HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1939-07-27, Page 3•
•
Could You
• Achixinister
First l►id? ..
' Essentials lou 'Should Know
•
. - 1. Reinove the cause of injury
• or remove the patient_ item Cori, -
tact tyith danger.
' Examples : A child sWallow.s a
crust or piece of Meat and is, cho.k- '
Mg: • The foreign • body should at
• once .be hooked up by the finger?'
•er pushed down the throat,
Your patient is 1 i a • gas-filled
room., Open windows;'after turn-
ings of th'b"gas, drag him ,out of.
the room, Whilst protecting' your
by :wet Soviets .over nose and
mouth
2. Alis zys gine 'air, and.' •loosen
':.clothing.••• •
• 3,'Attend.. first, to severe hctmor
,rhage ;by,' Pressing over • bleeding
spet•''b, earl; -and bari'd'ai e, and, also •
at • ,pies:Sure ,'points. • -
•4:' Treat- •shock' by warmth oto
limbs,, armpits,, etc.;, and hot drinks
Jf.._patient_ls_conseious.... ._._• a--
. $. Never give' anything by •the
mouth to. an unconscious patient.
6. Cover • any 'wo.urld by. a clean'
dry •dressing, sueh as, the inside of
,a • handkerchief • or a • sterilized
towc9.
7. If poison has been swallow-
ed' it should' be removed or • net- •
r:l �....
titled:
8. Arrange for transport of pati- '
ent ',to. his home;' or hospital • if
seriously., hurt. • •
•9. The best stimulants if patient •
. is conscious; are tea .or coffee; with
sugar, hot tnilk, meat extracts, • or
a• teaspoon' sal volatile in half ,a '
tumbler of water:.; War'm.th,- ape' •
plied to -the •sto'niach and massage
• of the ;heart are useful. The ad-
• Ministration
' of alcohol is clanger- ,
ous', in' accidents, as there May be
infernal bleeding,. ' Alcohol •should
only b'e prescribed' by a'do'ctor. ,' • •
. 10.,The most'inrpor•Iant r.u1e :for'
first -aiders is to send for the doc-
tor as' soon a$-p•ossible ..and steep •
the patient absolutely et -rest.•
Aerial Route,
- To Australia.:.
18,000 -Mile • Pioneering. Plight
By. Way. of Africa And. the
Virgin Islands , Shows Route.
:Useful -Ice Great. Britain '
An 18,000-.miile-pioncertng flight
from Australia' by ,way of Africa
, and the;Virgin islands ended early.
in July, when the • $140,000 flying-
.
• boat Guba Sat down on Jamaica
Bay,' N. Y. .
The 14 -ton • craft; carrying. the
Archbold -New •.Guinea expedition of
the American Museum :of Natural
I -Eatery, flew non -"stop. about 1,500
miles from ,the Virgin Island's.
Before that venture; the • plane
participated) ,in scientific explora-
tions in, ' Dutch New 'Guinea, .cov- ,
ering a total of. 40,000 miles since
it .took off •from San Diego, Calif.,'
June 3, 1938. . •
AIi Over British Territory ,
Heading the 'party was Richard
Archbold; owner of the "flying lab-
oratory" and research 'associate of
the 'museum:
• The survey flight, he said., prow
ed that Great Britain in time of war
'could reach Australia by. air by
flying over only its own territory,
"presumably friendly" French and
• Belgian• territory,,and several water
• bops.' •
New Liberal Organizer
Formerly director of .ravel arid
publicity for the. Ontarit, govern-
inent, Bar. G. Sullivan, ABOVE;'
resigned that_ post to become • or-
gamzer for the national Liberal
party. in Ontario, where Premier
Hepburn is currently at logger-
heady with the . Dorninfen trine
minister, _
•
A ceremony believed to - date
front tiine of Druid !worship Was
• -cel bra•ted-its• liinsteignten
land, when villager's• roasted a ram
whole over 'a . fire of logs. After
roasting it was sold in portions:
' The Argentine, post offit;e ]lie
Installed special booths in whieh
• one May make a 200 word tin-
treakabh gramaphone record let-
er, The record is then sent by
trtail ip the ordinary way.
