Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, September 11, 1920, Page 2

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— leaves, twigs, bark and fruits, in the yofi communicate ‘with me... 1 will pay you bighest market prices and 1 can arrange for you to load at your nearest railroad station. FIRST AID TO THE INJURED Sixth of a Series Asticles on “First-Aid authorized -by -the .~ Northern _Division of the “American Red Cross. = . s BE A HELPFUL BYSTANDER By Cngtnifi G..R. G. Fisher Burns are ‘of three kinds—First degree, where the skin is inflamed, as in scalds; second degree, where blisters ‘appear; third degree, where the tissue is destroyed and the burned pars ‘are charred. Burns are caused— 4 a, By dry. heat as fire or hot irom. b. By ‘a rail, wire or dynamo charged. with high pressure electfic current. - L % : ¢. By acid, such as vitrol. d. By a corrosive -alkali, such as caustic soda, ammonia or q icklime. e. By friction, contact with revolv- ing wheel or belt, or.sliding down a 2 Be sure to see me before you sell. With the Potato Growers’ Exchange - Phone 807 - Clifford’s Warehouse. - ~ BEMIDJL Tope. {. Scalds by moist heat, - boiling water, tar, oil or steam. To treat burns, first remove cloth- jhg from burned. parts, but if any sticks, -don’t pull off; just cut around with scissors and soak clinging pieces with oil and leave to doctor to re- , ) Now ‘a proven fact in i MONTANA: . Every well ve. Never break blisters. " Leave i yet drilled to the sands in :;Zs:. also to tlien doctor.. - Immedi- ! i 3 he K\ y g -the famous CAT CREEK OIL F IELD a e e ey ey ot L : i , v [ producer. Wells producing now as high as Tonk on ves is Cateon, O whidh i ' % - 3,000 barrels per day. Hundreds of wise Selly Tk I T T e " ones making fortune. Seize this opportun- ity to.become posted. : 'We are sending by mail free copy of the ‘Montana QOil Driller’ _ giving valuable information. . ‘burn covers a large surface, it is best to apply oil dressings in strips three or four inches wide, as these will fit better on the parts. If you cannot} secure oils, quickly mix a strong solu- tion of baking soda, Arm Brand salar- atus; thoroughly soak ~ cloths and cover parts and keep. wet with the solution. On failing in these, smoth- er burned part with pure flour. The air must be guickly excluded from the burned surface. If the face is burned, cut a mask out of gauze or linen, leaving holes for eyes, nose and mouth and smear this with oil or vaseline fl:n: cover ;’:e:p‘;’:;b‘:i:h'.’fi'::;ix . oles t0| gopt. 4-11—Minnesota State Fair. If ‘the hand is burned badly, sub-| gept. 13, 14, 16-—Red Lake Fair, ‘merge in water at temperature of| Red Lake, Minn. & body (98 degrees), in—which some baking soda has been mixed, and when oil dressing is ready apply strips to each finger and thumb separately and_bind the whole with absorbent cotton. . In all severe cases. of burns, it will be necessary to treat shock. If the burn is caused by a cor- rosive acid, quickly apply water, and then follow with a weak alkaline solu-| . tion made from salaratus, i soda. or slaked lime in warm water and then apply oil dressings. If.it is a corrosive alkali, immedi- ately neutralize with water, then bathe in a weak acid lotion made from equal parts vinegar or lemon juice and water. - If it :is quicklime, be sure:to remove any lime ‘before the water is applied. ‘When a woman’s dress catches fire, if she runs, which is most common and.also an aggravation of the shock- ing, accident, it only fans the fire, and also in screaming she will prob- ably:inhale the flames. rst, get her down, beat out fire, taking great care to do so with some- thing to protcct your hands. If fire is on front of dress, keep her on her back; if on the Lack of her clothes, lay on stomach. Remember fire burns upward. Second, if it is out of doors, as soon as fire is extinguished, get in out. of wind, and prccced as herein suggested, remembering that shock must_quickly be treatcd. Third, if a woman should be the one: who is to save her, she must fiyst profect her "own dress from catching fire, by wrapping a blanket or rug around herself. Fourth, if the reader is a woman, and "your. dress catches fire, try to control yourself. Throw self on floor, roll on flames and endeavor to smother fire with rug or non-inflam- mable material, call for help, phone, butidon’t go out of doors if possible. - " TEAR OFF HERE Oil Driller Publishing Company, : 118 '_l'é;nplg Court, Minneapolis, Minn. _Please send me free copy Montana Oil Driller. -I assume no obligation in'making “ this request. - B e In the Spring. | .. Man Leads in Endurance. When the soclety bug starts'working| Man is a truly wonderful animal young men- are prone to lose sleep. Although the majority of the human That was my trouble cne night when, | race ruin their strength and constitu- after having taken a fair maiden home | tions by unwise eating and drinking, from a dance, I headed' toward the | by 'lack of fresh air, and by unnec- garage. A long freight train ‘crawling | essary exposure to all sorts of Infec- along blocked me at the first crossing, | tion yet, even so, man can more than and I seitled back to wait for it to| hold his own with the“brute creation. Sept. 15, 16, 17—Beltram! Coun snake ftself by. The next thing I re- Not, of course, in muscular strength. Pair. - was a heavy hand pawing my | A tiger with one pat af his paw .can COMING EVENTS NAME . Sept. 24-26—Clearwater county shoulder. I started up-in alarm, to find | reduce a human skull.to pulp; a hare fair at Bagley. = , no trace of the train, the sun push-| ¢an run two yards to a man's one. It ing up In the east,.and the milkman | i in" endurance that man beats the grinning at me from the running board. lower races. - For a short distance a I paid him*a dollar hush money, but racehorse' can gallop nearly 35 ‘mfiles it did little good, for my engine had | an hour, but ‘in a’ 500-mile” race ‘s been running all the time, and it was | trained man’'will easlly beat any horse too good a story to keep.