Ontario Community Newspapers

Port Perry Star, 6 Jun 1929, p. 7

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

Bow Bells Silent Classified Advertisements For Three Years No Money Available to Re- pair Old Oak -------------------------------------------- orgy ELT tion for 3¢ Prices "The child In the home Is a mever- OXICKS Years: or y_and A it 100. Dela Pouliy Farm, Stratford, On London.--Bow Bells are not ringing. They have not, indeed, been ringing "| falling source of joy, but, at the same time a never-failing responsibility to the fond mother. It not infrequent- ly happens that minor ailments of the child distress and puzzle her. does not know just what to do, yet Granton, Ontario. ------------ ANADIAN MAGAZINE REQUIRES ambitl th® museum, the first group of mounds to be excavated was found in 1918 when W. B. Van Valin, a research worker in anthropology, discovered gold weavers, with golden crowns set with pearls; the shoemakers in, fine silk, while the silk-workers were in fustian; the cheese dealers and pork They are out of order and money for their repair is not available, Mr, Deputy Ellis told the City Corporation at a recent meeting. it TE HI (3 0 ous, ous commission, Li: 347 Adelaide St. West, eras, ppd, ; BABY CHICKS. WB HATOR four varieties, ce or Sree catalogue, rE Switzer, al agents who an feels them mot serious enough to war- rant calling in the doctor. At just such times as these it is found that Baby's Own Tablets are the mothers mounds that contained structures re- sembling houses, some being 18 by 45 feet, built of driftwood with ceil LECTRIC. MOTORS FOR HYDRO, 3 horse $15, § horse Ho. All sizes 8q' The matter arose when the town clerk reported the receipt of the ac- counts of the City Parochial Founda. butchers in scarlet and purple; Aah and pout ng! Pp y ear 3 . " low prices; 25 men-of-war; the glass-makers, with rite Loft Electric Coy London, Ont. are dealing. elegant specimens of their art; the comb-makers, 'with little birds in cages; the barber-surgeons on horse- back, very dignified, very learned, and with that you'd think there'd be an end of them, but east your eye back on that procession and you'd find guilds as far as your sight would § greatest help and friend. Most childhood allments arise in the digestive tract--the bowels become clogged and the stomach sour, Baby's Own Tablets are a never-failing relief for this condition. They are a mild but thorough laxative.and through thelr action on the stomach and bowels they banish constipation and indiges- tion; breakup colds and simple fever: ain 'accompanying the cut- th 'and promote healtb-giv- Concerning them Mrs, W. logs. A thick covering of sod has been placed over the roofs and the walls and the skylights, which had been cut into each roof, had been covered with seal or walrus skins. Skelton re- mains of many persons were found, with some of which were found imple ments and possessions of daily life, {ncluding wooden drinking cups, ba:|™ Jeen vessels containing small pleces of seal flipper and blubber and three pronged fish spears. Late last year, much of the ma- terial that had been brought here was transferred from the Museum to .the Wistar Institute of Anatomy at the university and examined by Dr. Ales Hrdlicka of the National Museum at Dobbin Prefers Water a . He sald that 38 years ago the money of the city churches was impounded and small sums left for the upkeep and repair of the churches were now altogether insufficient. He asked that the matter should go to committee for inquiry and report. The Court accepted the motion for E Ald Development am striving to bring to the Wes- an understanding of my that they ean assist in- IR Washington--Refraln from dipping oily palls into "Dobbin's" watering trough when filling your automobile radiator, 1s the plea the Washington Humane Society is making to motor- Let you be going down the markets, and what would you see for sale? Boots, clothes, bread? No, they were. out of sight; but scattered on the booths, the like of farls of bread on a fair-day, you'd find cloves and nutmegs, mace and ebony from Moluc- cas, that had come by way of Alex- andria and the Syrian ports; sandal- wood from Timor, In Asia; camphor Sumatra and Java sent benzoin to her markets, sent bitter aloes wood. From China and Japan and from Siam came gum, spices, silks, chessmen, and curiosities for the parlor. Rubies from Peru, fine cloths from Coromandel, and finer still This practice, it points out, con. taminates the water and makes it un- fit for drinking by horses, which the automobile has already relegated to the background in the transportation In the sombre aisle of the Church of Bt. Mary-le-Bow, the verger shook his head sadly as he told a press rep- resentative of the fate which had be- fallen Bow Bells. "Busy Londoners pass by in thou- sands every hour, Yet how many real- me-your little booklet on the care of!jze that the most beautiful bells fn all the city ha ree | ing troughs. Baby's Own Tablets are sold bY | years? id ye Hoy chimed tor three} Ing. troughs medicine dealers or by mall at 25 v ' cents a box from, the Dr. Wiliams'! ower since just after the Great Fire; the others were hung many years ago. "They pealed forth regularly until} 1926, when the old oak frames became | Read d, the strong man of Arabia, _ "It is to him that we are looking for salvation, and ft is chiefly for him that my lectures are being given in different parts of the world. that Great Britain should foster his have used Baby's Own Tablets and think so highly of them that I would not be wtihout them. tion to the traffic regulation which prohibits parking in front of drinks #3 Dr Williams "Arabia is in the "centre of the PINK PILL world, and the mandatory powers can: #A HOUSEHOLD NAME not afford to have fighting, © tent and unrest all the time in this spot. It costs them money and worry, and it is probably due In part to the policies that they pursue. "Purther examination by archaeol- ogists from the museum," Dr. Mason sald, "also revealed the objects to be typical of a phase of ancient Eskimo culture scientifically called the 'Thule culture," which had been very well studied in the central Arctic regions, "Six of the twelve have hung In the To be told at the front that we were fighting to make tte world safe for democracy was to be driven to the Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont, , ---- Disarmament on Land and Sea Saturday Review (London): There What kindlier friend in all the world Unoiled, Motorists Told The soclety also calls atten- a -- verge of insanity.--Herbert They got spikenard from Nepaul and Bhutan. . . d see pearls and sapphires, topaz and cinnamon from Ceylon; agates, brocades and coral from Cam- bay; hammered vessels and inlaid weapons and embroidered shawls from Cashmere. As for spices, never would your nogtrils meet such an odor; rom Scinde, musk from Ti- bet, galbanum from Khorasan; from Afghanistan, asafetida; from Pexsia, sagapenum; ambergris and civet from, Zanzibar, and from Zanzibar came ivory, too. And from Zeila, Berbera, and Shehri came balsam and frank- . "The spirit of nationism is growing #11 over the Near East and the sooner the mandatory powers realize it and make concessions the sooner will peace prevail. The mandate for pro- tectorships has not been carried out jn the spirit that it was given. f the mandatory powers help- Ing the nations weaker than they to become self-rellant with decent form of government, they look after 'mum- ber one,' that is themselves, first. Then they look to the comfort of the poor nation that they have sworn to help and protect. but not so well in Alaska. "Following these revelations, which form most important contributions to Arctic archaeology, made inquiries which disclosed that there remain a number of similar mounds near Point Barrow, but that the Eskimos, inspired' by the knowl edge that white men had become in- terested in the mounds, had begun to excavate them and were removing their contents for sale as curios. "With the co-operation of Dr. Hrdl- icka, the University Museum then can be no common denominator of power on land and sea, and the prob- lems of disarmament on one element and the other, are entirely separate. France and her European Allies have thought it necessary to keep up the system of conscription which we and America have discarded, European military system cannot be brought into any sort of relationship between ours or America's. The views of France must inevitably govern the land armaments of the Continent and we can offer her no sort of induce ment to change these, But at sea our interests coincide with those of Amer- ica, and (subject to reserves on sub- marines) do not conflict with those of France. Obviously, therefore, on naval MUSHROOMS PAY Barn upwards of $25 weekly growing Mushrooms for us, in cellar or other waste Keep Minard's In the Medicine chest. ' re . . Trade With Britain Toronto Globe Lih.): present circumstances Canada is pur- chasing from the United States hund- reds of millions of dollars' worth of goods In excess of total Canadian | ------ ~ - sales to the Republic. LL 1 ; time the exact reverse is true in the, case of trade with the Motherland. We sell to Britain far more than we "Buy from those who buy from you" is a good slogan at any It will seem even more applic- able and urgent in the present case it the United States reduces to any Escort for man between the day Curtained by night, e, We are restored, and sent upon our WAY. A boon thou art that never can be Nor may proud Wealth thy use polize ; Thou fallest like And knowest the place where tired mounds which are still undisturbed and to bring the finds to the museum where they will be available for fur If arrows of the day should wound And that was Venice, and Marco *That is not the way to gain the Polo, a young man. And now it's only affection and esteem of Arabia. I was Or Guilt or Failure track us to our BOX N75, BRIDGEBURG, ONT. VAN. spre | SCHWEGLER'S NATG YI 326 Northampton Ruffalo NV like any other town but for its churches and canals, -- From "Messer Marco Polo," by Donn Byrne. en present at the recent conference be- tween Sir Percy Cox and Ibn Sa'oud snd acted as Intermediary for den, Thy balm heals; the humiliating