Archbishop 'Qf
iu
Iaspetta Quebec Exhibit at New York' Pair
ENOU.GH FOR ALL: Thanks to
the 'methods employed by- •:tiers •
Hitler, millions of'dollars•have.been
pouring. into, Canada in the past
few months to the -extent of $50,
000,000 or, $0.0,000,0.00. It: is eapital
froin Etiro:pet Despite an organised
'outcry of local industrialists against
the •adniissfon of new industries or
new branches of industri'es'already'
establi'shed.iu Canada, it is'indicat-.
ea in. ;despatches front Ottawa 'That
the Departmeur of Jnimigtation•has.•''a
been equitei reasonable in, its: atti:t.
• tude toward 'Eurppeatl,.ludustriai
leaders who have'been, driven taloa
vest their' capital and brains bet
yovd the:war=worried. countries. •
And why shouldn't we be meas-•
unable! ' New• acapita•1, -new menu.-
featuring and new . brains will
reate, new employment and should'
• =be eneeteraged. Not::oir}y will -a
manufacturing boom create wo>yk •
•For' hundred's of artisans who are
unemployed at present, .but it will
xesultin a great:, consumption of
raw materials, rt is truly a good
thing for Canada.
ANGLO-POI-Mt FLARE.,UP: Just
when we thought affairs between '
'.B'ritain•and Poland were being iron,
ed out, while General Sir Edmund,
Ironside 'conferred at .Warsaw with
Polish Military leaders on 'co-ordin
ation of .the Bit sr i s
h ' Fr' nch and';
''
Polish • forces; an . Anglo -Polish
money quarrel•••flared•'up in Lon-.
"don. It 'conce'rit,ed', where•• and how
',the $25.000,000 British. loan 'fol the
Poles Was to be.spent,. The British
. Insist that. Britain's manufacturers
.632si• tap the .he etits t::t
• Poles o s wa nt a •,free Nand• to btiy.
equipment and machinery. Inhere
t tr y like, exon •in the'1Jnited•,States';
•
OUR' ,HERITAGE: For the fi'rit'five •
months of this year Ca:nada was
tliird among ;he gold' ,producing..:
'countries of the world.
, It in: a challenge to the imagin-
ation to try and forecast the •metal•
wealth wbic't remains to he taken.
out of he ground in 'the•'Dominioti.
There • has been a remarkable in -
,crease in recent years °n the min-
ing industry' and today lin
is. one of ' .
the biggest props of thc'whole: Cap
;Winn economy. ,
Where fu,resir. stood not so. long
'ago we see new modern com:mun
itiesi. we Sep wages, .purchase of
supplies, production and . transpor-
tation.' 'What will the conditions .be
25 'or 50 years from pow? The', Can-
adian Tenth of the day }las a. great,
•herl� _igc,
THE ,T,ROU'-BLEs OF 'TH'E
' WORLD: We heard about a'•visi-
tor in Italy ;rho related an illum-
inating incident of his •boliday.'It..
was :about a ,visit he made to a
fanlous•shrine in the Mountains not.
far 1'roni Rome. He was' just, going
'to.sign bis name inthe visitor's
book, :vhen•ho noticed that the last
signature was Hermann Goering,
"Se Goering's been here," he said •
to tae priest. '"Yes, he came here."
•"D1d he say anything?" -."Yes, he
said that this place was so lonely
and remote from the troubles •of
the world that he .would like to
stay 'here forever."
Without another word the priest
bowed and withdrew.
.Right -Of -Way
• Is Dead Letter
Revision of Traffic ,La s Urg-•
.:ed by Head of Motor League
Ninetys perwant of highway acci-
dent prevents depends oh greater
.care being taken by. the motorist,
. W. Gilbert Robertson, general man-
ager of the Ontario Mirtor League
deelared receirtlj-1 , .
t The chief cause of bad collisions
was the drivers''tendency to forget
to stop at stop streets after "zoom-
ing^at a high speed" through less
- important thoroughfares.
