The Lucknow Sentinel, 1932-07-07, Page 3•a
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What Is In a, Name?
In the game. of.,Scouting, Troops are
' divided 'into Patrols; and each Patael
is called by the .came of some Animal
or Bird. • • For .instance• there is the,
Bear Patrol, of the Eagle 'Patrol, etc....
'There. is . a' very large variety of
name to ehoosefroineee t in the he
Scout Depan tment. also, - wherever',
t •etliere gree• rateflteie�n ease aer ilabl •
Lone PatralS,of from four to nine boys,
e -are feinted and they choose a. Patrol
, ➢ Nanie' for their;rou:p, ., .
•• Tires; patro;;, • endeavcdr .:to .. collect
ae, meth infoi.knatioa •tats, `t-possijile,
'ab.out tli.eir - Patrol Animal or a Bird:
' Sonne of thein are even lucky enough
o obtain' a'°l.ive'specinre oi•'a Patrol.
• Pet, ;such .as tine .,Buildei f atoll etc
'whereas others so x:14,1 ie" " i d a dead
specimen of of their "name," which they;
'stuff and mount. (Scouts,, of course
...do
do not kill anini.als,or birds wilfullai•)•.
'They study the habits' and. surround-
---ings ..of their bird or animal, end learn
a lot of useful information in so. dein .
• I•Iow would you. like to lee as patient
and industrious ae a'Beaver'as cun-
ning as •a Fox,'as strong as. an Eagle,'I
to stalk as well as .a',Pant1ier, or. to be
;as,.agil.e. ,as_:a..Mb.nkeyc ?.
tone Scouts should also 'individual-,
ly, ,where they, are not members of a
..Patrol, solect an einblein as `do the
Patrols;. and study the. habits of the
bird_ or animal . they select•, in partici-
lar, concentrating on this `emblem -to
a greater extent than on the Otherr llive
creatures.. `• .
,From the States Department, for a
few cents, you 'can obtain 'a •Flag, to
• tie`unto the end: of. your .Scout Staff,
• on which is: depicted the animal whie;i
you,ael:ect, and•'which you can. use es
your banner: - '
Naval Cutter for Sea Scouts
•
•
• A fine. naval ,cutter was recently pre-
sented to the •l.t Barbados Sea Scout
Grgup.:. by the captain, officers and
ship's • compaily Of t-I.M.S. Repulse.
The• ,;iresentation was an .expression
of appreciation of. the courtesies, ek
tended Deep Sea•Scouts whed ashore.
• .English Collage Scout' Visitors
Master' the' Rev. it.. H. W. Kneese.
The Suffolk SeQuts are anxioua ; to
gisit a number of Canadian S.cout'.
Calnps. °
L._Lo:ne Scout Camp ` '
.,Whenthis ,paraf;rapli.appears, in tbe,l
,press the 'boys who ;were -fortunate.
enough•• to spend two we ks• in camp
at Ebor park with the,one' Scout
aqtaffeeeremakteadattarterarawill4ustabiea
thinking :of. returning .to their• homes,
and we,know la will be with. regret.
Altho`'ugh the.numbeys whn'have, at -
eh d • this camp are net so , large as
we liad ,hetied, for, , dale,• we ,presume,
to the difficult 'bines •we'haye recently -
„passed, through, nevertheless there
are 'enough Lonies to mp.
retake, the camp.,
and to have •a great deal
'.gf`fun-tag'etlreit. • •:
The. park is new At its- best;• and
the swimming ,pool is great, and there
is no doubt that those' who attended
'this • year will takateeto, repeat the ex_
•peeieuce atthe--t test-eppertanit -
Aninteresting point Which will un-
doulitedly appeal to all Ontario L.onies.
is that a friend• of our' Commissioner,
Scout : Kurt.•Topp, of Troop 800,.. Chi-
cago, Ill'., has •journeyed all the way
from .Chicago especially to attend@this
camp.
Bart -,16 15ye`iats old, and 'was
Capt. Furminger pleased 'to' see him
again? Oh Boy, I Should 'say! .
Empire Scouts at Weill. Githerinte•
The number of Semite' to represent
the Empire at the next World
Scout • Jamboree, in -Hungary, . next
,summer, has, been increased from
2,500 'to 4,200: .
Several Scotft • districts in Hupgary:'
are inviting .-British Scouts to visit.
them for a .few weeks this summer.
Their, idea is to develop friendships
and improve•• their'.knowT&dge of Eng -
A change of. policy to travelling.
within the Empire:..insteadof visiting.
Europe is. bringing to eastern Canada
this summer a Scout party of the 2nd
Framlingham College Group, Wood-
-bridge, Suffolk; England, ' under'Scout.
C, ad,a:.'Sc ' • afro in -.xt =am-
mers World Scout 'gathering in Hun-
gary will goas members of the Brie'
fish Empire group, and probably' will
be attached in small unite; •.• to Old.
Country troops. "
Perhaps:you too would like to be a
Lone Scout, if you cannot join •a Re-
gular Troop?" If you -are entereeted
write for partieulars to ' the • Lone
Scout Department, • The Boy Scouts,
Association, 330' Bay. St., Toronto 2:
Full information will be gladly sent,
and you will be placed under no obli-
gation.=yt.one E." .
