.-.. . ....i--i.. .e . First Aid and Home Nursing (Irons the St. John Ambulance) TO STOP BLEEDING '!11e'aig-ht of blood is enough to throw many people into confusion. Ihrtuznately. most cuts are atnarficial and the bleeding will aim quickly. It is when a deep wound causes a heavy flow nf blood that first aid knowledge really comes in handy. O O 0 While not the recognized first aid method of stopping the flow of blood. St. John Ambulance says these three steps will work in many cases and are the best pro- cedure for anyone untrained in first I.lA'l or medicine: First. the wounded person should rest. He should be encouraged to lie down quietly and particularly to keep the wounded part still. This will make his blood pressure drop. his pulse will become slow, and less blood will flow into the wounded area. This will reduce the Ion of blood. Next, elevate t.he wounded part if possible. Bleeding will stop I103! quickly if the wounded part -an arm. leg or the head - is a- bove the level of the heart. The most important step of all Is to apply firm pressure directly In the wound. This is hy far the snout effective first aid measure beginners, can take. Ordinarily, premure should he applied through a dressing which is bandaged firm- ly to the wound. The dressing should be thick and compressible to facilitate the application of even pressure over the whole area. Pressure on a wound reduces bleeding because; it compresses all blood vemels leading into the wound and lessens blood flow; it retains shed blood in the wound Iintil clotting occurs. 0 O O Rarely, in cases of profuse bleed- ing and when a dressing is not immediately available. it is per- minible t.o press with the bare hand directly on the bleeding point. The exact site of maximum pressure can be altered until the most effective position is found. If sufficient pressure is applied to the wound, bleed-mg will prac- tically always be controlled. jijjj-xj-1:-r REFRIGERATION Household. :1 I It o In e a 5 counters. walk-ln coolers. display cases. etc. VI'e service and repair J any make of electrical re- frigeration equipment. WIRING OOIITRAOTORS Contact us for any wlrlnz jnb from installing a switch to wiring your home. Motors. Whialiora and An- pliances -- we repair them all. Storey Electric PHONE 3237 I'll Grafton Street wound 1 .Of Important ly Bertrand Tlslbault Canadian Press sum Writer 1 wiiirr of electric food xers blends with the distant crunch of explo- sives from the mountains. Red letters scrawled on a. sign decorated with moose antlers pro- claim the town of Labrieville. cap- ital of the 8225,oo0,000 Bersimis river power project. The project. to be finished seven years from now, harnesses one of the most important of the rivers flowing into me at. Lawrence from the north- easter Quebec highlands. This town 250 miles north of Quebec City is the administrative centre for line 4.000 workers on the widespread project. A few miles away dynamite crews blast through rock to dig an eight-mile tunnel that will carry water to generators producing 1,200,000 horse-power. Named after Magr. N. A. Labrie, Roman Catholic bishop of the gulli of st. Lawrence. and peopled now. by a temporary population, Lubric- ville was built to house the work- ers who will man the power sua- tion when the Bersimls Pltn is fin- ished. The 2,000 intnabilants of the town, most of them workers, live in dor- mitories. eat in two huge cafeter-,1 ias. Two thousand other workers, at nearby camps have similar ar- rangements. scattered about the town are a church and presbytery, a hospital. a school for 50 pupils. Quebec hy- dro-electric commission adminis- tration buildings, a bank. tavern and three-cell jail ,as well as pri- vate homes. Menus for all camps pared a week in advance. Food kept in cold-storage warehouses here. are pre- , Huge Food Supplies One day's grocery list would loaves of bread, 1.100 pies. 130.1 cakes. 600 dozen eggs, 500 pounds of butter, 26!) bags of potatoes, 10 bags of vegetables and hundreds of cans of condensed milk. Trucks make daily deliveries to the outlying cafeterias where main dishes are cooked. Bread and pea- tries are baked in Lebrieville. A French-language menu is posted daily in each cafeteria. For 810.50 a week a worker gets lodg- iing and all the food he can eat. The tavern is open for two hours in the afternoon and two in the levening. Beer costs 25 cents a 'small bottle. Workers queue up for .two bottles of beer each. may can .have more but must go back to the 'queue to he served. At night, Labrlevillek population Labrieville, Que. is Capital Power Project l