Not. Properly Obeyed Anyway
"The ,sigh -of -way • le •a dead let-
ter and should be reproved from the
statute' books;" he said., "This sec- •
tion of the Highway„ Traffic Act
-•is not properly obeyed by any nro-
, torist and should be made to con-
foria, with actual motoring condi-
tions.
"This iuean$ legally that any
driver coming up to a, through'
highway .can dart through the traf-
fie after' he has stopped. The law
-should not give •-him the right'of-
way+. over the driver travelling on
the through street."
• z .!
•
' On his, way home ,front France, • where . he -officiated •% 'r'i .
n , v a ous ..ceremonies, His Eminence, Cardinal Rodrigtie,•
Villeneuve,•archbishop..of ,Quebec.; and primate 'of the .Roman Catholic• church in Canada; ,finds much to interest
• him as .he inspects •the Quebec exhibit . at, the world's' f air in New York: ' •With him is His' Grace' Msgr.. Vachon;.
rector of Laval University, Montreal. •
VO!CE
oF the
PRESS
t - ,
CANADA'S CHANE •
Canada is an attractive place
rto Euro can indus ri li
p .t st, a rsts at pies-
end, bacanse .it. is, Yemiived from',
the trouble centres, because it is
midway between . •E.urope'an and
Asiatic markets and because it has
great stores of ' re$ources' awaiting
development.' It is reported that"'
industrialists with something like
3d million ; dollars to invest are
considering this ' • country, .That
would make ,it appear. all the; more'.
important to welcome . the , ' Bata'
shoe cortlpany.. ••Halifax Chron-
icle.
TURN THE... DIAL •
Radios. left on late at night and
allowed to blare out arenot d'erh-
onstrations of neighborliness..
Niagara Falls. Review. .
PEDESTRIAN AND 'MOTORISTS
Vancouver , has "'embarked upon
a second "Hundred Deathless
Days" .campaign. ',The ' first cam-
paign ended after two days in a
• tragedy. A. pedestrian was killed
by a motorist, and the coroher's
jury which investigated the affair
decided that the pedestrian, not
the •motorist,was to blame.
The unfortnnate incident under-
lines the truth that' traffic safety
depends not on motoristsalone or
on , pedestr.ians atone but on the
co-operation of all who use the
streets •and. highway s. -Vancouver'
Province.
Newest Police
Methods used
R. ' C: 'M.. P.:. Follow- Technique
of Studying How .Criminals
• Operate' '•
Gorporal John Timmerman'of;.the
Royal Canadian Mounted Police an-
nount7ed .here recently peace,. Iden-
tification methods throughout Can- .
'.hrare been ahaaagee mater ill
through, adoption. of an elaborate
new .system, the 'modes'operarida
system. '
'Gives -'Clue To Identity '
C'brp, Timmerman said the. new '.
system deals largely Witti the way..
criminals, operate. Most . eriruinais•
specialize-' and use a :definite. tech-. •
`nique •in their crines, which ;under'
this system of 'co -relating police in-.
formation Would' protide a' clue to• •;
the criminal's identity when a crime i
is committeed in a certain 'way.
,The new' 'system• provided; also
fol co-operation of• police , forces
throughout the country, • • so that
municipal, provincial arid.'' feder"al
police can work' in unison.
, The Duke of W°rici.:cras' p.•i.vate .
.. chauffeur for eighteen 'years
•'. George I.adbr:ook, the' sarne.'orie-'
Who whizzed Mrs.. Simpson across.
France immediately afters the. ab-.
dication, is now a' doorman for a
swank London night' club.
Pruning Trees
Requires Care
Must Be Done Properly To In.
Sure Right Development
• To ,insure proper d.eveloprilent
and vi' orous.• growth. of ,the tree,
pr
''uning 'must be carefully . aria
.`properly done.. All dead, bruised,
and broken r'uots are removed with
sharp •knife or pruning. shears,:
. • Clean `cuts Will heal rapidly, while
ragged puts heal' slowly and may
'provide an entrance•'place for'in-
feetion:. The top of the
he tree is
cit back' to: balance throot' sys-.
