West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Chronicle (1867), 21 Jan 1926, p. 3

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

51,111. Prop. SSORIES t. KINDS ,IGU'UTS GARAGE VICE .81" 1d Service Y PURE CDIES 0f IIeah etc MY Lice Killer t'cctant and ducer Run-down rolet yuago I‘Ll’.\lll|.\'u Mr S, .‘x vas ncmA '94 had 8 til“ I jumped it always low tum was de- way {01' m- dViSCd [new .4 Vegan“. taken it for rv much bet- (l um. it acts Means J“ pre. quickly ‘ more .ealthy. Is and oultry larger :hicks. ADS Hf ft “'0'“ in not for SW for I feel I" at iceompdm’ed by self-addressed and stamped envelope. Address Dr. W. J. Scholea, in care of The Durham Chronicle. Burns are among the most common accidents. They often result from contact with hot stoves, furnaces, elec- trical apparatus, from hot lard or grease, from matches and a number of other things. During the winter, when stoves and furnaces are in use, and children spend much of their time playing indoors, accidents resulting in burns are especially likely to occur. Many small children learn that certain objects are hot through the painful exper- ience of a burn. 'I‘lu-y aim painful but. not. clungprous. Bul. sumo-liming burns lll‘l' snvm'n and «lanai-musmnilhvr lining deep, or c-nwring mm'h 0f lhu surface. Even lmi'ns that am mild in ilngrm ma lw ilanxvrnus if lhvy involve muc ul‘ lhn surfacv. It is gc'nm‘ally stat- ml that :l hum which involves two- lhimls of lhn skin will pron fatal. Many burns arv more or loss tri- nal. 'I‘va mm'vly calm- redness or a wry limitml arm of the skin. Whilo suporticial hurns which are small in cxtcnt may ho trcatod by homc rcmcolics. all dccpcr and moro oxtcusiw hurns should havo the ram of a physician. Vaseline Elective 'l‘ho pain of slight sn rfaco hurns may usually hc controllcd by somo proti-ctiyc covaring which shuts out thc air. Ono of the host applications is plain. storilo vasclinc. This may ho applicd on storilc gauzc or on a clcan cloth. Cotton makcs a disa- grooahlo drossiug for hurns. if it is appliod dcrcctly to tho hurn. If no yasclinc is at hand. huttor. lard. croam or a littlo moistcncd bicar- honato of soda may ho usod. 'icsc aro things which arc usually avail- ahlo for first aid trcatmont. l-lxtcnsivo burns and doop burns may causo considcrahlo constitu- tional disturhanco. 'l‘hcy arc accom- paniod hy morn or loss shock. 'l‘hc shock may ho followcd hy considcr- ahlc t'cycr. Complications involv- of clothing. caro to ayom tho in- trmluction of gorms into tho dam- agcd tissues, and oft‘orts to combat shock. It is usually host to cut away clothing. (Th-cat care should be oxcrciscd to cause no iinncccssaryi pain and to avoid furthor injury to tho tissucs. If any of tho clothing sticks. and it oltcn docs in casos of sovcrc burning, it may usually ho looscncd hy soaking tho part in warm watcr. . Bringing into contact with the wounds clothing. hands or anything also that may carry germs should ho avoided as far as possible. 'I‘ho wounds should he covered with stcrilo gauzo or clean cloths. To combat shock. wrap the patient in blankets and kocp him warm by moans of carefully protoctod hot watcr hottlcs. hot irons. hot. bricks, or hot platos. 80 very careful not. to inflict additional hurns. Lay him s i that tho hcacl is slightly lowcrcd. and 1(0on him quict until the doctor comcs. ( Copyright, 1924, by The Bonnet-Brown: Corporation, Chicago) HEALTH QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Warts Mrs. L. l’. writos: "Sovoral of tho t‘hlldl't'll in this neighborhood haw. horn trouhlml with warts on the hands. My own little boy never had an) warts until now. Now ho has some on his hands like many of the children. W hat causes warts. Are they contagious? What will cure them?” Reply Warts are probably caused by infection. They are probably mild- ly contagious. They frequently dis- appear spontaneously. Their