LABRIEVILLJ. Qu;htO'Pi--'T'he; Built For Workers , employee makes a weekly tour of the outlying camps. , Minimum wages at the project lie :45 a week, or 90 cents an hour 'for unskilled labor. Carpenters and l ltruck drivers earn about 81.20 an hour, and miners between 31.15 and 81.00. The 12-bed hospital, staffed by two doctors and four nurses. has modem x-ray and operating rooms. b'rhere are first-aid units in each camp. Besides the nurses, 60 other wo- .men work in the camps. mostly in loffices and cafeterias. They live in is special camp supervised by Mrs. lGeorges Hamel of Quebec City. A 15-page stem-illed l"renoh-lan- guage newspaper with one page in liiingiish. Traile d'Ul1.l0n literally .The Hyphen, is printed monthly. 1 It carries local news. editorials ia sports column. comic strip and s icroesword puzzle. , rm. c. E. Robitaille. parish priest who writes a religious col- 'umn for the newspapbl". makes it a point to eat every day with the workers in one of the cafeterias. Another priest, Rev. P. Gagrie. has charge at Robertsonville. a smaller lcamp nearby. Father Gagne celebrates mass in the cafeteria at Robertsonville be- cause like all the outlying camps it will be dismantled once the pro- has I. permanent church. Gov'i Hopes To Drop Emergencv ,,lPowers Soon OTTAWA, (CPI-Prime Minister St. Laurent said Monday the gov- ernment hopes to do without the . 'E PO A la MW M lwgller me Meme” hmlsewu" n'!'3lml(:liEl.eIlliI:iys majleeuno (formal!-declf: mcluil” 5-000 P"”"d5 9' "'59- zimlion because of possible shins in in- ternational affairs. He said an Opposition motion, describing as "repugnant" to re- sponsible government the powers given the government under the act, is merely an attempt to de- cide government business before the government wants it decided. Opposition.Leader Drew won sup- port for the motion from the CCF and Social Credit parties. He charged that the government had abused its powers under the act and that Parliament should make it clear that the government must not ask that the act be kept. in force beyond May 31, present ex- piralory date. Mr. st. Laurent said Parliament will have an opportunity to take a stand on the question if the gov- I ll Tweued by hundred" M worker5it'.l'nmerll. seeks another extension in 20': the "”i"bef”'"P5';rI1':l9" ”elt.he bill. hm passed in 1951 to ' O6 9y games twee” mmp5'f meet the emergency of the Korean Social Workers Meet In Monctcn To ject is finished. Only Labrievillelniscuss Rapoft The March meeting of the N. B.-P, E. I. Bunch of the Can- adian Association of Social Workers was held in the Mental Health clinic. Moncton. with Mrs.,Mary Bishop, president in the chair. The regular business was con- cerned with the nominations of the Auociation for the coming year. Irurther study was given to the relationship between the Schools of Social Work and the Social Agencies in the Communities. It is felt that many people in New Brunswick will be particularly interested in an article which ap- peared in at recent issue of ihe Social Worker. the official organ of the Canadian Association of social Workers. The article dealt wi-th the welfare services in this Province and was based on the findings and recommendations of the 1919 Welfare Survey. The sur- vey under the able chairmanship of Miss. Bessie Touzel, then As- sistant director of the Canadian Welfare Council, was carried out under the auspices of the Pro- vincial Government. it is popularly referred to now as the "Touwl Report". During the 14 weeks the survey was in progress. 5300 miles were traveled and many institutions and organizations visited. Legislation. documents. statistical. and financial data were also examined and in- terviews were held with provincial. city, town and country officials. agencies and citizens organizations. In this manner an attempt was too close to the well when the gas ”blew." Reads 8.000 Words PcLMinule DENVER, Co1o.. (AP) -In the time it takes you to read this little story. George Murch could be done with most of the page of the paper. Murch, a Denver University stu- dent from Grand Junction, Colo., may be the world's fastest reader. He has been clocked at 8,000 wordss a minute by Dr. George Vardaman, chairman of the gen- eral education division of the uni- varsity. Strictly speaking, Murch doesn't read the printed word the way most of us do. He absorbs ideas instead of words and takes in whole pages at a glance, like a photograph. Dr. Vnrdaman said tests show that Murch remembers what he reads. In fact, the faster he reads, the more he seems to retain, The average person. Vardaman