' tem; that is, enough of, the bran
rhes are Cut back lar entirelyli,reee
moved ta compensate for the !loss
of eroots when the tree Was dug:
Thus the loss of. . •m'oisture . by •
• transpiration 'through the leaves•.is
kept in,pi•opertien to the intake ,of -
moisture. through the . rocas,. pre- •
• touting a too -rapid drying out • of
the top of the 'plant. ,The centre
stern'. ofthe tree„.,k; awn as the
leader, .is.retairied, but if. the tree
is • to.o tall for the •number of side .'
branches it rna'y be tojiped .;a 'lit:• .
'ale.. From° one-third to onee half of
the!length 'pf the • side bran rhes ,is
cut back. ' In ' pruning, it,' is kept
in mind that.' the complate•d, tree •
should prescnt`a pyramid: al ;hype„•
•
' A i'ar'ltfi1•ider, i„. sure of rer'onr;
• pc ase in"kind. ,'''
P'
U. S. War Relic Viewed By.R.C.M.P,
•
•
FISHINFANS. BY ,THE
° 'MG, ILLION;S •
There is little doubt aino•ng
Canadiansportsmen that the
sport of fishing is about' the • nest
popular outdoor tiastfine . in the
Dominion, and this is very, true of
the': Province of Ontarip in parti-
cula>l�, 'where it leads most sports
by a Targe margin' of popularity:
a PREMIER FISHERMAN '
•
And speaking of the Popularity
of fishing, Ontario's - active • 'pre-
mier Mitc:hell fiepburn: is::quite ar-
enihusiastic fisherman when poli-
tics and government.'niatters spare
'him '.the :odd' few- moments. But
re-cently ':the pressute.4b%isinessK
forced the province',s government
leader t6' decline an invitation to
go pickerel' fishing on Lake.Nipis
'sing• with a fishing party arranged
: by Hoa. Harry C. Nixon,, Ontario.
Gaines and Fisheries Minister. In-
stead, . Premier Hepburn . angled
with government problems while
the others went'fishing. The par
• ty included 'Leopold Macaulay
(Con.' York' South) and'•his wife.;,.
Mrs. Nixon; •Lionel. Conaeher (Lib.
Toronto-Bracondale), former hoc-
key star, of the'National' 'Hockey •
League; and Mrs. Conatii:er.
BIG HUNTING " •:.•
Aue bald g eagle was seen fly •
-
ing over. ' Meaford, Ontario,. the
other day and so rare is`this.sight
in this part of Canada. that • the
;whole Meaford Natural History .
C'fubturned out in goodly numbers
s
to spend the week -enc) Covering
f •las Ceorgiian Bay district to find
if the large bird had decided .. to.
nestnthese parts of Ontario:
London Called
w useur : Piece
London, in • the 'view of Arehi-'
•'•teet.Frank 'Lloyd Wright, is a mu-
seum Meer,' an.d as, a modern city.
• is r.ot fi* rar hgm,;tn�•habitation,'><
11r. `;'fright 'd<', i;,ncd- Tokio's
In,pet al I•iotel, o::lj •earthquake•
• r roti s,r ucture iri the city -in the'.
1.9.1;3. disaster.
Said 1'i-riglit • (in. ;:o:idou l..�t
a'aek,i "'Your government is
•ing plates, to• evacua':c' the city.'
Why not evaluate .for..'gosd?
There is .plenty of 'room on;.:ris
'green :earth ,fol C& eryb°oda•:''
"If statesmen,' car:not solve the' '
,probiean at', its' sources • civilizatiolr
leard'ly 'worth • saving: People
sholrld be allowed to live above .
earth—they will be under it. soon
enough." • '
o®ks Anxi You
BY
;ELIZABETH EEDY
REACHING FOR THE STARS
, By .Npra Wain - •• ' .
One of. the most enjo;;abie:'hooks
•whic'h 'continues Jo .enjoy great
popularity ,•is this story of Miss
Waln's four-year sojourn • in Gel•=
many. 1'z-om the 'time she motored
across the` Belgium. border in .June
of. 1944 with her English .husband
who., was to study music in Ger-
many,' shhe'devoted a great part of •
slier 'tinge in 'an attempt ;to under-
stand ,the German people and. their.:
covn:try'"under H.itler's, .rule. '
Her, strange Experiences w,er•,e
-.many afid'w'b.en sheaeft tho country
•lobr"..years later, it was with' a...,'
'wealthiof knowledge of the-paeopie
•„with "wlimp ^she hadassociated fox .
so •''any ;month .' S•he. ' 'says that
condita n,, exist everywh.ere which.
