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[page 210] A. 118 days last year. Q. That is almost within a day or two of being one-third of the whole year? A. Yes sir. Q. You spend a week to ten days there? A. Yes, sir. Some times not more than 4 or 5 days again. I have made it in this way: the first of the month sometimes. Then occasionally it might go until the middle of the next month. But during that time Col. Robie and Mr. Hinkley have taken care of the letter boxes Q. What do you do when you are there? A. I guess about all I do is to comfort them and incite them to work and cheer and speak a cheerful word. They welcome me always; glad to see me. I am never idle. I do just all I should wish a nurse to do. Q. Then you do not do any work of going in as a kind of detective, a check to it, as the law says here? A. Yes, sir Q. I understood you to say that about all you did was to comfort? A. That is the intervening time. I have several cases- I cannot quite recollect them now, but I have them on my note book- of violence reported to Dr. Harlow, and the attendant has not stand in