Ontario Community Newspapers

Port Perry Star (1907-), 26 Aug 1937, p. 3

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« News in Brief » 5 Legion Homors Belgian Minister OTTAWA. -- Presentation of Vimy Pilgrimage medals to Baron Silver. ® cruys, Belgian Minister to Canada, and A. Major, Belgian Consul in Ot. tawa, was made'by the Canadian .jik "egion at a function here 'this week. ® Attended by Dominion Command offi- " 2ers, the ceremony. was presided over dy Lieut-Col. L. R. LaFleche, D.S.0., Deputy Minister of National Defense and a former Dominion President of the Legion. Colonel LaFleche recalled the hos- pitality extended to the Canadian pil- grims a year ago by the Belgian peo- ple, and commented particularly on the reception accorded members of the National Pilgrimage Committee .8 ¢ by King Leopold. Crystal Palace Ruins Razed LONDON.--The ruins of the Crystal. Palace almost wholly destroyed in a fire last November, caught fire this week-end and the remains of the building were levelled. "The section left standing after last year's fire and which now has burned down included the "old school of fing arts" and the roller skating rink, Ice Packs For Horses | WINNIPEG.--Manitoba farmers this ~eck were instructed to place ice- packs on horses' heads and put ani. mals in a dark place whenever they show signs of drowsiness, first symp- a LAr + horse sickness which has killed hun- dreds of animals in the province. v Lack of serum and little hope of securing quantities from the United States Northwest, where the disease i3 also prevalent, hag promnted Hon, i D. L. Campdell. Manitoba Minister of Agriculture, to prepave a ciroar out lining household remedies fo rave ® "orses from the worst epidemic of « "uine sickness the province has ever AC FW "Sy. Two Killed In Ontario Storm .2eping across Southern Ontario PY "+ week-end, an electrical storm of ¢ clonic proportions left death and Criivection fn its wake and caused worty damage that totalled well in- * ©) tre thousands of dollars. Ta "men, William Breen, North Ox- 1 oo or, and George Rennie, stee- pl Thay "ting at Sarnia, were both ine ntly killed during the "line *"a storm raged. Breen was "eC iy a broken Hydro wire Le a2 Toronto man, was ning while working on smokestack. Wii ara ghtning were about runl'y recpoasible for the damage I'ft in the wide path of the storm. At Carleton Place, near Ottawa, the gale tore tiie roof from a hotel and tossed Pp it into the street. In the same district many cars .were damaged by falling trees, Ten casualties were reported from storm centres, including four golfers who were stunned while playing near Brockvillo, Refugees Land In Earthquake MANILA, PI. -- A series of three violent quakes, following each other in rapid succession, shook Manila this week-end. The city was Dba into confusion. Walls of modern office buildings were cracked and wafer mains burst. Hundreds of persons, in- cluding refugees from war-torn Shang- shai were imperilled but apparently" there were no deaths. Many citizens were injured. Refugees from China were disem. barking from the liner President Jef- ferson at the time of the first shock. Iraq Army Split: i 7 JERUSALEM.--Iraq was without a Cabinet this week and its army was & reported seething with divided loyal- ties due to the crisis caused by the assassination of Sekir Sidki Pasha, chief of the general staff. . Premier Hikmet Suleiman's Cabinet resigned last week and former Prem- fer Jamal Madfai was commissioned to form a new Government, + Madfai declared fn an interview at Baghdad, the capital, that the inter. nal situation was quiet despite rumors { to the contrary, i it was reliably understood that the i new Premier planned to revert to the 2 Government policy prior to_the coup 4 d'etat which placed Suleiman in pow. ' 4 er last October, turning out all those 4 who came into office after the coup \ with the exception of army and other . # defence unit heads. : -- 5) LTR RZ > | © Bavarian Princess Married MUNICH, Germany. -- Watched by Bourbon: and: Bavarian royalty and sigbbed by the Nazis, 22-year-old ; ' 83 Marla of Bavaria was mar-* Pe 'fo Prince Pierre of Orleans-Bra- ganza, 24, in the Dococo chapel of Nymphenburg Castle, : Prince Pierre pretemds to the existent throne of Brazil. Michael, Cardinal Faulhaber, Arch: Bishop of Munich, performed the cere- Ar mony, . " Hardly any commoners wera on J hand and the press, conforming to Nazi policy in matters dealing with royalty, scarcely montioned the cere- mony, ¥ ! Former King Alfonso of Spain and former Crown Prince Rupprecht of - non- toms of encephalomyelitis, the strange Bavaria, uncle of the bride, were among the dozens of Royal guests, Hit by Cholera Epidemic HONG KONG.--The British colony Was gripped by a cholera epidemic this week-end. The disease has spread through the {sland. Scores of new. cases have been reported daily with 80. per cent, of them ending in death. Because of the Sino-Japanese war raging at Shanghai, authorities were unable to obtain fresh supplies of anti-cholera vaccine there, China National Airways Corporation planes transported 600 pounds of the serum to Hong Kong before the out- break of the Shanghai fighting a week ngo. Special appeals were made to other Far Eastern ports to rush more vac- cine by air, -- Japs Spurn British Plans } TOKIO.--Japan this week-end in. formed Great Britain it could not en- trust its Shanghai interests to foreign protection, as proposed by the British Government in {ts plan to restore peace in Shanghai. Japan demanded instead, convoca- tion of the powers which helped con. clude the 1932 truce terminating the Sin~ Japanese hostilities in Shanghai of that year. This assembly of na- tions, according to the Japanese pro- posal, would persuade China to abide by its obligations under the 1932 truce and withdraw its troops from Shang- hai, The Japanese stand was communi- cated here to the British charge d'affaires, J. L. Dodds, by Foreign Vice-Minister Kensuke Horinuchi, Wilkins Expedition to Rescue TORONTO.--The Arctic-bound plane in which Sir Hubert Wilkins and four companions plan to search for the six Russian aviators, lost in the Polar regions for over a week, landed at the waterfront here at 3:30 o'clock E.D.T. Thursday afternoon. No "Static" War Says Duce CALATAFIMI, Sicily. -- Premier 'Mussolini told the Italian arimy high command gathered here this week that the "Sicilian manoeuvres proved -that no Mediterranean or other foreign bower could disembark troops in Sic- ily, large island at the toe of the Italian "boot." , Mussolini said the war games demonstrated that so-called "static warfare" was out of the ques. tlon for an army trying to invade Italy. He said Italy 'had developed her own doctrine of "war of move- ment." . Farming Course SASKATOON.--A two-year farmers' course has been announced by the University of Saskatchewan aimed to produce successful farmers and rural leaders. Prof. J. W. G. MacEwan said bupils must be over 15 years of age, have public school education and one season's experience on a farm, Puts Ban on Noise MONTREAL.--Montreal City Coun- cil, at a noisy protracted meeting, this week adopted an anti-noise by-law to become effective after ratification by the Legislative Assembly at Quebec. Ald. Dave Rochon, nevertheless, 'thinks some noise will conlinve. His suggestion peddlers and fruit mer- chants be forbidden to shout in public places was not accepted, Loses Only Industrial Plant CHATHAM.--Chatham's only indus- trial plant, the Maramichi Foundry and Machine Works, fire this week with loss estimated at -$50,000.--The plant, employing about 25 men, was owned by F, M. Tweedle, M.L.A. foi Northumberland. { Lady Tweedsmuir's Air Trip INTATA LAKE, B.C. Lady Tweedsmuir made her first airplane flight aboard a Royal Canadian Air Force seaplane on the return from a fishing trip on which neither she nor - the Governor-General caught any fish, She hoarded the plane piloted by Squadron-Leader Earl McLeod for 'a 10-mile flight back. to camp from Nat. alkuz Lake at the eastern end of In. tata River. Lady Tweedsmuir said later she did not like flying but Squadron-Leader McLeod declared Her Excellency would have become Accustomed to it had the flight been longer. The air was bumpy in spots. Lady Tweeds- muir was affected also by the "feel. Ing of being in suspension." While Their Excellencies had no luck with the fish, Alastair Buchanan, their gon, Mrs. George Pape, lady-in- waiting, and the two aldes, Lieut, @. Rivers-Smith and Capt, Patrick Camp- bell' Preston pulled in six good-sized trout, X Students Strike MEXICO CITY.--Students of law, medicine; economy, commerce and the plastic arts at the University of Mex- ico are on strike and have taken pos- session of the Universtty ~ building. ey allowed no one to enter or leave, The students = called - the trike against their respective faculties for alleged Jartiality in. he election of the board of directors fot' the sttident body. Ya was destroyed hy re OTTAWA. -- Ontario is the fifth Province to sign an agreement with the Federal Governnient "providing for a program of special relief projects for youth. The four Western Prov- inces | signed agreements some time ago. As announced here this week-end by Labor Minister Rogers, the® scheme calls for an expenditure of $500,000, split fifty-fifty between the Dominion and the Province. Work will be pro- vided for 5,000 young men and women between the ages of 18 and 30. The program calls for six projects --forest conservation work, technical training in mining, agricultural train. ing, industrial apprenticeship, schools for training household workers, and technical training in urban centres. The Province will select the youths for training, but the agreement stipu- there must be no discrimination in relation "to social origin, religious views or political affiliations. Pro- vision was made for vocational guid- ance by qualified officers before en- tering on a course of training and subsequent employment would be in accordance with the individual's ap- titude. . i Health Instruction 'Living allowances may be paid in cases where the youths attend courses away from their tomes. \When poss- ible, instruction will be given in phy- sical education and health. Provision will be made on placements in em- ployment on completion of the train- ing. Special machinery will be set up for this purpose. The agreement, which remains in force until March 31, 1938, calls for fifty-fifty expenditure by the two Gov- ernments, with Ontario paying admin. istration costs, Among the projects which have been approved after éxamination by the National Employment Commission are: | 1. Forest conservation work to pro- vide a practical course in forestry on the Provincial forest reserves for ap- proximately 350 young men, with class instruction in related subjects, 2. Technical training in mining to be given in the Technical Schools of Northern Ontario to a selected group of fifty designad to fit them for posi- tiong in the mining industry. Instruc- tion will be 'given in mine surveying, drafting, assaying, mineralogy and other subjects for a period of about six months. - Plan Farm Placement 3. Rural training, providing practi- cal courses in subjects related to agri culture for young men. These courses will be established in various parts of the Province under the direction of the Provincial Department of Agri- culture. There will also be courses for rural young women in homecraft, household economics and other suit- able subjects. Through the Provincial Agricultural Representatives provision is being made to give 500 young men training in farm work by placing them with carefully = selected farmers throughout the Province who agree to furnish adequate training and instruec- tion in farming. Thig<is not only a farm placement plan but is designed to train,young men to follow agricul- tural parsuits. ' 4. Industrial apprenticeship and learnership, to help train young men or women in skilled or semi-skilled employment by paying the cost of "thelr instruction either in special classes in technical schools or in per- iods of instruction in tho shop or fac- tory. This cost may include (1) the actual cost of the tuition given; (3) travelling expenses for those who have to- attend classes away from their home; (3) payment to the young people of an allowance in lieu of wages while attending classes or un- dergoing instruction on the job or in the shop or factory. In the case of learners at least 60 pergcent. of the combined wage and instruction allow- ance must be paid by the employer. This project will be promoted by a staff of gpectally appointed and quali. Ontario Young Men and Wome "Placed In Jobs--Six Pro "Signed This Week-End $500,000 Will Be Spent ~ On New Youth Program n Will be Trained for Work and lated they must be unemployed and _ jects In View--Agreement fied officers to canvass employers of the Province, and is under the djrec- tion of the Provincial Department of Labor, Will Assist Women 5. Women's specialized training, schools for, training household work- ers will be established in some of the larger cities of the Province with a qualified staff in charge and under the supervision of an honorary com- mittee of women representing local organizations. The schools may be operated on a residential basis, and will provide a three months' course + with: a placement and follow-up ser- vice. Provision is also made for train. ing in other forms of specialized ser- vices suitable for women. 6. Urban technical occupational training. To provide courses of prac- tical training in the technical schools and elsewhere to help young people fit themselves for employment opportun- ities in the area. Somo of these courses will be used in connection with the apprenticeship and learner. ship project. THE -- | MARKETS HAY AND STRAW No. 2 timothy, old, $10 to $113 new, $9 to $10 per ton; No. 3 timothy, $3 to $9; oats and wheat straw, $5.50 to $6.50. Above prices f.0.b. Toronto. POULTRY Prices pald to country shippers. Dressed Milk -Sel. A "Sel. B Fed A. Spring Chickens-- 1 to 2 Ibs. .. 