says. reads about 260 words per minute. Multiple Accident On German Highway DARMSTADCF. Germany, (AP)- A motorcycle rammed into a parked trailer truck in a dense fog on the Frankfurt-Munich autobahn near Darmstadt Monday and its rider was killed. Two trailer trucks stopped at the scene. Two other motorcycles an estimated s38,000 well-cementing truck sun 60 UP IN THIS SMOKE - Gas escaping from a well 10 miles southwest of Hobbs. N. M., is burning at the rate of 31.16 worth every second. That's day, enough to supply a city the size of Ft. Worth, Tera. with all the fuel it needs. Gas was ignited when it was forced from the well by underground pressure, causing either a friction spark or an arc in a broken electric lamp. The steel drilling derrick over the well melted and toppled over wlthdn two hours. The charred mass at left (arrow) was I. 100,m0,000 cubic feet a caught MARCH24, mi A Picture E .:.- A only small white-shlngled house with shutters painted green. Two fir trees stand as sentinels. A wooden gate between. The scent of crimson roan Drlfta within the open door. While a shaft of golden sunlight Falls across the hallway floor. ? IT IN - waica IT VANIIII nusrsain IIIHY to ram: In a window filled with flowers A wicker bird one swings. The!;ctIul'rOe.'D0Okl and chairs and Q cqnunom qua" nu". Cheerful um. homellks uiinu. There are blue and yellow dishes '9 I' ''''I''”” '5'" '51 luckier- ln- the china cupboard small. . ...a.'K.”a1'.5l'3."3E.3”&I'J?; Platters and old willow-ware, X.-fir mil:-I.t.oach-z.throu And crystal goblet: tall. "'3. d, k ”.';l”9 lftulvylln ' In lh al . There's an old clock quietly tlck- "Ilo'TE;""' n:'7-Wlmzau inn T'sil"Ei'.'Ii;' ”'"".f;""""" The happy hours away. 9 I II sass: ag was at as. w..'. uh cssas sheen)! bri 5u"i'e"-u -'7-'-n..u.6fts3f."”" UCKLEYS STAINLESS VVHITE RUB There is music. soft and tender. There is laughter, sweet and gay. There is candle-light and silver And a table set for two- And you will smile across at me And I will smile at you. -Constance I. Heckherf. movies, amateur shows and wres- tling. Big Payroll 3 On fortnightly pay-days as much (as 31,000,000 in wages is deposited in the bank. Each worker's pay. lless board and laundry, is put into his personal account and he gets a statement of his net earnings. He, may withdraw any amount. The. bank also forwards any allotmentlmemt EVe"'"s may devemv - ' " I ruin-at I ' ;”E” ' ; ,y . - , a ,3 Make clear. golden-,' amber tea in a twinkling. Enjoy tlid refreshing 'lift' of s ' steaming cup the minute you feel the need.Just a spoonful of Nestea in your cup and add boiling water; Then relax. Tea's ready. . no" sooov sacs . no MIIIV uavu . no smemo . no wanmo nelenoi .Nsscarl -"a'.a" " KI'tC . unseat war. It was extended last year to this May 31. Future Uncertain He said there has been no'oc- caslon in the last yyear to use the aide powers over the economy and other individuals. The government will be happy if it does not use that ;he my make to his family. A banklwomd mm” the WWE" ""m'c"' - nary , ..- The cabinet had discussed exten- pslon but had refrained from mak- llllg I. decision, because it hoped that an extension would not be needed. The Opposition motion had been brought forward because the act might lapse removing the oppor- tunity of crying "wolf-wqlf" and raising the "bogey" of one-party state. No one disputed Parliament's supremacy or the rule of law. Despite constant charges of dic- tatorship, Hitlerlsm. Fascism or Communism. there were none of thesc things in Canada. That. was why during l'liS world tour he found such admiration for Canadian in- stitutions and "even favorable com- parisons with those thing; mat many in the United States deplore SouliiAnd Vicinity ' Miss Loinse Peters of Notre; Dame Convent. Charlottetown.t in the administration of their own - made to ucu,-9 5. compm, , smashed into the rear truck, kill- plmure .5 poggime, ing both the motorcyclists. Mgny jngeregung new about Another truck. unable to stop in New Brunswick were brought to time. hit the wreckage and hurled light. and a number of recommen- the two bodies over an embank- dations were made. First and fore- merit. most is the recommendation con- A fourth motorcycle plunged coming the appointment of a De- into the truck. The, rider and s puty of Welfare. which would make companion were injured critically. necessary the formation of a pro- six automobiles piled up in the vincial Welfare deparlment in the oppmite lane. Traffic was stalled province. Such a department would for two hours, Integrate and give direction to all mm--:1 welfare services. lt goes witliout ports have been available to the ESYIHS lhklv H9-085581? Qua-illlellipiiblic for a year and a half now. D9-r50l'lhP1 Wfiuld be T9(lUirPd- All-lMany crgniiizatlniis and interested other recommendation which woiild1cii.i7..