. Free. Medical, Care .
Advocated in London
• London. The .economic eitaaation as
it affects' the''ill •is reflected in three
'schemes for the relief of • persons re-
quiring medical or surgical. treatment
here. • .
A report to be pres •inted at the an-
nual meeting of the Soci'alist•, Medical
• Association will urge universally free
medical service under central and local
g. rernment -supervision. Members of
Parliament are being ask4d to sponsor
ascheme which would enable persons
who have incurred expenditures for
medical care 'during illness to claim
rebate on i-ncofne tax.
An organization called the British
• P•royident Association has just launch-
ed a• comprehensive scheme for enabl-
• ink persons of snail means to obtain
, private beds iii hospitals and fret
class medical or surgical treament at
•reas•,nable prices.
• The . first' scheme would radically
'alter the. medical organiztion of Great.
Britain. In addition to universally.
free medical service, a national hospi-
• tal system is urged. It is proposed
that facilities. be -arranged which
, • would enable alt citizens to have con-
.tinuous medical supervision froin birth
a to death; that `scholarships shall be
granted' to poor students wishing 'to
become doctors, and that the -existing
"poor .law", medical service be abel-
ished..
6
Game Abounds on Bois.
Paris. ---The Bois de Boulogne, a'fa-
shion parade and playground by day,
is, after nightfall, •a game preserve.
Deer, foxes, quail and pheasants
abound in:thewooded coverts and are
often seen late at night.
. Duty
True life is just a gofng on
• To duties still ahead.
For; when today is •'past. and gone,
• Tomorrow -wines instead— •
And thus the duty I have done .
Is prelude to• another one.
Thus -life's reward for every task
Is' that I shall fulfil •
The further. -service, life may
And do my duty still--
Since at each. morning's •opening
gates
Another sacred 'duty waits.
-A. B. Cooper.. •
•
• The Human Mind'
The` human mind will 'become
more various, piercing, and all com-
prehending, more capable 'of under-
standing and• expressing the solemn
and the •speetive, the terrible, and
the beautiful, the profound and the
tender, in proportion as it .be
.illumined -and penetratedby tbe• true
knowledge . of • God. Genius; intellect,.
imagination. taste, and sensibility,
must all • be baptised into religion,
or they will never know ,and ,never
make known, -their real glory •and
immortal power.
' • -•-Channing, (1"enelon,-
0.
Sir Falter'. Scott, while travelling in
Ireland, was one day accosted by a
beggar. He felt In his pocket for a
•
sixpence, but finding that he had noth-
ing striper than a shilling with him;
gave it to the woman with the words:
"You must give me the. change next
'tinge we itieet." "I will, seri," replied
the beggar, "and may yer honor live
till'ye get it." '
ask,
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MUTT AND JEFF— By BUD
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WWEensEMcivt'
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GOTTA SQUARc CC
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`New
tyle Upper Berth
40„, �- of/tuy;.j•
A permanent folding stairway,; ea dormer Window ' and dressing
. latforne are the: features introduced ,in, this new upper berth, eiimiu-
ati;pg many of the diseomforts of train. travel. ,
Sunday School
Lesson
July 17. • Lesson Ill—The . Passover
Eikodes 12: 21-28. Golden Takt—
Even 'Christ our Passover is sacri-
ficed ?or us. -1 Corinthians 5: 7.
ANALYSIS: •
L. TH, PASSOVER AS A RITUAL, vs. 21,
22.
IL THE PASSOVER A3 A REDEMPTIVE
EVENT, v.-. 23.
III THE PASSOVER AS A MEMORY, VS.
. • 24-28.
INTROI,uCTION—The book of Exodus
comprises • ofK history and ` egisiat 8 .
The dramatic story of the exodus is
broken off here and there to include
a section of laws c r directions for
various institutions. • The reason for
this is twofold. On the one, •hand, the
historian obviously sought to set forth
the inner -soul of his people by exhib-
iting the. kind of laws which governed
their lives; oh, the other h'apd, it was
considered that most of Israel's Origin and great institutions had their origin.
ie the 'formative period when Israel
was delivered from Egypt. At this.
juncture of the- story, then, we have
the directions fol. observing. the Pass-
over. A seri•:a of dreadful plagues
Lad failed to convince the stubborn
heart of Pharaoh that God really in-
tended to set his people' free from the
bondage of Egypt. Another plague,
more awful than any of the others,
v -as 'yet to come—the destruction cf
all the first born of • Egypt. It was
while Egypt was thus stricken that
the Israelites made good their escape.
The Passover had its origin in that
night of'divine triumph for Israel.
I. THE PASSOVER AS A RITUAL, vs. 21,
22.