0... 16 pK! 18 Ww 1T 16 20 3 to 4 lbs. .......... . 19 "17 21 4 lbs. and over .. 20 18 22 5 1bs. and over .. 21 19 23 Dressed Fatted Hens-- Sel. A. Sel. B. Over 5 Ibs, .. 15 13 4 to 5 lbs. ... we 14 12 314 to 4 lbs, ..... wr 12 11 3 to 314 Ibs. cee, 11 10 POULTRY AND EGGS Buying pricos: Toronto dealers are quoting produc- ers fon ungraded eggs, delivered, cases returned: Fggs-- = Grade A large ....... 24 to 00 Grade A medium ....., 23 to 00- Grade B 19 to 00 Grade C 16 to 00 Dealers are quoted on graded eggs, cases free: Grade A large ..... « 261% to 27 Grade A medium ...... 2514 to 26 Grade BB 221% to 00 Grade © ... .. 19% to 00 ) DAIRY PRODUCE Butter-- Quotations to wholesale trade: Creamery solids, No. 1 27 to 00 do 38 score ........ 26 to 00 do 37 score ... 25 to 00 do 36 score ..... 24 to 00 Cheese-- New large, parafined 137% to 1414 do twins ........ 1415 to 141, do triplets ................ 143% to 14% (Average prico paid to shippeds f,0.b. country points.) i -New-large; parafiined 1315 fo 1314 do triplets ................ 13% to 13% Apple Pie Is First In U, S, Expert Says Peach Next In Pre- ference; Cream Kind Gaining PHILADELPHIA, -- Monroe '"Bog- ton" Strause, hafled ag the nation's No. 1 ple expert, rolled out a neat pie crust and proclaimed that fn hig 20 NEWS PARADE HIGHLIGHTS OF THE WEEKS NEWS By Elizabeth Eedy | . "Program For Canadian Youth "A gigantic plan for the rehabilita- tion of Canadlan young people caught in the maelstrom of hard times and unemployment is before the Federal Department of Labor and the Unem- ployment Commission, $1,000,000 has been voted to the scheme by the Do- minion Government, a sum which will be used to promote apprenticeship in many trades and industries so Cana- dian boys and girls may be properly trained for work. All groups of youth will be taken into consideration and absorption made into as many branches of industry as possible. Ontario hopes to receive $240,000 of the total allotment, and an agreement will probably be drawn up to that effect and submitted to both govern- ments for ratification. Much prepara- tory work is already going on 'in On. tario, Government employment offi- ces are being asked to keep a list ot all unemployed young people and maintain close touch with the situa. tion in' cach locality. Will Stay Out of Politics It is inevitable that reports will never cease to be current during the rest of his natural life that the Duke of Windsor is about to return to Eng- land and enter politics. Already rum. ors are circulating that the ex-King is going back to England inside of the next six months to become Prime Minister. Londoners say that it is only in the United States that such {deas are given credence. In England, they declare, there is no apparent body of opinion that would lift a finger to tac- Hitate a political career for the for- mer king, and it is morg probable that public opinion would strongly resist, on {mpersonal grounds, any attempt of a member of the Royal family to enlarge -his influence with the public. An authoritativee London source says there is not a scrap of evidence to indicate that any substantial num- ber of Englishmen regret their de. cision of December. They would make it again and in like circumstances with equal emphasis. Vanish In Arctic A four-motored Russian plane pil- oted by the famed Sigismund Levan- evsky and bound to the United States from Moscow, 1s long overdue at the Fairbanks, Alaska, landing field. It was the third Russian flight over the North Pole in the past two months. A Russian plane flew from Moscow and landed at Vancouver, Wash,, June 20, and another flew from Mos- cow to San Jacinto, Cal., on July 14 after a 6,700-mile trip. Both flights were non-stop. While the search goes. on for the missing flyers, theories accounting for the disappearance of the plane piloted by Levanevsky hold that he may have run out of gasoline and come down in the tundra, or that he may have crashed in a 100-mile-an-hour gale, " Britain may propose that Only the Arctic wastes know the sec- ret of what happened to the plane. Meanwhile the Soviet Government is going ahead with plans for further ex. perimental [flights over the Pole, Clash With Aberhart The Dominion-Alberta impasse over the banking laws enacted at the re- cent special session at Edmonton was dramatically terminated this _ week when Premier Mackenzie King an. nounced that the three objectionable statutes had been disallowed, In a wire to Premier Aberhat, the head of the Dominion Government says in part; "It It is felt that changes should be made in the banking or currency laws of the Dominion jt is open to any citi- zens of the Dominion restding in Al- berta, or in any other province, to seek to have those changes made by the only body witich has the due auth- ority. The issue in the present in. stance is that a direct attempt is be- ing made to {infringe upon a field of Jurisdiction universally recognized as falling to the Dominfon, and to butt. ress this action by denying any ques. tioning of the constitutionality of this section in the courts." -- of It is thirteen years since the power of disallowance has been exercised by the: Dominion. The Federal Govern. ment claims that by passing the three -pleces of legislation (licensing bhank- ers, introducing measures to control banking, closing the courts to actions testing Alberta statutes), the Province of Alberta has overstepped its pow- ers. The fight is on. 2 Sino-Japanese War A conflagration that appeared to have died down somewhat last week has flared up again with the Japanese attack on Shanghai, and the Chino. Jap disagreement has been brought within the category of a major con- flict, a deadly war of the first class. The greatest aerial bombings the Orient has ever known, are going on. Sections of Shanghai have been des. troyed by incendiary flames, ships be- longing to both belligerents sunk, and innocent bystanders done to death. Hundreds of soldiers on both sides have been killed. The war in China is looked on with great disfavor by the Japanese at home who are already overburdened with taxes, yet a mob- ilization of all resources of that coun- try has Leen proclaimed, and Japanese troops bv the thousands continue to pour into Chinese war zones. The Chinese meantime are stemming the -Jap advance and using blockades to keep enemy ships from penetrating in- land.- Reprisals on whites 'are feared and the foreign population of Shang- hai are right in believing themselves to be in grave danger. It is expected that in order to spare the city, Great she, the United States and France assume re- sponsibility for safeguarding Chinese and Japanese interests there. ple is the No. 1 ple with the nation, Peach ple is second he enumerated, tucking the crust into a ple pan. The fruit pies rank high in the United States, but recently the cream pie has taken on popularity by leaps and bounds and in the near future, he thinks, meat pies will be extremely popular, ' Strause, whose home is in Holly- _wood gave a pie-baking démonstration-|- last night before the Stewards' and Caterers' Convention. International Association Philadelphia, said Strause, is the na- tion's leading community of pie-eaters. "Your rate per customer is the highest in the country." He sald he had been studying the Philadelphia pie situation for years and he is thinking of naming his next pie for the home of scrapple and pep- per pot soup. Peter G. Economou, of Buffalo, N.Y. told the delegates it's colour that whets your appetite. "The average di- ner-out will choose the dish with the years' experience he has found apple fancy colours every time," | i i lecti wall p Selectine Ail you urray, red course, if Make Your Wallpaper Match You! er Antteting to your | eraonal coloring it ead anil Lo % change your coloring i's an expensive fad, rraine Bennett, blonde, the latest fashion fad. Margaret Horan L-R) demonstrate t the effect, O Canadians Are - Beef-Minded © Parley Is Told i Roast Beef and Yorkshire Pudding Is Dominion's Favorite Dish, Says Torontonian PHILADELPHIA, -- Delegates to the International Stewards' and Cat- erers' Association convention diligent- ly compared notes this week and unan- imously agreed that, generally speak ing, all people like to cat. But when it comes to the choice of good food and care of the customers, a sectional diversion of opinion apeared, Up in Canada now, people toy with a salad, but they really want some- thing substantial, said C. W. Hitch- cock of Toronto. There ig nothing a Canadian customer likes better than a good roast beef and Yorkshire pud- ding. Take a Philadelphian now. You can- not give him meat with a lot of ribs in it, or fish with a lot of bones. That, according to F. L. D. Seely, (lerman- town delegate, is because Philadelphia diner-outers are "lazy." J. C. Ross, who hails from Los An- goles, says that if a Californian can't have his saldd he gets morose and re- fuses to eat his spinach and drink his milk. Will Wire Governor Every Cow Casualty DELAND, Fla--Governor Fred Cone will be notified by telegraph every time a cow is involved in a Volusia County highway accident, The Deland Junior Chamber of Commerce joined in unsuccessful ef- forts to pass laws at the recent legis- lative session to bar cattle from Flor- ida's roads. Just to keep the matter before the governor, the chamber's board of di- rectors: voted to wire him the bad news every time a cow is bumped on the county's roads. Geologists Find Relics of Indian "Helen of Troy" Bones Reveal Story of Maiden Who Won Hearts of Ponca Captors NIOBRARA, Neb, -- Dust from a pile of bleached Indian bones swirled out of a long, decp trench this week to disclose the story of an Indian "He- len of Troy," who won the hearts of her ancient Ponca captors, Dr. Earl H. Bell, University of Ne- braska archeologist, and his crew of student diggers, uncovered the prehiss toric drama in the ruins of a mighty Ponca fort, high on a hil'ton overlook- ing the junction of tho Misbrara and Missouri rivers iy Northeastern Ne- binahr, 'Iere, in a fort which was completo with battlements, a moat and cache pits, they found the remains of an an- clent love story which precipitated a war between Ponca and Omaha Sioux Indians. Uncovering 14 skulls, the diggers found evidence of a Great Plains en- sagement which they likened to the Trojan war, and pleced together the fragments. of tribal legends to round out the story, Great Plains Helen The perennial enemies of the Pon. ca were a tribe of Omaha Indians, who lived farther south. The Ponca retal fated after one encovnter with a for. ay in which they stole many Omaha horses and women, ' One of the women was the Great Plains Helen, a comely Omaha woman who was dragged away to spend her life with a big Ponca. Legends gay that she was a- chieftain's daughter, and that the Omaha schemed to recap- ture her. But when her former tribes. men stormed the Ponca fort, she was within the encircling barricade, fight. ing side by side with her captor. The Ponca routed their enemies, Fourteen skulls told the story of the battle. The Helen who brought a war to the plains, say the legends, lived the rest of her life among the, Ponca, helping with the gardens and the domestic work, and worshipping her conqueror, Seers Predict Mild Weather Bas q fay They Can Tell By Watching Caterpillars - HARRISBURG, Pa., Perspiring farmers at the capital's market places mop their brows and "allow" that it is going to be a mild winter. The current warm spell has nothing to do with it, of course, but -- Brown caterpillars are crawling all over the barn floors. Central Pennsylvania farmers, many of whom still predict the weather for months in advance, by use of "nat. ural signs," assert there are [ndiea. tions that the winter will bo much like last year's. ) There will he some blizzards, a lot of sleeting, rain, snow and wind, but will not be like the one before. The weather prophets are sure of that. Take John Herr, potgtry farmer, for instance. He saw a light brown cater- pillar the other day. If the caterpillars are black, that means a severe winter. It. the caterpillars are light in color, things would not be so bad. Herr said he doesn't take a lot of stock in the caterpillar signs, but others chipped in that "they're never wrong." And Mrs. Herr reminded him that "they say if the caterpillar is light at both ends and dark in the middle, ft means the late fall and carly spring will be nice, but the winter bad." Other farmers felt that it's a little too carly for forecasts. Wait until you see the squirrels burying nuts said they. When they bury the nuts deep, look out! Goosebone prophets and folk who depend upon the groundhog, felt the same way about it being too carly. But the caterpillar fans insist that they have "scooped" the others again and that winter will he nothing to worry about. Car Is Embedded In House Porch DETROIT.--Jack Norgard appear- ed in city police 'court on a reckless driving charge in consequence of an accident that occurred at Tecumseh Road and Crawford avenue. His car struck Edgar Leveque, aged 12, of 1391 Wellington Avenue, who was riding on a coaster wagon at the time. . After hitting the boy, the auto ap- parently went out of control, for it leaped the curb, crossed a lawn aud embedded itself "in a porch at 906 Tecumseh Road West. Papa Dionne Hid Under The Verandah STRATFORD, Ont.-- Oliva Dionne, father of the quintuplets, used to take refuge under the verandah at oi the Dionne home when visitors came to see the girls, Miss Patricia Mul- ling, Ottawa, former nurse to the five sisters, said while visiting here. Miss Mullins, a Red Cross nurse in North- ern Ontario, hélped nurse the quin- tuplets until they were old enough to learn to speak, at which time French- speaking nurses were engaged. ee will be => le _ - ba ate eli. 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