score from this Dominion. Thou wipest clean away; "rhe United States Coast Guard Service and the Bureau of . Educa. tion, both of which have vessels avail- able in 'Alaskan waters, have agreed museum transport armaments we need not worry about making our formula acceptable to Pp conditions any more than France worries about making her mili tary strength commensurate with ours or America's. ject of our naval policy is to reach an Burned From The Sun? Minard's will bring soothing relief. Apply Minard's too for any skin irritation. ete et The fly, as & germ carrier, is cap- able of doing more harm than & mad Death from our circle a love one may drawn up, but it is not lasting. So'oud is a good and honorable man who is looking for peace and great ness for his country. The supreme dix We get him back from thee ... until SEI Rev. A. L. Fraser, D.D. "In this respect he cured, France will not enter into com- The Scottish Invasion od much. Where 1a .sules the petition; without that we shall inevi- JRE P-- Sun Tas disp ke Fhey. 810 ©. E. Lawrence, In John O'London's Britain Ships Lighthouse le, tably drift into ruinous naval compe- Weekly: Not only do they (the Scots) Lens to West Indies tion with America and possibly into a quarrel. In naval policy we are not a European Power but a World Power. tside in the desert in other parts of Arabia, the old feuds and en- mity is being carried to the limit, bring with them the accent of their fathers, the congenital thriftiness of their mothers,.the legendary and do- 70,000 Candlepower Light To Be In- stalled on Watling's Island tm Nassau, Bahamas~--A monster light- ering and killing still mestic atmosphere of their home val house lens with a 70,000 candlepower and it Is tmpossible for Bri-| The West Indian Market ley or hillside, but also they bear light hag arrived hefe from England into ¥ it out without the ald| g.i¢ yohn Evening Times--Globe | southwards a version of history which and will be installed next month on in a very briet while we are ready to Watling's Island, or San Salvador, as (Ind.): Those who insisted that there accept, as 'sufficient. By merely talk- was no trade in the West Indies worth "If he is given concessions, and al- Jowed to spread his protection OVEF| going after must revise their opinions. |ing of it they have ho impressed us it was formerly called. 1 th k: in Staffordshire was manufactured the desert, the desert will be a peace- and was shipped in parts, making Indeed they appear to have done 80, ful spot. He can and" will maintain yp onon occasionally one reads such|purn was the only real b forty-four cases in all. order and will be ready to come to Britafn's aid at any time. between the English and the Scottish, remarks as that there are larger mar- that we are unable to mention Flod- kets nearer home. After being taken to the Port of San Salvadoy by ship the lens must be other hand, these concessions are be- taken three miles overland to the base "ng given out to minor rulers who are den, which shows them to be indeed a however, that we lave a surplus for most victorious people. Anyhow, with. export and the West Indies furnish of the 100-fobt hill on which the light- ~under British protection. They cannot «promising field... out. learning much of it in the schools, house is located. After this 480 yards do anything with the country and can- not render any effective assistance to Britain at any time. we English know far more of Robert|- Bruce, William Wallace, Bonnie Dun- dee, Montrose, Glencoe, eee meee Rocky Mountains national park, berta, of tram line Will" be Iai "to haul the cases to the summit of the hill with the ald of winches, «The proportion of the country's | with headquarters at Banff, Al {a the oldest and second Iarges stool than | population in faver of our | donald and Jenny Geddes' [the Welsh in their most "Look-you" | at least fifty per scent. in love with a dimple ' Soviet Russia is now entering into| 4ional parks. It has an. hours have told of Llewellyn, or even 8,834 square miles and contains some makes the mistake of field. She 1s trying to rf into the good the garrulous Irish have said sbout| 'The Grain Congestion When your whole girl--Life: of the finest recreational and scenic Children Cry Felt Tired and Miserable I took Lydia E. Pinkham's Qastoria is a comfort when Baby is etful. - No sooner taken than the ttle one is at ease. few drops soon bring contentment. No harm done, for Castoria is a baby remedy, meant for bables. Perfectly 'gale to give the youngest infant; you have the doctors' word for that! It is a vegetable product and you could use But it's in an emerg- cy-that Castoria means most. Some night when constipation must be re- an extra bottle, un- make sare there will al- ria in the house. It is older children, too; read le Compound for mis- erable and tired feelings and it gave me strength to do m work. My nerves are better I feel well and strong and have a 1 sleep well 'and am in pretty and able to work e now. I recommend the Vege- table you may use this letter as.a testi- Ry New Brunswick.

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy