The Icelandic Canadian - 01.06.1945, Side 49

The Icelandic Canadian - 01.06.1945, Side 49
THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN 47 destined to make him a good and well beloved doctor. During the past weeks he had seen this patient face loneliness and extreme pain with courage. And it was only right that he should have the one he had come to depend on, and to regard as a friend, with him during these last-moments. The ward was quiet at that hour. The bed was in the far corner and screened from the rest of the patients. The nurse on duty was standing at the foot of the bed. When it was all over, Bob stood for a moment thinking how tired the old man looked and yet hw glad to be at rest, when suddenly he heard a scream. He turned to see a long knife pointed at his throat, a butcher knife with a gleaming edge, held in a muscular black hand. He jumped aside, knocking over the screen and grabbed his assail- ant’s wrist. For a moment they fought for the knife and Bob’s arm was slashed from wrist to elbow. By this time the nurse had hold of the menacing arm and then the orderly and two other nurses came on the run and between them, they got the mad man disarmed. For he was insane. The mild mannered negro stevedore who had been a model patient, ever since he was brought in two weeks before, had suddenly gone completely out of his mind. When he was safely on his way to psychopathic, Bob went down to the casualty ward to have his arm bandaged. “I guess I owe a lot to you Miss Corrigan,” he said to the nurse. “If you hadn’t screamed, I wouldn’t have gotten off this easy.” Miss Corrigan looked at him as if he too were going out of his mind. “I didn’t scream” she said “I didn’t see what was happening until you jumped and knocked over the screen.” “Well I distinctly heard a woman scream, that’s what made me look around.” Miss Corrigan’s only answere was to tell him to lie down. He had evidently- suffered a much more severe shock than she realized. She was the only wo- man in the ward at the time and she certainly hadn’t screamed. That was final. He’d better take a sedative and try to get some sleep. One of the other internes could take his place for the remainder of the night. In the morning he would probably be all right. Bob stood up. He did feel a little weak and shaky and he could do with a night’s sleep. He looked at the clock on the wall of the casualty room. It was two-twenty! KEYSTONE Fisheries Limited 404 SCOTT BLOCK Winnipeg, Man. • Phone 95 227 G. F. Jonasson S. M. Bachman Manager Secretary The Icelandic Canadian EDITORIAL BOARD: Judge W. J. Lindal, Chairman, 788 Wolseley Ave., Winnipeg, Man.; Gissur Eliasson, Secretary, 890 Dominion St.; Steina J. Sommerville, 614 St. Mary’s Road, St. Vital, Man.; J. G. Johannsson, 586 Arlington St.; B. E. Johnson, 1059 Dominion St. NEWS EDITOR: Sigrun Lindal, 912 Jessie Avenue. OUR WAR EFFORT: G. Finnbogason, 641 Agnes St. BUSINESS MANAGER: Grace Reykdal, 301 Great West Permanent Bldg. CIRCULATION MANAGER: Hjalmur F. Danielson, 869 Garfield St.

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The Icelandic Canadian

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