. outlaw treedom. - make unguarded
• 'speech i, possible and throw ter.
ror ' and:'horror . across •the daily
lives of oppressor and oppressed
"I wrote my book," says• ' Miss '
Waln, "to make the :World love-.:
that is, understand -the: German ,
people --a people wbo, taking their
virtues with ,their: vices; and their,
wisdom with their follies, are not '
ntore wicked Or more: stupid •than
the remainder' of mankind.""
•
A clock built 'by a famous. Bei-,
gian watchmaker' has' ninety-three
dials, is: sixteen feet in height, and
• weighs .4,500 lbs. •
Gean'an Customs officers have .a' •
,. ,
dailyba ' ' �•
g of •between fo.ty and:
f:'fty•.people . tiying.•'to .''smua:gl.e'
. things ,out of Germane-. •
Wright said he liked 'London's.
green parks,:, hated sky -scrapers..
But •"in England I have found the
.greatest •cultural lag outside of '•
Fuseal. and the 'United States.". '
BUT ARE THERE SUCH? ' '
A boy who wins a spelling bee
may grow hp and become a busi-
ness man who doesn't `have to de-
pend on his stenographer: —Ham-
ilton
Spee'tator.
DEMOCRACY! •t:. . . -
• • There it'•is, .just one word. But
itis not a word; it is 'a concept of
`life. It. is.a ooncept that is root-
ed, not in • the 'mind alone, but in.
the heart of man. It is the differ-
ence between men who stoop in
subservience, to a ruler from
above, and alien' who wall: straight
and. are themselves the rulers. It
is the rightfor men and Women to
think and speak for themselves, to
have' faith in, themselves and 'in
. each other, and to make known
their wills without fear or indulg-
ence. Democracy is a, way of
.life for which men have always
struggled and •for' which they will
continue to etruggle. Toronto
Star., \
BEAVER SEASON •'
• Ontario's Deputy Minister of
Game. and, Fisheries, D. J. "Jim"
Taylor, reported recently that his
department is well pleased . 'with
the results of the short season 'on.
beaver this ear. "We estimate
between $100,Q00 to S150,000 was.
)tut into ,circulation throughout
the north during the season,". Mr,
Taylor stated.
To inaugurate a 'new service,
South Africans were allowed to '
send a. free -1L-worsocia to e-
grant to anywhere in the British
Empire, with a few exceptions, on
the first day, +
In the tfntyT-five years sh.ice it
was built the grad (building: art
Port Moreeby, .Papua, reserved fol
white ,prisoners, hashad only two
occupants- -t'i e last move 'than:
tell years ago'.
LIKE THAT •
By Fred Neher
•
:Members of the Royal Canadian Mounted Pelice me seen here at -West
Point, I\.1.,• as their guide show them a periteop,' used hy-, the i;c•. loan
crown prince at th'e battle of Verdun and t:aptured „by A,n^:•+cnn sol:lien,
• later in''the war. • •
Jk.gd'LAR FEL.,
�.,1E1t2S•-,:.het Results
HAW HAW '
bFISNIN' LINE/ 'rr5
AtTAN ED ,AiJ'
WELL, WE'`F R-�.
t b1N' FISNiN' UP
RIVER!.YOU •i<tN'
STAY HERE AN'
UNIANG,LE THAT
LINE of IOURS'O
'•}Intim
• '••••,I¢ t;Yhc+ 7Q",5, 1r i c 1 lirnitl.•.
•
...Darned IE' laion't CeIit.'C I urcfe:••r, vitt!!"
13,1t.. .E rE Et,- `i' s
WELL, WELL,
PINHEA0'; DID
YOU FINALLY
CHET'; YOUR LINE
UNRAVELED?
HECK, NO f i ,705'
DROP IT 1N AN'
1HE F N CHET
T'idAPPKD 4N
7'HE DARN THIN4 .
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