Flesherton Advance, 31 Jul 1935, p. 3

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New Low Prices Think oi itâ€" a Firc$ioneTif« (or 81 little as $4.75! Never before could you get Firestone quality at such a low price as in these Sentinel Tires. With these low prices you get a new extended guarantee. You are assured freedom from cuts, bruries, blowouts and other road hazards except punctures for 9 months. And, even though Sentinel Tires are guaranteed for this period, they are made to last much lonj-er. Take advantage of present low prices to replace worn tires. See the nearest Firestone Dealer today. ytre$tone No. 231 S-E â€" C Schedule July UP AND DOWN! Are you going up, or are you going down? Would you rather smile, or would you rather frown? Do you ever stop to think wbafs rtally right or wrons? Answer this yourselfâ€" It won't take you long. Can you try your best when tasks are hard to do? Are you much depressed when lile looks rather hlue? Can you crack a joke wheu things are coins wrong? If you can answer "Yes," you're bound to get along. • • • "And the vacation re ort over- looked a lake?" "Yes, and it overlooked comfort- able beds, good food and evertbing else besides!" • • • Friendâ€" Is your son still pursuing his studies in college? Fatherâ€" Yes, but he doesn't seeai able to catch up with them. • • • Nature adjusts things. By the time hk.; wifo gets too fat to be held lu his arms he doesn't give a darn. • • • On a vacation trip a man gets: Hurned up by the sun. mistered by the rowing. Stung by the hotel clerk. • « * MaoPhcrsou arrived at the oHlco Half an hour late. Chiefâ€" What does this mean? Macl'herson â€" Well, it was like this. I squeezed tho tube of toothpaste too much, and it took at least halt an hour to get the stuff back. Employment Shows Jump I Of 22,704 ill 9,270 Firms Ottawa. â€" A substantial expansion was shown in employment on June 1, when reports from 9,270 concerns showed 915, 7D2 workers on the pay- rolls, an increase of 22,704 over the previous month, the Dominion Bur- eau of S'.a istics reported re. ently. The crude index on June 1 stood at 7.6 aprainsi 95.2 the preceding month and 96.6 on June 1, 1934. On the base that June 1, 1926 equals 100, the index for the 13 previous ears as follows: 19S3. 80.7; 19.32. 89.1; 1931, 103.6; 1930, 116.5; 1929, 122.2; 1928, 113.8; 1927, 107.2; 192^6, 102.2; 1925, 95.6; 1924, 96.4; 1923, 98.5; 1922, 90.3. and 1921, 87.7. Pronounced advances were report- ed in manufacturing, when the ad- ditions to staffs considerably ex- ceeded the average seasonal gain on GASOLINE NOW NON-INFLAMMABLE June 1 in the past 14 years, the re- port states. The favorable movement extended to praciically all classes of factory employment. In the non-manufacturing indus- tries increased employment was shown in logging, mining, communi- cations, local and railway transpor- tation, building;, and railway con- struction and maintenance, sen-ice and trade. On the other hand, ship- ping and stevedoring was slacker, and there were temporary losses in ! highway construction. improvement was indicated, says the report, in all five economic areas, except Ontario, where there was a minor contraction, while firms in Quebec and the Prairie Provinces employed the greatest number of e.xtra workers. Years of Research by Chem- ists World Over Now Bear Fruit r^f'^'JXa, OOUb :i AUTOMATIC BOOKLET Treatment by Metallic Arsenic Claimed Successful for Cancer For many years chemists and fuel engineers in many lands have tned to develop a process for converting tlie highly inflammable liquid gaso- line into d non-explosive solid form. The event of the research is indi- cated by the fact that more tiian 200 patents have been granted for .solid fuels. None of these, however, was found to be efficient when put to the test, according to Dr. Alex- ander Kleniin, director of the Daniel Guggenheim School of Aeronautics' . at New York University. ' Last week a demonstration was NEW METHOD OF held at tr.e Guggenheim school' â€" -•-â-  -w. which suggests at last a method has been discovered for producing a non-explosive solid gasoline which CAa/ntecie)t^ CISARETTE PAPERS ARTIFICIAL RESPIRATION Holger Nielson And .Adopted By Danish Red Cross 'thi-'a. N'.Y. â€" A metallic arsenic colloid treatment by intravenous in- jections has given encouraging re- sults in treatment of sarcoma (can- cer), the 12th colloid chemistry symposium at Cornell University was told recently. Prof. E. F. Burton, head of the Department of Physics at the Uni- versity of Toronto, reported on the treatment, which was prepared at the suggestion of Dr. A. C. Hend- Moti'-ier says Father never haj; his initials put in his hat, thinking a little later he might be able to pick up a better one. « « « The gir! out our way with the ter- rible looking riding habit has got worse onps than tihat. • « • Patient (nervously) â€" \z\6. will the operation be dangerous, doctor? Doctor â€" Nonseuse! You couldn't buy a dangerous operation for J40.01', • * « In the old days they married and worked together to get ahead; now they pnch pennies to pay tor the dia- mond ring and the coupe. Father â€" It's a good plan, my dear, always to iCiink before you speak. Daughter â€" But, Dad. when I do that the giris have changed the eub- ject. • * « Who bosses the house? Well, do they spend mere tme wioh his family or her family? • • « Mabel â€" What's worrying j'ou, Dav- id? DavUi -Iwas just wondering it Dad would see to the milkin' while we're on our honeymoon, supposin' you said 'yes', it I asked ymi. « • • Wealth isn't everything. You wouldn't enjoy owning the whole earth if you were the only person on it. « • • Johnâ€" I Dit» t get my overcoat which I left at the railroad station. Harryâ€" Was it checked? John â€" No, brown, with a belt across tho back. What the average woman wants is a .strong, inflexible m;ui w-ho can be wrapped around her finger. • • « Country Boy â€" Say Mister can you tell mc what an orator is? Man â€" Sure. It's a fellow who Is always ready to lay down your life for his country. On his appointment, the new man- ager of a certain big bank was given much publicity, and photographs ot him wore reproduced lu newspapers. .VIl were not printed attractively. A depositor wandered In, walked up to the manager, produced one of tie photograhic reproductions, and said. "Is this your picture?" The manager assured him that it was. "Are you the manager of the bank?" The other admitted that he was. "Well, give me my money!" or- dered the depositor. THE NEW BISCUIT SENSATION THAT HAS TAKEN CANADA BY STORM rS Nutty flavored, slightly salted, little Soda Wafers that make a real "event" out of all entertaining. Christie's Biscuits "O^here's a Christie Biscuit fpr every tQste'* rick, Toronto phj-sician. Pure metallic arsenic was prepar- ed in colloid form by mixing arsenic and water, using some gelatin as "binder" to prevent arsenic from precipitating, he said. Tiny particles of arsenic are held suspended in the colloid form. Prof. Burton cited one case of a young Winnipeg woman suffering from osteogenic sarcoma in the low- er third of the left femur. In Sep- putation after biopsy was recom- mended. -A.rsenic treatment, how- ever, began October 20. X-rays taken in December, 1934, and March and May, 1935, showed progressive reduction of tumor and regeneration of bone. The patient returned to her home in Winnipeg "apparently quite cured," Prof. Bur- ton said. would have as its chief advantage Invented Bv the el.mination of the fxre hazard â- ' in air travel. The new solid gasoline, called | â-  •<solene," has been developed af.er jiany minor details of the treat- time for the even, slow T}Vl I"" °^,.''^t.^'-':'" '?y ^^ment, chiefly in regard to caring for Adolph Prus.^in, Nw \ork chemist, ^^e patient before and after the If tne preliminary tests are to be tig^j^i ^spir^aion is applied, are taken as a criterion, he has sue- „;„;,„_ .„ tv c i. a i c'l ... , . ,. .... ^. ; similar to the Schaefier and Silvest- ceeded in producing a soiuhficatjon „ .u i j n j , ,. "^ ... " 1 1 • • .. er methods and will require no des of gasoline readily usable :n inter- nal combustion ensines at a cost .«aid to be less than one cent a gal- lon above the ordinary liquid fuel. ! It is predicted that "solene" will prove of great advantage to the army and na\-}' air forces, as the igniting of gasoline tanks by tracer or ex plosive bullets during combat is one of the serious hazards. To test this : assistance. If help is very long cription, as they are known to al). The essential rule;, according to which the new me' hod may be cor- rectly performed, are as follows: If rescuer is alone, he shall start resuscitation immediately and shall send for the doctor and ambulance , i only when others have come to his in non-igniting quality, Clvde Pang-i comin?- Patient should be removed bom, round-the-world flier, fired \ ^° nearest house. furr incendiary bullets with an army' Remove outer clothing and quick- rifle from a rang;e of twenty-five ', b' loosen all garments restraining feet into a five-gallon can of the j breathing if necessary. solidified gasoline. EFFECTS OF THE SHOTS British Debt Per Capita Up On U.S. Lay patient face down on flat, hard surface. If surface slopes, keep Washington. â€" The United States Government neared the end of its fiscal year recently with a gross debt of 'almost $28,700,000,000. In the face of thi.^, an authorita- tive comparison showed that the public debt per head in Great Bri- tain is about two and one-half times .greater than that in this country. Figures gleaned from a statement prepared for a congressional commit- tee by .Marriner S. Eccles. Federal Reserve Board Governor, indicated the debt per head for all public bodies in the United States was ?370 compared to $i>91 in Britain. Meanwhile, bill-drafting experts were busy preparing legislation to whittle the Federal indebtedness down a bit with the tax-the-rich pro- gram that President Roosevelt has advocated. Hearings on their pro- duct were arrar.,ged to begin very soon. The most optimistic pre Ac- tions at the Capitol were that the tax measure would be ready for presentation to the House bv Julv 29. Eccles, in the statement that he prepared for Congress, contended that treasury cash balances, the $2,- 000,000,000 stabilization fund set up with the profits of dollar de- valuation, and recoverable assets, should be deducted from the gross debt figure. On that basis, the net Federal debt was calculated at less than $20,- 000,000.000. The national income for 1934 was estimated at $50,000,000,000 or $400 per head in the United States, against $20,000,000, or $430 per head in the United Kingdom. The first three shots had no ef- ; head at lowest point. Bend patient's feet whatever. It was only after' arms at elbow, cross hands flat, one tlie fourth shot, when some of the' over the other, and place directly gasoline had liquefied by pressure under patient's forehead, and spilled on the ground, that it' Place handkerchief under hands ignited, and then only in such a and face, if possible, to prevent dust manner that it could be easily ex- entering and to keep mouth and nose tinguished by merely stamping on ' clear of the ground, it. j Then, standing at head of patient, -Another advantage in military , the operator places one knee near and naval aviation under combat head on a folded cloth or coat, and conditions would lie in the fact that places the other foot near his elbow. a tank containing solid gasoline Kneeling thus, the operator slaps would continue to operate even ! heavily with flat hands between the after it was punctured by an enemy | shoulder blades two or three times. bullet, whereas gasoline in liquid j jq ^^at the tongue may fall forward form would, of course, when its , Xote. if tongue does not fall forward, container was punctured, leak out. j operator must open patient's mouth It was shown in the course of the | ^^^j jj.jj^y jj forward. At all times demonstration that "solene" would j^^ „,ygj. j,e certain that the tongue not burn even when subjected to a high degree of heat, unless a flame wa.^ actually brought in contact with the substance. Full details of the new solidifi- cation process are being withheld, but a few general hints have been given out. The principle upon which the new solidifying process is based was first discovered by Dr. remains forward and downwanl. STARTING POSITION The operator lays his hands with outstretched fingers on patient's back, so that his palms are just on the shoulder blades and the wrist.' just over the ton edge. EXPIR.ATION Operator commences artificial res- his r, • •,,!,,> 11 1 - * ,. i piration at once by swinging Prusian in 1919 while he was tiy- ^ ^^, forward, swining freely from ing to remove paraffin from l^aso-, ^^^-^^.^^^^ ^^...,^ ^.^ ^^^^ ^^^^^^ ^^j stiff. He moves slowly line. He found tli.Tt the gasoline i _^/„ •„ ^_. ^,^^,,. ^^^^j ^.j.^ could be solidified by first altering] â„¢^ nmssiire , , . lu 1 nrogressive pressure. Ine pressurt its molecular structure through 'i^r.'^-^' ^ v , '• .» „f . , , ^, „ 1 , >, % ' i« to be made on v bv the weight ot cata vsts. the "match-makers" of i ''; '" "^ ' . , - -, „„ „,„,^ . , â-  1 ,1 I ii the ooerator s body alone. He must the chemical world, and then remov-i ^"^ openLui s l .v _ ing the catalysts. If this sounds simple, let it be stated that during the past sixteen years he tried out no fewer than 9,000 types of hydro- carbons before he hit upon the right combination. PROCESS WIDLEY USED The same process, according to Dr. Prussian, has been used for lurning into solid form kerosene. bo certain that his movement of pressure shall be free of muscular force. Continue pressure until arms are quite vertical. Operator holds position while he counts 1, 2, 3, 4, and on four he releases pressure by swinging his torso backward. Operator then moves his hands along the patient's shoulders and arms until he can grasp the middle naptha fuel oil, lubricating oil, [ of the patient's upper arms. He crude oil, shale oil and alcohol. The ; now swings slightly backward, caus- process is not complicated. It em-j ing the patient's arms to "lilt" a ploys cheap chemicals which can be i little. Only the arms move in this used over and over again. It takes second half of the movement, the only fifteen minutes for the eon- j head and torso of the patient re- version from the liquid into the solid ; maining undisturbed. The arms are state. The temperature is never held in this "lift'' position while the Yesterday You cannot get away from yester- day. What you did, what you said, what you were is interwoven with every experience of today. Just be- cause there is no escape from yes- terday, you should give it very little deliberate attention. Sometimes tho recollection of yesterday's mistakes fairly paralyzes your initiative. You brood upon them until you get the feeling that everybody else must be thinking of them too, and come to the conclusion that it is no use tn try. Perhaps yesterday's little tri- umphs loom so large that you fee! you deserve a day off. Trying to re- lieve yesterday's good times may make totiay's task seem hopelessly dull and dreary. Brooding on yester- day's sorrow may keep you from seeing the little joys that today has waiting for you. Yesterday is not done with you but you are done with yesterday. above 155 degree.^! Fahrenheit and no expensive machinery is required. With the present apparatus, using pressure kettles turned by hand, 120 gallons an hour can be produced. It can be speeded up to as high as 2,- 500 gallons every four minutes. Only one chemical is used as cata- lyst, it was revealed, but the time of the removal of the catalyst is an important factor in the process. The process, it is claimed, can be applied to gasoline of any octane number, and the mere act of solidi- fication impart^ to it a high anti- knock quality without the need for the addition of tetraethyl lead. Land is one of the things we have in abundance in Canada. It is the source of -wealth. How about letting a few more people begin at the source ? â€" Rejrfna Leader- Post. TO END PAIN ...rub in MinarO's. Checks colds, taken m- teroally. Ends skin blemishes. At druegist^ In regular and new large cctxiomy sizes. n operator continues the count by 5, (>, 7 and 8. At eight, the operator returns his hands to the first posiJon .and re- peats the whole movement. The operator repeats these double movements seven or eight times the minute. The first half the pressure on the shoulder blades, must last for 2 Ml seconds, while he is counting to four, and at four he must swing backward and grasp tho arms. The "lift" of the arms continues during 2'i! seconds, while operator count-, from five to eight and at the count of eight he returns to the starting position. The count must be made slowly and evenly and the eighth count should be made seven seconds after the first. This allows ample swingmy from pressure to "lift" position and back. If necessary, operator may employ a watch during the begin- ning of the resuscitation. The treatment must not be given up until at least four hours of steady, unremitting resuscitation have been tried, unless, of course, the patient commences to breathe strongly and naturally of his own volition. The basis of the method is form and rhythm. A really rhythmic, soft rolling movement can be carried on indefinitely, if the operator makes certain of the balance of his position. This, of course, may be slightly ad- justed during the first few double movements, until he finds himself working without effort. Artificial resuscitation is to be carried on well after the patient gives the first signs of life by ex- hibiting the ability to breath* slightly by himself, but from that point on the operator must discon- tinue the second half of the move- ment, the "lift." The operator pro- ceeds only to apply and relieva pressure on the shoulders, thus speeding his movements to nine t»^ 10 times per minute. For if the "lift" is continued after this point the patfent can be very seriously over-ventilated, causing a great diminishment of the carbon- dioxide in the blood, C02, and result- ing finally in a total inability to breathe at all. If a carbogen apparatus is em- ployed the "liff may be continued, but" only in this one circumstance, .\nd only if the apparatus is in the hands of a trained operator. With- out the carbogen apparatus the "iiit"' must be discontinued at once on perceiving the first signs of life in the patient. SEVEN AGES OF AMBITION .\t live yearâ€" to be like Uncle Bob. At 15 years â€" to be a detective. .â- \.t 20 years â€" to be idolized by all the pretty girls in the town. .\t 30 years â€" to pay his debts. At 45 years â€" to pay his wife's debts. .\t (50 yearsâ€" to be a boy again. At T5 "years â€" to be let alone. Classified Advertising BECOME A nUTECTrVB pXl-KUIli-NCE Julion. Dniwer U.NNECEStf.VU'i:. l'.\U- .lurice UrancU T. Mo:ure.il. PYORRHEA -L'.\K.\NTK1:d UK.MKl'Y FOK PYOR- G troubles. HU-edi:ig 8>">'f.-„ ^'u-^'^'Vy.* teeth, tightens t.-oth. "'â- I- ^l-^-Ji=^-3D . •i-.'n Street. Ni.i.i;ar,i Kails, Canada. ITCHING TORTURE Stopped Instantly D. D. D. 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