tendâ€" ency to spontaneous disappearance is apparently the basis of the. comâ€" monly encountered belief in the many charms used as cures. Cleanliness and the use of some preparation con- taining salicylic acid will usually cause their disappearance. Corn Theirp is some agitation fur the I'miiiction of lth‘ postage form of taxation, with tha desirn of having tzlxvs reduced and also the oncmir- azvmont. of trade. The thwaui-nnt rah'. hammer. is regarded by busi- llt‘s‘S intort‘sts gt’m‘l'all)’. as a must mmitahlo form of taxation that t'neis nothing to coliect. The print- in: and handling of a thrw-cvnt >t mp i'ds‘ifl no more than 3 'WO- w-m etznmp. and yet the Governmvnt mliw'h‘ 30 per cent more money. l’nstauv row-mic bears heavily 0n i'HSHHN’s i-nnm‘rns. but they would M'nhfahlx ivl‘o‘fm‘ this rate [,0 the Oth- - - n-nAL an Thursday, Juan 3!, 4m, ,'l\'I'-.II'L V m- hum; of tax nuisahcés such as :smmlw' nn leqm‘s and recall)“. Hwy “me also prefer. no doubt, to BEARS HBAVILY OR BUSINESS BURNS By DR. W. J. SCHOLES Note: Dr. Scholes will answer such health questions in these columns as will be of interest to others and permissible in public print. ..Personal questions will be answered only when 2““!!!“9‘54 by “If-addressee} and stamped envelope. Address ing the kidnms and intestines may result. from sy Stit'mltic poisoning. the 1'08“!” of toxic. ()l' poisunous substances producnd by the bum 1'10“ them is al“ ays the possibility III the wounds resulting from burns bl‘CUHIillg infected. HI-ncn. t‘lTOl'tS to cum for Victims Of SPI‘iOllS lIIII‘ns should b0 limitmt to what. first. aid is nocossary until HIP servicvs (If a phvsician :II'II niItainIIIt. First. aid consists in the rpmoval of i-lnthing. carp tn avoid the in- lrmluvtion of germs into the dam- agm’l tissues, and vll‘nrts to combat shock. It is usually best to cut away clothing. Great ram should be oxnrcisml tn cause no unnocvssary pain and to avoid furlhm' injury in thn lissuvs. If any 0f tlm clothing sticks. and it. «film does in cases of swore burning. it may usually be lnosvnml by soaking the part in warm walvr. ‘V “I I. V‘UU' Bringing into contact with the wounds clothing. hands or anything vlsv that. may carry germs should he avoidm‘l as far as_ pnssible. mmglicivw containing salicylic acid a good I'Pmedy. Vaccination E. S. \w‘itvs: “Thrm years ago, I was vat-cinatml against smallpox. I am nnw Warning whom there has boon an outbreak of a few cases of small-pox. Is‘thgg'o qqy'd‘anger '0! DWI 40‘ IL, [I I \-. \ ~._w_-k me getting it? Should I be vacc- cinnted again?" The chances are that if you were successfully vaccinated three cars ago. you will not get smalpox. Immunity. however, is a relative thing. It is best to have vaccina- tion repeated whenever there is an outbreak of small-pox in your com- munity. That is. unless you have had a very recent successful. vac- emahnn. Successful vaccmation is the. only known thing that protects against smallâ€"pox. 390 a reduction in the income tax first. YOUNG WIFE AFRAID TO EAT ANYTHING “I was afraid to eat. because I al- ways liad stomach trouble after- wards. Since taking Adlei-ikai. I can eat and feel fine." {simied} Mrs. A. Howard. ONE Spoonful Adlerika re- moves GAS and often brings sur- prising relief to the stomach. Stoos that. full. bloated feeling. Removes old waste matter from intestines and makes you feel happy and hungry. Excellent for obstinate constipation. McFadden’s Drug Store. Reply is COIPLAINS CIRQELQILE ponderance or points of similarity, he found that in his opinion the handwriting was by the same per- son, but he would not swear to it. “In my opinion, the crown author- ities were steered along a certain course, and they quite overlooked the fact that the very 9P.5‘.)n who was so anxious to bail up a case against Miss Knisley might well have been under suspicion himself. “Yours truly, “H. Tucker." Without going