Thendel.iverance fru.:. Egypt was to
the Israelites what Calvary is to the
Christian. Each of these great re-
demptive events came to be symbolized
in"su.itable ritual—the deliverance'
from Egypt in' the Passover, and „the
sacrifice of Christ in the Lord's Sup-
per. Moses delivered the detailed pro-
visions for observing the rite `o the
elders, . and the elders, as the tribal
and clan leaders, would pass them. )r.
to the people. Not all of these details
are now clear to us, but there is no
mistaking the main jeatures of • the,
ceremony. It should be noted that.
while the Passover was• to 'le observed
be -the whale people, it was largely a
family affair. 'According tc your
families," said "Moses, v. 21: Each
family, as a unit, was to draw a lamb
-from its flock. , Perhaps . the later
popularity of the Passover above all
other Israelite institutions fay in the
fact that it was primarily a family
festival. When the paschal la:nb was
killed, its blood was caught in a basin
and' Applied to the lintel and the door-
posts witha wisp of hyssop. a shrub
Cancer of the Bowels,
Easily Detectable By -1Za,
This article has hese. written for the
Canadian Social ilyglene Council 'by
an eminent specialist and in addition
has received the endersatir n of the
Provincial Department of Health of
Ontario. .
The great anatomist and .•zo.ologist
.L;: eidy of the University of ,,Pennsyi.
'crania remarked in 189Q. that'he would
not pass' a dental student in anatomy
who :did not know something about his•,
insides. --.-Leidy m dideeno.t realize that
he -•was establishing, a very 'important
principle in Preventivemedicine: Den-
tists , •must know' a great deal , about
.,•tiro-tit-heeleaeaase it-ice-ureic-prefes
sign tat•treat the 'teeth. But elen°t'ists,.
as doctors, need knnew more about the,
inside of the' Iiod'y. than anydne else..
But, everyone o ahould know s_Qmething
about the oespliagus,which -carries ;the
d•
fonfrom:
the mouth to the atomaell'
and ,about tile; stomach^ and• the first
portion• of the. sinall; intestine beyond
the stomach called the duodeum, and:
ththrd about thirty-two feet of:
sinal'1 intestine and ,'about ten feet of
the large intestine' called colon;, and.
it mmre i•niportant to know 'about the
ten feet Of'melon than aboutthe thirty-
two Meet of the small intestine.. ; •
• If you 'place , an individual in . frant
of in xray machine, and have 'behind
him the xray tube, and. then look at
him' through the fluoroscope in a dar
leaned room, •you• can. witness the heart
;beat.andsee the lightness, of the.
lungs;_ the darkness of the liver, and if
you give him the -barium-milk mixture
to.'swallow„you, can tell at. once' the
normal oesphagps, and as Ibis mixture
passes into, and' fills the stomach, and
then passes.tltrough .the pylorus'and
the duodenum, • within ,five .minutes.
you will'. know whether there has fill-
ing defect or not. If t: filling defect
•L4 on the duodenal side of, the pylorus,
You. can say to. the' patient "You do.
not have, a cancer of the stomach, 'bid'
you'may have an ulcer or some 'adhe-
cions about the duodenum .which may
be cured by, tref:ment, and if not, by
operation. But. when you see 'the
• filling defect •.in' the stoii!lach itself,
you must think of the :Possibility' of
cancer and the advising of, an opera-'
time:. Some hours later ou will.get'the-
picture of.the colon In the fluoroscope
oe.. on the 'film,' and if there is a filling
defect in the, colon, You must make
-aueith film=by-inlecti4ig-the mixtore.
•through the reetum into' the. colon.
With the''rares't exceptions is any seri-
ous lesion •or trouble of the nesopli r,
agus, stomach;, duodenum, small intes-
tine, or colon overlooked. The chief
danger is that this 'examination will
be', made too late' and not. ,that it will
• be made in time anis' misinterpreted. '
In years • ,of •x-ray :studies ofthese
cases the evidence confirms this state-
ment. • .
•'Recently. the cases of cancer of the
colon,' occurring in' a period••of forty
'years has been studied and Cases dei
' monstrated long before. the advent, of
the x-rays and diagnosis by their
means.- ,What' is the explanation of
this? It is very simple.. The cancer
causes obstruction,' 'it is at the
pylorus 'of ne stomach or in the left
colon. Twenty-five years ago •Rocher
of Switzerland recorded thatin all his
permanently cure.. cases of cancer •of
the 'stomach, the cancer was a freely
'Moveable .Pass at the pyloric end of
the stomach where• a little, mass pro-
duced • obstruction early. The .left
colon is no smaller than the right, but
the fecal matter is harder, and the
least narrowing of the lumen• causes
obstruction. Unfortunately nature has
not' provided that all cancers of the
bowel produce. obstruction so early
that people are forced to the operat-
•ing room fpr relief. But fortunately
all cancers of the 'bowel or stomach
give symptoms just as ,;finite but not
as urgent; as obstructione and if an
x-ray examination is made at tills
time, the defect will be . recognized,
just as easily as. 'if there were. ob-
struotion. ,. .e•
It has bedu found in the past tett
years, more than in the previous
twenty years, that more people, when
they have troiiltle .,.. the colon and ex-
pect to be Operated Upon for a pos-
sible cancer, fear the discomforts of
what is known as an artificial anus,
fe'al fistula, colostomy, or as most of.
the people say, that the bowels w(ll
move in •an abnormal place, or that
they will have no control. First, this
'Psalm 1: '?: