Winnipeg Free Press (Newspaper) - January 25, 1943, Winnipeg, Manitoba
Winnipeg free press Bryce s Home by Carrier in Winnipeg 25c per week. Reception honors Brackens on eve of departure for East around 40fi persons went through the blizzard to the legislative building saturday night to bid Good Fortune to or and mrs. John Bracken m their new undertakings at Ottawa and w testify to Friendship which has grown stronger with the pass Winnipeg monday. January 25, 1943. Plice 5c Pei. Copy edition no of 20 years. Manitoba. The throng during which or. Bracken was attended staircase to d or. And mrs. A Rackin. Passed up the shake the hands i of Manitoba we. Were was rep . Former associates of Bracken in the government. Cross Section of political faiths represented. As was Many found friends Are Active in the progressive conservative party. Prior to the Public reception or. And mrs. Bracken were guests of Honor at a dinner in the fort Garry hotel Given by members of the Ila Are who support the govern or. And heir wives. Or. Justice w. J. Major of the court of King s Bench and former attorney general in the bracket government was present Withers. Major. Events of the included the presentation or and mrs. Bracken of a Large Ilver tray in Reeve i with tin.1 signatures of the i coalition members of the Legisla Ture and of a bouquet of Rod roses o mrs. Bracken. Prom is tray Hubert h. Mooney ., Vir Cen. One of the original group who invited or. Bracken to head the provincial government in 1s122. In presenting the Silver tray described As a Symbol of the gratitude of or. Bracken s former supporters in the legislature for Many gracious and kindnesses on the part of the former Premier and his wife. Miss Jaroslava Bachynsky. N daughter of n. V. Bachynsky. M.l.a., Fisher presented the roses to mrs. Bracken who in reply spoke evidence of deep feeling of the friendships they have n Manitoba have meant to her and or. Bracken. Mrs. Bracken gave an intimate account of How or. Bracken broke the news to her that he had been urged to run for the conservative Dominion leadership. It s going to be fhe told him but Don t you like to do hard she quoted or. Bracken As saying. It was then she realized that her husband looked upon the Opportunity for National leadership is a Challenge to do bigger and better things not Only for Manitoba but for his country As a whole. And she decided that she ready to do her part every Way possible. A representative from or. Bracken s former legislative Riding mrs. Robert Graham of the Pas. Pass Premier of the dinner and made speech filled with humorous Mem ories of the Rigours of campaigning m the far North. She said the Pas was accustomed to being represented by a Premier and Good hum redly suggested that premier1 Larson take on the Riding. Pays tribute or. Bracken in thanking the Din Ner group for the presentation paid a tribute to mrs. Graham s work m his behalf in elections. One of the satisfactions to and mrs Bracken Felt in going to Otta said was the he Thev awareness were leaving behind a competent government in Manitoba a Man a his opinion none in Canada. Second to such unanimity of loyalty could la Tom Emier. There was no believed that the coalition members should not continue to stand to Gether for they had Many More Points to unify them than to Divide them. Premier Garson was chairman of the dinner. He said that the out standing feature of the Bracken regime had been the harmonizing of representatives different Reli groups was to help in looking backward Ilir. Rrth j files pious racial and political into a United whole. This was pos sible in Manitoba he said because this province based its political judgments on the merits of Public issues instead of on narrow claims of Creed race or class. Original group present were six members of the group of 25 who a 1922 invited or. Bracken to leave his Post As Princi pal of the Manitoba agricultural College to become Premier. In Addi Tion to or. Mooney this group at the dinner included or. Bachynsky m. A. Hryhorczuk Ethel Berl w. R. Clubb. Chairman of the government liquor commission and minister of Public works tunisian situation held unsatisfactory Loc. Are different Joy Over Tripoli modified in Britain by Helen Kirkpatrick London Jan. 25. Special can rejoicing Over the capture of Tripoli is modified among responsible peo ple by the belief that the 8th army cannot rest after its mile drive but must now continue into Tunisia. Millionth ton Axis shipping is sunk former and labor sooner of farm Loans and Rural credits and former minister of health and Public welfare Hon. Douglas Campbell minister Agri culture. At the conclusion of the dinner or. Bracken read to the assemblage a Cable he and mrs. Bracken had just received from their son Fly ing officer Gordon Bracken who is attached to the . In Ceylon. The Cable told his parents that the i. B. Griffiths commis Young officer Day in India. When or. Reached the was enjoying a holi and mrs. Bracken legislative building from the dinner they found a Large throng awaiting hem. Taking their places in the Rotunda at the head of the grand staircase the Brackens were guests assisted by Hon. In receiving the r. F. Mcwilliams leu tenant governor of Manitoba and mrs. Mcwilliams Premier and sixty years 25, 1883 the cold snap in Winnipeg continued it was 36 below w. L. Rutledge. Theo. A. Burrows and w. E. Mclellan were elected members of the Manitoba historical wide interest. Fifty five years 25, 1888 j of the new progressive. Conservative left Leader and his wife was six year the throng who moved up the staircase to shake the hands for san Diego. California or. Sil Cox had preached his Farewell Sermon after nine years As pastor c congregational j successor. Rev. Hush Pedly. Was his a be in the pulpit on the Forth coming sunday. Fifty years 25, 1893 it was announced officially that right Hon. John Campbell Hamilton Earl of Aberdeen of of Jordon seventh succeed lord Stanley As governor general Canada. May o Connor who was with Mother mrs. Sarah o Connor old her of Winnipeg. As the Little girl reached out her hand mrs. Bracken took a Large red Rose from her bouquet and gave it to her. Shake hands the first to shake hands with the new Leader As the procession of the Public started moving past the receiving line were or. And mrs. H. R. Drummond Haj. Ernest tread away. Wearing medals of the last Iwar a member of the staff of guards forty five years 25, 1898 at the legislative building announce first ice to be in led the names of each one attending a in the Canadian West was in the j. Y. Griffin Swift peking City s Stone where anyone who wished to Vork could get 50 cents per cubic fwd for breaking Stone was curing forty years 25, 1903 a committee of Welcome was a fast and Well ame Between the at a meeting of Winnipeg tiers to receive and entertain the scottish curlers the com a jilted included Aid. Barclay we. A a. F. D. Macgachen Alex g. W. Murray and w. H. Thirty five years Jan. 25, 1908 Harry Kennedy the Maple Leafs j 3nt Wing was the Star of that Ean and Billy Baird. Strathcona a Var Point the outstanding Strath player hockey teams at the Aud rink the won 7-6. Years 25, 1913 one Portage la Prairie s _., destructive fires the Branch Hudson s Bay company w with an estimated s100.000 Al the 50 employees safely though John Dodi jct eran carpet department cd severe Burns was the Only one Way have years ago Jan. 25, 1918 s books on the subject of which were current Best were my four years in by ambassador Gerard lated states the first thousand by Ian Hay Gib on s a n y years Jan. 25, 192 Ace Council decided not e the City charter As affect taxation Muriel mation. Gathered m the reception As he approached the receiving line. Modernity of Burns stressed by Ketchen just As modern As a daily news Burns said Rev. Bev Erley Kelchen Hamilton ont., who will be guest speaker for the Winnipeg caledonian Burns Celebration monday evening at the Royal Alexandra hotel. If he were broadcasting today Burns could make Hitler wince. Or. Ketchen claimed in an interview at the hotel monday morning. A satirist like Dickens Burns Man Ner of poking fun is his most Effic had quarters. British Mediterranean Fleet Jan. Delayed British submarine Sank the Millionth ton of Axis shipping in the Mediterranean As Tripoli fell into Allied hands. Rear Admiral sir Henry Harwood commander in chief of the Mediterranean Fleet announced today. Carwood emphasized that his Fig ure did not include sinking by torpedo planes destroyers and other surface Craft. Entrance to the Harbor of Tripoli Harwood reported now is blocked by the wrecks of enemy ships but the Royal Navy already is on the Job. Preparing to dynamite the shattered hulks from the Channel. We Are employing the same sys tem used at Mersa Madruh Bardia Obruk and Bengali before sweep ers and Salvage Crews were Able to Clear ports for Large he explained. Our armies Snow plows Battle with heavy drifts battling through heavy drifts a dozen Snow plows of the Good roads Branch cleared arteries of Manitoba monday after a province wide week end blizzard. The trans Canada Highway remained open monday from the Eastern to the Western boundaries but the going was very heavy cast Cern. It concludes of Whitemouth. It is not surprising that the Highway no. 2 was heavy