into details in the matter, we may say that we re- ported the case exactly as it ap- peared to us from the evidence and in the same manner as we report all news matter of a similar nature. From the. nature of Miss Knisley’s icomplaint. we would take it that she regards our report as a personal opinion in the matter, but nothing is farther from the actual inten- tion. A newspaper reporter is out for news; he reports police court and other happenings from the evi- dence at hand, and the personal side of any case is never allowed to have any bearing on the passing on of news to the public. Evidently, the chief objection is taken from our statement in the evidence of (l. B. Staunton. the handwriting expert. This is what we said as taken from the. evidence as it was given: "A sample of her handwriting was socurcd, and U. B. Staunton of T or- ontn. a handwriting vxlwrt whn has given ovidonru and advice in hun-i drvds nf rasvs fur thv government and banks. statml that in his Opin- ion. the» two lottrrs suhmittnd and H10 HUN! nhtzlinml from Miss Knis- Ivy warn tho our and the same handwriting. A fvw days at‘tvr the post nftirn inslwctm' was horn. an obsce-no postcard. which had hm‘n provinusly marked. was pasted in Durham, which on instructions from Mr. May. was forwardmi to his 0f- t‘irr at Lomlnn instvad «if being do.- livorvd t0 the addressno. This card, too. was prnnuuncod by Mr. Staun- ;ton to have horn written by the same hand that prnnod the other threw. samplrs. _ r. (at __A| A_ Ulll‘ " tJtuluu‘uu- “At tho trial at 0an Sound on W‘ndnesday of last week. Mr. Stami- ton. as well as numerous witnessvs from Durham. were put in the stand. the crown showing that the postcard on which was tho Obsconn writing was one of five which had hemi markvd. and two of which had been purvhasnd by Miss Knislny. This card had been posted in Dur- ham (m tlm L’lst (if March. Mr. Stanntnn’s M'idmu-n in his crass-ox- aminatinn by thv dofvndant's 0mm- soi. H. G. 'l‘uckm'. was unshakon." Regarding Mr. Tucker‘s conversa- tion with certain members of the jury, we know nothing. This has nothing whatever to do with the. ease in question and has no weight as the jury through their foreman returned a verdict of “not guilty“ and {raw- no further intimation as to their reasons for so doing. MI'. 'l‘uckm‘ also i'vl'm's in thn 1‘0- port in The Durham lim'ivw and ni- himpts to make" :1 1% 0f ‘hn fact. that. M 1'. Siauntnn would not "swear" in the guilt or innocence of anyone. He was them to give his Opinion as a handwriting oxport. and having done this, his work was completed. In replying to Mr. Tucker, he did (Continued from page 1) P U R "’3 FED U RJ \ 701' all your baking 1. {\A\ " - ' He has his choice of the world's finest brands. Wm: for the 180 pa e Pan'tyFlourCooi Boo . 30: in “amp: bring: it to you, pajtpaid. me lot: more. He chosses Purity Flour to meet your baking needs. Experience has taught him this uniformly ex- cellent, silk-sifted, oven-testi' flour makes the most wholesome and delic.-.s pies, cakes and bread. A Purity Flour sign in the window oi a shop is your assurance of a first class store. WESTERN CANADA FLOUR MILLS (30.. Limited Head OSesâ€"Toronto. Branches from coast to coast ‘2 011 can fmst fl%he man 11/110 3 'sélls Puma! noun Iv-wv 'â€" THE DURHAM CHRONICLE tense. While the excitement in the final st e ran high and both teams worked ard. the slow ice 1nd the utter impossibility of combined ef- ford marred somewhat. what would have been one of the nest. games seen here this winter. PLAYED 90 IIRUTEQ With the score a tie, the game went into the first overtime period, neither team being able to flnd the net. In the second session. in a rush from centre ice. Hanover got through the Durham defense and heat Snell. With only two or three minutes to go, Durham fans had al- most given up when with mfisec‘onds to play, Elvidge scored for Durham, and the teams rested up for the. third overtime period with the score a tie. 3-9.”. The last. session saw no scoring. Though eleven penalties were handed out by Referee R. L. Saun- ders, of Durham. the locals getting seven of them. none were for major infractions. and nearly all were for tripping, attributable largely to the heavy going. It was a nice, clean garne. and while things got a bit strenuous at. times, the best of feel- ing prevailed. Just what the outcome would he between these two teams were the game played on hard ice, is hard to say, but we. are of the opinion that the heavy ire. gave the heaner and more. experienced Hanoverians a decided advantage over Durham‘s light team. Anyway. it was a great game. and while the. crowd in at- temianee was not large. it will be considerably larger when Chesley arrives for their tilt on the first of February. Following Hm gamo. both tvams worn the guests of Mr. Harvey Wil- son at the local rostzmmnt whore. a plvasant hour was spent. Th“ linv-up'.‘ Hallow-1' â€"â€" Goal, Moore; defense, Wois and Smith: (k'ntl'n. Buck; wings. Bluhm and Hm'uo; Subs., indonor and Kunnoman. l)ur‘ham-â€"{inal, Snell; defense. Mc- Donald and Wilson; cmtre, M0011; wings. Elvidge. and Rowe; Subs., McFarlane and Vallett. saY,._ ho_wever_, that he was very sor- wâ€"v ,_ -" ry to have to appear at all, as he did not even know the accused, but his original opinion on the hand- writing remained unchanged. Fur- thermore. we do not think Mr. Tucker in his long career as a bar- rister can produce one single case where any expert called upon in either a case of this nature. or any other, would “swear” to evidence of this kind. As disinterested parâ€" ties, the court merely asked their “opinions" m1 these matters and lets it go at that. After reading our report of the trial once more, we can’t see where we have done anyone an injustice in the matter and again say. as we did at the commencement. that the ruse was reported as gleaned from the evidence. and not one sentence was constructed from any personal knowledge of the case. In fact, we have been told on more than one Occasion that our report was em- inently fair, and this without any solicitation on our part. Advertise in The Chronicle. It Pays. Refereeâ€"R. L. Saunders, Durham. (Continued from page i) in 3-3 soon Oh, it's just the little homely things. The unobtrusive, friendly things, The th .“won‘t-you-yetpmeâ€"help-you” 1 That an e our pathway light: And it‘s just the jolly, joking things, The “never-mind-the-trouble" things The _ _ “laugh-xvith-me-it's-funny" things. ' , The fwondrous record-breaking Those â€"â€"v The “everyday-encountered" things, '1‘ h e “just -- because - I - like - you” things. The “done - and - then - forgotten" things. Those . “oh - it‘s - simply - nothing" things. For all the countless famous things, That make the world seem bright. things, That all the papers cite. Are not like little human f§hipgs, things 7 That make life worth the fight. Advertise in The Chronicle. It Pen. THE LITTLE "I.“ “never-can-be-equall'ed" Delinquent Husband! A premier is 1 mm who most pot his time deming the truth of rumors about hié Intentions.â€" The School is thoroughly equipped to take up the following couroee: (l) Junior untricnlation. (2) Entrance to Normal School. Each member of the sun is t Ulll- versity Graduate and experienced Teacher. Intending pupils should prepare to enter at beginning of term. Hamilton Herfld. VII‘J“. " â€"v‘ ------- Information us to Courses may be obtained from the Pripcipgl. ”*fin’é’é‘ch’ééfim’é'i Crédiuble record in the past which it hopes to main- tain in the future. rates. tain in the future. Durham is an attractive and healthy town. and good accommoda- tion can be obtained at reasonable DURHAI Ill. SCll00l. J.A AM BOBB, B. A. Principal. JOHN MORRISON. Chuirmnn. PAGE 8.

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy