The Canadian nurse . I HIS little housewife had aproblem — sweet-tooth Hubby ona sweet-free diet. (And beginningto get nervous about it.) Shetried everything. Fancy helpings. But Hubbysfrown darkened by the day. Thenone day she read in a magazineabout a discovery, a newnon-caloric sweetener. One thatshe could actually cook and bakewith — in any food, at anytemperature. One which gavethe perfect taste of sugar — withno bitter aftertaste in ordinaryuse. That night there werecookies, pudding, coffee — siveetcoffee — and a big, big snule acroas^^ (^M^ . . and so shestarted usin


The Canadian nurse . I HIS little housewife had aproblem — sweet-tooth Hubby ona sweet-free diet. (And beginningto get nervous about it.) Shetried everything. Fancy helpings. But Hubbysfrown darkened by the day. Thenone day she read in a magazineabout a discovery, a newnon-caloric sweetener. One thatshe could actually cook and bakewith — in any food, at anytemperature. One which gavethe perfect taste of sugar — withno bitter aftertaste in ordinaryuse. That night there werecookies, pudding, coffee — siveetcoffee — and a big, big snule acroas^^ (^M^ . . and so shestarted using Sucaryl (Cyclamate, Abbott) ® For samples and recipe booklets, write Abbott Laboratories Montreal The JoamAl prtstmis pkmrmmc€%t%c»U for mformttwm, Nmtet mmd^stmmd tkmi omty m pkyMkim tmy * THE CANADIAN NUUSE. I m cfloflDifiii mm A MONTHLY JOURNAL FOR THE NURSES OF CANADAPUBLISHED BY THE CANADIAN NURSES ASSOCIATION VOLUME 51 NUMBEI 4 MONTREAL, APRIL, 1955 Chase out Fear and Ignorance ffnEN ROBERT KOCH isolated thebacilli of tuberculosis over 70 yearsago a whole new vista of cure, pre-vention and education was opened was the cause. Now all that wasnecessary was to find appropriatemeans of destroying those bacteriawherever they might exist and the*great white plague could be ban-ished. What a happy place the worldwould become! Though experience has proved thatthis pious hope will not be realizedfor many generations to come, tremen-dous strides have been taken in reduc-ing the incidence of once it ranked high in thegeneral mortality table as a cause ofdeath, it has now dropped well downon the list. Much has been accom-plished — much remains to l>e of the most important aspects ofthe prevention program is the needfor a a>ntinuing educational campaign


Size: 1466px × 1703px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookauthorcanadiannursesassocia, bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900