Between j country grows restive about our Winnipeg and Treherne and also in the political transaction for the View was expressed in Sev eral influential quarters Over the week end that Gen. Bernard l. Montgomery and his 8th army must now Lake Over part of the Job originally assigned to the armies of the French in North , As the Sun Day observer puts it. The Battle for Tunisia is clearly turning out to be tougher than must earlier have been anticipated. If results desired from the North african occupation arc to be obtained that Campaign must be brought to a speedier conclusion than the number of German reinforcements pouring in would make it seem. The original plan would appear to have been that the 8th army should Advance from the East to join the British 1st army with its american contingents at the Tripo titania Tun Isia Border Picering the Ger mans. Now instead of that it looks More and More necessary that the 8th army Advance into Tunisia. The observer editorially makes the. Most forthright comment on the prospects. It regards the tunisian situation As unsatisfactory and one which would be menacing but for the Advance of the 8th army. The germans Are attacking not altogether without Success they arc seen not to be decisively hindered or. And mrs. Bracken bade Farewell to Many hundreds of Winnipeg citizens saturday evening when members of the Cabinet held a Public reception at the parliament building. Three scenes snapped by the free press cameraman show upper left mrs. Bracken graciously presents a Rose from her bouquet to six year old May o Connor who attended the reception with her Molher mrs. Sarah o Connor upper right the reception line lower right. Kenneth Mckay As he Shook hands with or. Bracken while another guest talked to mrs. Bracken. Allied Victory plan eagerly awaited by the in which have become the British army is deeply committed in Tunisia the observer re Marks and soon the tunisian fight ing will be overwhelming British business. That in the eyes of the observer makes the political Situa Tion in North a British con Tive weapon. Or. Ketchen admitted he had never read Burns until he was asked to give an address on him about 25 years ago. Now he has a great respect for the scottish poet and finds excuses for the muddled per Sonal life of the poet whom he says cannot be judged by conventional standards. Nothing finer has been written on Liberty than Burns tree of Liberty he believes. The Western stretch Between intersection with Highway no. West through Souris to the bound Ary and Snow plows were working on these stretches. Highway no. 3 was closed to traffic West of Morden. But o Snow plow was keeping this Highway open Between Winnipeg and Morden although the going continued heavy. Snow plows worked on no. 4 monday from Portage la Prairie to Westbourne and the going was difficult but the Highway was listed open to Russell. A plow cleared the Way for traffic on no. 5 Between Neepawa and Dauphin. Blowing also proceeded on no. 6 Between Swan River and the Saskatchewan Border on no. 7 Between Winnipeg and Stonewall on no. 8 Between Parkdale and Gimli with the going heavy on this route and on no. D Between St. Andrews locks and Selkirk. A these routes were open. No. 10 was open from Minnedosa through Brandon to Boissevain. No. 11 was closed to traffic on monday Between Lac Dubonnet and Pine Falls. To. 12 from Winni Peg through Ste Anne Des Chenes was still open but the going was heavy. No. 14, the lord Selkirk Highway South from Winnipeg to Emerson and the International Boundary was its which its fighting men May have to pay the Price in blood. They Are 1 concerned not with the supposed errors of american diplomacy 0" with French shortcomings but with the responsibility of the British Ern ment in North african affairs. This responsibility cannot be Dis charged by giving a free hand to French generals turned capt. The Rev. F. M. Joy wins humane medal capt. The Rev. F. M. Joy still open. No. 18 of Killarney. And was no. Open North 31 Between Russell and Roblin. Remained open. North and South highways closed altho Gether to traffic were anglican Canadian won the padre army Roy a 1 serving with the overseas. Humane recently society s nazis hear gloomy tidings from East by Victor Gordon Lennox London Jan. 25. Special can Washington despatches report the eagerly awaited disclosure of the Broad outlines of the Allied pattern for Victory the germans Are announcing the gloomiest tidings from the East front and . Several predictions some now a month old Promise to be realized ukrainian Harvest even if still hold before the month s end. These in ins that territory. Medal and was commended in army orders for stopping a runaway horse in Liverpool England according to word received by his will pm ulc dbl Alai wife who has just taken up Orcsi a command succeeded in persuading elude most important pronounce ments of Allied policy linking up the United slates and Britain with Russia China and their other associates in planning the nex phases of the offensive and War winning strategy. That includes an agreement on a basis designed to pave the Way for a fusion Between All French elements now taking up the struggle and notably Between the fighting French movement and the French North and West african authorities. It is now possible confidently to assert that the remainder of col. Gen. Hermann von Hoth s encircled 6th army in Stalingrad will finally be liquidated within a matter of Days. Once about Strong today it has probably been reduced to Between and kept supplied by air after a full two months the germans there have fought a desperate delaying action forbidden to surrender and faced with extermination. Imaikop oilfields in the caucasus also the Ger mans now evidently realize that it will be impossible to hold the Imaikop oilfields. Though a month ago from Here it appeared cer Tain that the germans must evacuate the caucasus and they were re ported to be withdrawing some divisions it now seems that Only within the past week has the High dance in Russell Man. Capt. And mrs. Joy s Lour Chil Dren Are All attending school in Winnipeg Frank and Mark at St. John s College school and Patricia and Sheila at Rupert s land girls school. Mrs. Joy is a daughter of mrs. M. E. Langford. Of Shell Mouth Man. A sister Lance corp. Molly Langford is serving with the . Here being attached to of . 10. In England. The District pay office capt. Joy was born he served As a minister first at Saskatchewan parishes and later at Iroquois Falls. Onl., residing at Bracebridge. Ont. Minister of Macnab presbyterian no of Between Hartney and Delor Church in Hamilton or. Comes from a Kotc non scottish of real fighters. There claims he settlement Are 13 presbyterian churches in Hamilton of which he spoke proudly. A or. Paterson mentioned by one of Burns biographers in connection with the poet is believed to be a great Grandfather of or. Ketchen. Turkey seen to consider May 1 As crucial Date new Delhi Jan. 25. Info nine no. 22 Between Pipestone and Melita no. 24 Between Pierson and the International Boundary. No. 28 from Harding very heavy. To Shoal Lake Wasi Hon. Douglas Campbell to address 4 meetings Hon. Douglas Campbell minister of agriculture will address four meetings in Winnipeg during the week As follows tuesday attack on flin flon woman is investigated flin flon Jan. 25. An unidentified assailant brutally at tacked mrs. E. E. Carter of the child welfare department in her Home Here saturday evening. Mrs. Carter was hit Over the head with an instrument and suffered a Scalp wound and bruises. Mrs. Carter has represented the i child welfare department of the 4k government at flin flon annual meeting of the beet selected As miss Winni Mafield of 6v candidates. Of the Canadian fress Canadian press is sex entitled to the use for of All news Des credited to it or to the eci press in this paper also the local news pub herein. The Wake of a the the turkish press Mission Indi Cates that Turkey considers May 1 he crucial hour seeing an outside possibility that Hitler May attempt then to break through into Middle East and drive behind russians in the caucasus. Mav l is considered the critical Date because then the passes through the Barrier of the turkish mountains will be cleared of Snow and the ground sufficiently dry Lor motorized operations. ers association at the legislative building wednesday the mortgage loan association at Moore s restaurant thursday evening the Manitoba Bee keepers association at the St. Regis hotel sat Ifor the past three years. Trie Royal Canadian mounted police axe investigating. At 1 . The Holstein Fric sier. Association in the Hud son s Bay company dining room. Three railroads Are experimenting with passenger cars suspended on Coal and Leaf Springs that cause them to Bank like air planes in rounding curves. Newfoundland storm St. John s. Nfld., Jan. 25. Up and Highway communications in Newfoundland still were partially paralysed today Fol lowing one of the most severe storms Ever to hit the area. One freight train was blown completely off the. Raids and at one time 800 passengers were marooned aboard express trains. Hitler that he made another of his most colossal blunders in attempt ing to hold on there. It is understood that the germans have been compelled for the past Days to order the Transfer of Ger Man divisions from France in order to attempt to fill the gaps created on the cast front. These divisions leaving comfortable quarters in France for the Rigours of the cast front Are reported to be moving off much dispirited. All the latest signs and information suggest that the Reich is suffering from a desperate Man Power shortage. This plus the shortage of certain raw materials has brought some of the most important War industries to a stand the nazis arc now reported to be pressing Italy most strongly to Supply More troops for the cast front. Hitler s recruiting officers in Italy Are not finding it easy to get fresh troops but still retain a Vise like grip on the whole coun try making revolt impossible at present. The rumanian unrest knowledge their great losses on the East front plus resentment against the nazis on account of their seizing an oilfield urgently needed domestically is reported to be causing an inflammatory situation in Rumania. The gravest unrest is also reported from Hungary. Actually most serious for the. Germans however is their threatened inability to retain and exploit Imaikop or extend their grasp to the Southern caucasus Oil Fields. This Means that the Ger mans will not be Able to gather the striking proof of Germany s Dis May Over East front developments is provided by its own press and radio. The Berliner Boersen Zeitung declared for the first time in this War. The German people must face a defeat of some Magni lately there has been talk in the press that Germany would re tire within the Reich s frontiers to fight a Long sustained defence. I is known that the Gaul enters have been assured that the american and British armies cannot Ever equal the qualities of the German army. Germany can outlast them and then they will gladly talk a negotiated peace. Paris radio com ment shows that the German High command knows that it cannot Content itself with defending the Reich but to avoid defeat Fust hold out further afield. Somehow it must strive to prevent the allies from establishing air bases on the continent or nearer West than War saw. Finally somehow it must pre vent the establishment of air bases in Italy because that is too near the rumanian oilfields. But even today Ploc Sti is not beyond Allied bomber Range. Moscow emergency Hospital develops medical miracles this is one of a series articles by or Carter telling How Russia is using scientists to improve the Jot or soviet citizens. By Dyson Carter several years ago some English doctors visited a certain hos Pital in Moscow. When they returned to London these medical men reported enthusiastically on what they had seen. No one paid any attention. More russian said those who read the report. Now the truth is being revealed military British and doctors have the Hospital. American been taken through this time the reports Are being carefully studied because medical men everywhere have be gun to realize that Medicine one of the branches of science has made tremendous advances in the soviet Union. The Moscow Central emergency Hospital is a Beautiful building that looks More like n Palace than a Hospital. Its appearance might Well be different for there is no Hospital like his in any other country. As implies l is a Hospital emergency cases Only. Its name handling people who have been injured or people who have taken ill suddenly. Special Hospital Why a special Hospital for such cases russian doctors give this answer. In emergencies a human life often depends upon minutes even seconds of time. Saving a life Means knowing exactly what to do. Having everything necessary to do it and being Able to do it quickly enough. The Ordinary hos Pital with its emergency Ward is not enough. We decided to Start from the very Bottom from the emergency itself and build a whole new medical picture yourself As a witness to a serious Accident in Moscow. An old lady has walked into the path a Street car. You run to a drug store Telephone and hastily make of you notify doctor or of connects you at once to . No matter to about in Accident in Moscow police. Creator Moscow emergency Hospital. There a Telephone girl who has received special training in the psychology of voices listens intently. From the Way you talk she knows instantly that there has been a real Accident and probably a bad one. Without interrupting you she presses a switch. Two stories below in a Street level garage behind the hos dead people is the very Best for transfusion purposes for restoring life to sick or injured people. Russian doctors Are using this discovery at the front. How they do it is a military secret. The method has been revealed to Brit ish and american doctors who Are enthusiastic about what they be seen. Dying men and women Are literally raised from the grave by others who have already passed into eternity. Heroes who die de fending Freedom live again in the risen bodies of others. Surely no immortality Mere valiant than this has Ever been conceived by Man Central s staff has made discoveries of greatest importance to War Medicine. Revolutionary first ail consider the revolutionary methods in first Aid on the Battle Field. It All started in Central emergency. Studies proved that cases of violent electric Shock should be moved an absolute minimum. Ambulance mechanics got to work. They made a queer wheeled Stretcher that straddled the patient wherever he might be lying then Jan try lifted him. Military doctors took one look at the Gadget and ran for a machine shop tank. There this they built a Rescue amazing ambulance roars Imo the thick of Battle Rolls right Over a wounded Man the treads straddle opens a trap door in its belly and lifts the Soldier up to safety. While heavy Armor protects Rescue Crew doctor nurses and wounded inside you and i May never need mos cow s Central s electrocution but another discovery is of tremendous interest to us All. This is a new method of making operations painless. Some British experts consider it the greatest surgical Advance since chloroform. Have you Ever had a local As when your dentist a tooth before pulling it. Or when a minor operation is per Pital. Red lights Flash and gongs formed or. The nose sound. The Driver of a High Speed j in "1c famous soviet surgeon of a Long Vishnevsky began to extend this his motor. From a waiting room iwo doctors run for the ambulance. Ten seconds later the phone girl has the address of the Accident and passes it on by radio to ambulance and the car is away. Everything has been timed by electric clocks. The Hospital regu lations allow Only two minutes be tween the phone Call and ambulances departure. Ii any More time is lost there is an i Vesliga Well known anaesthesia to serious cases. He used a new technique. He injected very weak novocain and per Caine under the skin. By in petting Large quantities Little by Little going deeper with the Needle As the flesh became insensitive to pain Vishnevsky found he could put a wide area to sleep. The soothing drug diffused All around the Needle Hole. Vishnovsky s method is quite Tion. When one ambulance goes pain Ess. Within Taco out another moves up and two More doctors prepare for the next Call. Moscow Central emergency hos Pital is unique. Its motto is to save lives and prevent suffering. With 700 Beds 100 doctors always on duty and As Many More in re serve Central averaged emergency cases a year in peace time. To handle this volume of cases Moscow Central is organized to respond faster than a crack fire department. This organization begins with the phone girls and the ambulance Drivers. They know every Moscow Street and District there Are five ambulance stations one at the hos Pital four More at strategic Points in the great City. Because Speed is vital scores of cars Are available one nearest the scene of trouble is the one signalled by the phone girl s switch. After the ambulance leaves the operator at Central emergency tries to get further details from whoever nos Relief to agonized Accident victims. The patient remains fully conscious. There Are no after effects such As vomiting or heart disturbances. Best of All the Shock that often follows operations is drastically reduced. Last year soviet chemists sup plied Vishnevsky with a powerful new drug Sov Kain. This works even when one drop is diluted with ten thousand drops of Iva Ter. Several pints can be injected into a person without harm. Aesthetic effects last four to six hours. The Vishnevsky method met with such astonishing Success that now it is used at Moscow Central for fractures amputations abdominal operations and cancer. When a limb must be removed Sov Kain will maintain the painless state for Days until Healing is Well under Way. Extraordinary is the word for Vishnevsky s method applied to War wounded. Tried in the finnish Campaign Sov Kain gave Quick Relief general k. Stuart arrives overseas London Jan. 25. Kenneth Stuart Canadian chief of general staff has arrived in by Stair. For conferences with . A. G. L. Mcnaughton commander of the Canadian army in Britain and his senior officers. Their talks it was understood would concern the can Adian army s far reaching preparations for its fighting role. Col. G. P. Morrison director of technical research department of National defence h. J. Carmichael. Tank and gun g. O. Mcrae director general production adviser to and the of m. Munitions depart ment arrived at the same time on a Mission concerned particularly with problems of Supply and Ord it is believed that during his stay Ken. Stuart might be invested with the companion ate of the Bath awarded him in the new year s conors list. Beef for armed forces automatically Frozen beef for use of the armed forces was again automatically Frozen monday morning local packing House officials stated. Most of the retail butchers stocked up Friday however and should have sufficient supplies to last until almost the end of the week when the ban is usually lifted and civilian sales allowed. Fined for hoarding port Arthur Jan. 25. Bradley former cafe owner paid fines and costs totalling when convicted in City police court of hoarding. He had purchased 2.000 bags of Tea 72 pounds of Coffee and 208 of sugar shortly after he sold his port Arthur restaurant. Phoned in. The information is sent by radio to the doctors out on the Call. Then the operating room staff is notified so that All necessary without making soldiers ill or help when tested under identical to lotions against general a. The Vishnevsky method Cut the death Rale from wounds by 40 per cent the end copyright 1942. By contemporary contributions for the Canadian Aid to Russia fund Are being received care of the free press Tribune sky or . Doctors and equipment May be ready when the patient arrives. No internet there arc no internet Al mos cow Central. To win membership on the staff a doctor must have specialized for 10 years the idea being that Only the very Best skill is Good enough in emergencies. Brain surgeons neurologists Bone men internists diagnosticians All Are on lifesaving duty 24 hours a Day. British military surgeons report that Central s equipment is lavish and unexcelled not merely for emergency work but also for later complicated operations and treatment that maj be required to restore an Accident victim to health. It is in this Hospital that some of the most important soviet medical advances have been made. Take the familiar Case of blood transfusions. A Over the world human blood is Beth Frozen or dried for convenient use n hospitals and on the Battlefield. In our countries this development is fairly recent. In Russia it began Back in the twenties. Moscow is the recognized leading Centre in blood re Are trustees. Albert Rudolph e. Of Mitchell and Edna were selected on social committee bleeding w. Sha Stakowski elected by packing Plant Union Waller Sha Stakowski elected president the packing Plant employees Union local 122. Affiliated with the trades and labor Congress of Canada at a general meeting sunday afternoon in the labor Temple. Union members collected s107 for the Canadian Aid to Russia fund and the Union donated s25 at Sun Day s meeting it was reported. Other officers elected Are Harold Jensen vice president Ray Ander son Secretary treasurer Sid Bare Ham recording Secretary Maringer Warden Bob Armstrong Harry Babiak and Mike Kent Yuk. Search and is now far other countries. For example Accident victim. A badly rushed to Central emergency Hospital May be Given a blood transfusion not with pre served blood donated by a living person but with blood taken directly from a dead person someone who was killed earlier in an Accident startling new technique is countless rus Dan lives to this saving Day. The method War worked out at Moscow Central. It was found that blood after certain types of death is a remarkably Safe and effective transfusion agent Superior to All ethers. When a person is instantly killed without suffering any pain and the blood is taken from the body by suitable methods a very strange thing is observed. First the blood coagulated As does after any kind of death. But soon it becomes liquid again. And it will stay liquid without any chemicals being mixed with it. For this and other reasons the blood Iron Canadian films popular in America says visitor films depicting Canada s War Effort Are very Well received in the United states according to Joseph Gibson of the National film Board who arrived in Winnipeg sunday from the West. Or. Gibson who is a member of a new York camera Crew which has been touring Canada for the past six months under the auspices of the National film Board said films showing the extent of can Ada s War Effort reach about 80. Americans. Through the medium of these films he americans Are developing a growing appreciation of the extent to which Canada is working in War production. He is a guest at the fort Carrjr hotel
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