot." :' Writes the Winnipeg Free Press: y The layman secking the quintessence , of the salutary virtues in a medical |\ statement, might expect to find it in "the counsel given by the British ‘â€" Minister of Health to the students f at the term‘s opening of Guy‘s Hosâ€" | pital Medical School. It may be enâ€" {couraging, if prosaic, then, to notice | that Sir Kingsley Wood wished to : see the bedside manner resumed by | the general practitioner he would have recalled. , Sir Kingsley says that the doctor | is no longer the priest or magician he long ago was thought to be, but / a remnant of the old magic is reâ€" tained in what is described as the "bedside manner". â€" ~Bir ~ Kingsley prefers to phrase it differently. He thinks of it as the human sympathy of the doctor, and believes it was probably more iniportant than nineâ€" tenths of the drugs in the "materia medica." London Sir Percy Vincent, once members of the ofd Roman only in En(lnnd._lt is not L Casses. _ But it is a history, of all facts, to Europe denies achieve. courts®e and inâ€" business is Oorig ginc the don. beinp li\ of 5t ; and 0; used tooth and tr3 tin pa 18t far las W W t he W O W I did I did n One ï¬ M W sper