-n,g have studied these results ,make quite a drastic cliaiigc. is and I1 HVP SIWYI U101? support .the. division lntn adniiiiisti-aims?cm-mlniy the N, B, members nf units of the entire province so that , the C, A, 5, w, have don.-. ave,-5-. all areas would benefit from n,ihiiig to keep the relport alive, 1... Bound Well?!” DF08r8m- A C0mDl8lPlcluding study of the report, con- revlsion of the Children's Prolccl-1 lacls with members of other organ- ion Act was advocated in oi'dci'li7,-aliens asking them to study it 10 brlnll NW0 CODIOITIIIIY With niid offering their services in aid present trends in child care. It was in interpretation. Contacts wrrr felt that consolidation of all I01-lalsn made with the members of .ISl8il0I'l relzardink Chl1drPll. Into the Provincial Cabinet and Legis- i"”9 "I W” d95iTHb19- N Dresrnni laiure asking that the hasic needs all Children's Aid Societies arc for a separate Welfare deport- auionomous with little provinciil mcnt be provided. Much remains flollllffll 01” dire"-l0n. With A rznodin the future. blli one thing is, PTOVIMIBI 59'-UDV ille Vnfinllslccrtaint the report has become al lilfn0-I95 Nllld be WT)" mllclllcommon denominator for all ilmscl Sirmlllvlleiled and encouraged. llll the province interested in lht'l The results of the "rouzcl Re-lwclfarc field. l SPECIALS IN SILVER Butters. Cake Plates. Trays, etc. SEE OUR WINDOWS I unwo M now reall I V washa bl No longerrnesd mother worry when dirty linger- morks, smudge: and spots smear popered wollw new that Sunwortliy wallpaper is really wuslioblei it's truel . . . now you simply clean off dirt with a damp clotlil 'Yas, Sunworiliy Wculicblo Wallpaper is practical, oven with children. ' WliaI's more it's economical loo. for besides the low initial cost, In matchless beauty lam and Iastsl Ask to see the wide tongs of excitingly beautiful patterned and plain textured papers designed to bring a wonderful change to every room in your Items. You can work wonders with wallpaper! waI.I.I-ai-in Mmlie 5. Mason Ends! spent the week-end at the home' of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Oil-l bert Peters. South Rustico. l The sympathy orthe communltyl of south Rustico goes out to Rev-l erend Fr. Robins PP. and the, sisters of the Notre Dame Con-I vent of North Rustico on the loss We have twenty re-c.ondltion- ed LadIes' and Gcnts' of their high school which wall completely destroyed by fire earlyl w.'tches' Saturday morning. I SEE THEM The many friends of Miss Lil-l lian Gallant of Rustlco, are sorry to learn that she is seriously ill in the Charlottetown Homital. A speedy recovery is anxiously await- ed by all. FANCY CHINA All Stock Patterns of Tea. and Dinnerware l0'Vo DISCOUNT Also Many Specials The Misses Angie Doucetie and Stella Doli-on of Charlottetown. spent the weekend in Bonn Rus- tlco at their res, live homes. -CA. ma : WITH EASTER JUST AROUND THE CORNER. Now is YOUR ' OPPORTUNITY TO savr. MONEY av BUYING YOUR nasnza AND WEDDING GIFTS AT ma SAVINGS. OUR ENTIRE STOCK AT GREATLY arsnucan PRICES. , SALE paras -. MARCH 25th to APRIL 3rd Inclusive WATCHES All Ladies' and Gents' Watches for Pre-Easter Sale. 20'Vo DISCOUNT any Now For: EASTER GLASSWARE All our beautiful Patterns of Stem- ' ware, Avon. Windsor. Duchess 20'Vo DISCOUNT RONSON LIGI-ITERS We are over-stocked in Rouson Lighters. We offer 100 Lighters Regular Price SO15 SALE PiIICE'SS.39 SILVER HOLLOWARE an our stock of sterling and rims llolloware for thi sale- 20'Io DISCOUNT BUY Now AND says: STERLING and PLATED EXTRA SPECIAL Now is the time to buy your Novelty Jewelry for spring and Summer. com-u.-rm visuar. . mimacriozi arm 3 ANALYSIS 1 G. F. I-IUTCHISON O "";”nw"35i'i'f” ”' ' I: SON . u M rug. 31.00 94.32.50 Value. SALE PRICE 59: -A . DIAMOND RINGS our Entire attack of Diamond lungs for tiih nie- 20'lo DISCOUNT 0 FLATWARE All patterns both Skirting and Plated 20”lo DISCOUNT Now Is the time to add to your pattern. I CONGRESS PLAYING CARDS Larg Assortment New Designs. Regular Price 81.25 SALE PRICE 98: EXTRA SPECIAL Avon Patten - Fine Bonc Wedgewood China. 2570 DISCOUNT LADlIS' HAND IAGS Finest assortment in the City. Now on sale at 20iVo DISCOUNT Intest Styles and Colors. EXTRA SPECIAL As a speck! attraction for this big Pr-e-latter sale-- we offer 100 Alarm CI0c'i5- regular prla S350- sau mes 32.1-.9 Diwossaadliemtimv I 44-