—Exchange. that ever lived. - < Subscribe for The Daily Ploheer.].SHbsc;‘lAI‘)e 'STATE, - - CHILD WHO CAUSED A WAR British Gifl Only Six' Years of Age Was- the: Innocent Center of Trouble in Assam: for The Dally Pioneer. The discovery that Mary Winches- ter, who when only six _years of age was the cause of the Lushals war, Is still alive, has aroused the greatest interest. = .. ) Lo P B She was ‘abducted by the natives of northern Assam, and when the fight- ing was over it was found that the chiefs of the Lushais had.almost dei- fled her, and they pleaded with the|. British officers to be allowed to keep her to become the head qf the tribe. Mary’s father. was a native of Elgin, and belonged to one of the leading county familles in Morayshire. When the story of the Lushal outrage reach- ed Lligin it cawsed great consternation, and the M. P. for. Moray and Nairn raised the matter in the house of com- | mons and took it further—even to Queen Victoria herself. So it came about that the pnnitive force was sent against the Lushais. On receipt of the news that' Mary Winchester bad been rescued and was alive and well, Elgin gave itself up to a riot of re Joicing, and later still, on her arrival at her grandparents’ home, the whole town made holiday te welcome her. Prior to traveling north Mary had|’ the honor of -being received by Queen Victoria. The little mald, despite the fact that she had changed her native dress for “Buropean attire, was then and for some considerable time after- ward of a dark almond color wher|. ever her skin had been exp~sed te the Tha Painter’s :Dog. Mrs. Ritchie;’ the daughter of Wil:| tropical sun of “Assam. liam Makeprace Thackeray, the Eng- - - lish novelist, writes of visits when she Faith. was a child to Sir Edwin Landseer, the| Amos J. Cummings and Ernest Jar- snimal painter. She says Sir Edwin| y51q were once ina pilot boat during & was ' delightful company and that he ' great storm. The former lay on & told 'the children ‘many stories of ‘an-!hynk, intently reading. The boat gave fmals as he Stood painting “at N8| o' fearful lurch and careened until it huge’ canvases. “I remember,” she| seemed that she must turn complete- says,”“hid telling us’an arecdote of | 1y over. one of his dogs. Hé was In the habit| " «This is awful, Amos!” sald Jar- work was over. The dog ixked to wait| gerver, for the boat can’'t stand it| . patiently gll day long while Sir Edwin | many minutes.longer!” ‘ e | THE MOST BEAWIIFUL CARN IN AMERICA. | OTORISTS in every section of the Nation are com .- 1 menting upon the “smoothness™ of our six-cylinder o “Glenbrook” power plant. They marvel at the lack of . - of taking him out hen hi L g < i Lel taking him out every day when his| rgld, “I'm going to put on a life pre- vibration and the unusually even flow of power. 3 i was paiuting, but be used {0 come and| “Oh, keep quiet and let me read, - : An extra ¢ ic-balanced mksbafi our own g lie down ut his feet and look.up in his| Mickey!” sl;ld Cummings, never lift- by L. . h&eYY, static 8 'Of : 9 b facé toward five o'clock, and on one| ing his eyes. “The men on this boat s - desxgn 15 la'tg y mponmble for such sup ¢ tb e pete = 3 occésion’ finding that no notice was| draw a regular salary ‘to keep her L formance. Carefillly ba.la.noed p:st:ons and rods play taken of his hints he trotted into the| afioat.”—Saturday Evening Post: hall and came back with the painter's —_— hat, which he laid at his feet.” Eruptions on the Sun. . —_——— Not long ago, at the "Yerkes ob- servetory, an eruption was observed Coal From Leaves, Bark and Fruits. | (and photographed) on the rim of the sun which threw up material to a height of 500.000 miles. One cloud of it, which appeared as if floating de- tached, was reckoned- to have some thousands of times the volume of the earth. Wo are accustomed to regard great volcanic explosions on the earth as the most appalling of -natural phe- nomena, but they are feeble and tri- fliny disturbences compared with the outbursts which are continually tak- ing- place all over the body of the sun. e 1 _ three years of patient research on the part of our engineers. i You, however, are only interested in results. So we say— take just one demonstration: y . MOTOR INN .. Phone78 Bemidji, Minn. PAIGR-DETROIT MOTOR CAR COMPANY, DETROIT, Michigan Masnufacturers of Motor Cars and Motor Trucks - After an exhaustive study of a large number of coal seams, James Lomax, an English mineralogist, says he has come to the conclusion that almost all had their origin in vegetable matter grown and deposited on the spot ‘where it now rested, the coal substance being formed chiefly by the droppings of shape of seeds and fructiferous cones mainly from large trees. There had als0 been, especially in the lower parts of coal beds, the remains of plants much smeller in size and lower in the 2 scale of organization, various kinds of The Remedy. ‘mosalike plants, &l of which combined{ ~*T ati sorry I can no longer offer my to form a humus in which the plants | friends s good bumper.” much more highly organized could “Oh, yes, you can when you take exist and develop.—Indianapolis News. | them &at in your fiivver.” o ST — . s

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