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Port Perry Star (1907-), 16 Mar 1939, p. 7

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Can Shape Baby's - Face To Order Reshape Pliable Bones of An Infants' Face if They Are Malformed |] Facial malformations soon may be overcome as a matter of course," Dr, Ray Edward Raymoker of Mis- soula,, Mont., told the convention of the Philadelphia County Dental Society last week, fir) == Dr. Raymaker said (hat any ex- .perieneed dentist, using onl$ his fingers and one small instrument, could reshape the.pliable bones of ° an infant's face within 80 minutes after birth, In. disclosing the re- sults of 16 years of research, the Montana dentist stated that he had - reshaped the .faces'of hundreds of babies, He declared that nipples for ba- _ bies' milk bottle should be pre- scribed by competent degtists af- ter careful examination, because poorly shaped nipples cause upper jaw malformations. Noted Canadian Poet Dies Dr. Thomas O'Hagan, widely- known. Canadian' puet, author and : scholar "died in Toronto after two years' illness, in-his 84th year. A teacher by profession, Dr, O'Ha- .gan was principal of some of the "leading Roman Catholic separate schools throughout the Dominion. 'Swedish Modern' Leads Furniture _Has Grace, Style and Propor- ~~ tion--Uncomfortable Angles And Acres of Chromium Are | In current displays of 'modern furniture, Swedish Modern is © widely featured. The better Swe- dish modern has a nice blend of grace, style and. proportion so long hoped for by those who have liked modern furniture from the first, even .when "modern" meant un- comfortable angles and acres of chromium--which it n>" longer does. Newest tone in Swedish * Modern is harvest mahogany, mel- low as autumn sunshine. In one particularly nice living room the walls are pale, ¢loud- blue with lines of rust, green, straw and deeper blue that give a-- subtle plaid effect. The rug is ~The other is covered with nubby teat-brown and the draperies cin- namon-beige, both of which, with . the walls, provide a perfect back- ground: for the harvest mahog:' any breakfront desk with hand- somely caned doors. One chair is in neutral tones, striped in colors, "cloth in two shades of green. eB re © practical. ular 18th Century furniture 'are highlighted this year. Complete -- bedroom--suites--in-- Sheraton and Hepplewhite designs ought to ap- __peal to the woman who needs new ~ bedroom furniture and wants it daintily feminine yet thoroughly --e. Skyscraper City ~ A Thing of Past Architectural Expert Predicts . Cities of Future Will Be Hor- * .izontal Rather Than Vertical - George S. Mooney, associate di- rector of the .Planning and Re- search Department of the Mont . Yeal Metropolitan = Commission, «predicted the cities of the future will be horizontal rather than ver- teal. - Yoo : . "The skyscraper city already is A thing of the past," he: told dele- gates to the second Canadian cons "ference on houging. "By far the Targer- number 'of communities res gard such pictures of architectural aspiration only as warnings - or nightmares. House of Tomorrow i houses of tomorrow will --=-turg thefr-backs on the street and open their porches each on a®lit- tle park;* he said. 4 He pictured slums as a standing menace to" the communities in which they exist and "from the standpoint of social economy they are a luxury our éivilization can- "A | Sunday: School Lesson ' LESSON XII Peter Exhorts To Christian Living 1 Peter 3:8-18 (olden Text: Like as he who cal- led you fs holy, be ye yourselves also holy in "all manner of living. 1 Pet, 1:15, "eh Lesson In Ite Selling Time -- We cannot determlné with absolute accuracy the year fu which the apostle Peter wrote his two epistles, but it is generally be- lieved that the First Epistle was written somewhere near AD. 60. 'Place -- In the thirteenth versé 'of the last chapter of this epistle tho apostle uses the phrase, 'she that is. in Babylon," and from this some have argued that Peter wrote this epistle from the great city on the Euphrates River; others havo advanced the theory that because. the ancient city of Cairo, Egypt, was called Babylon, the epistle was written there. It Is more generally believed that hero Peter used the word "Babylon" to designate the city of Rome. . 8. Finally, Ue ye all likeminded, _ - LATEST AUXILIARY OF CANADIAN NAVY COMPLETE TRAINING ed by Hoh, "| Christlans ought to be of the same mind because they are members of the same body, the Lord .Jesus Christ, Compassionate, Loving as brethren. . In secular Greek the word here means the love of broth. ers for brothers, 'but in the * New Testament it Is used in what is really a row sense, of love for those who are brethren by virtue "of the fact that they are "begotten again? (1 Pet. 1:3). Tenderhearted, Humbleminded. Having a modest opinion of one's self, Return Good For Evil 9. Not rendering evil for evil, or - reviling for reviling; but contrari- wicy blessing. Wo can hardly show ourselves Christians more vividly 'than' in obedience to just such an . admonition as this, Not an easy thing to do, yet certainly possible, as the [Holy Spirit dwells within us., For hereunto were ye called, that ye should inherit a blessing, God blesses, therefore we should bless; he forgives us, and therefore we should forgive others. We were cal- -led into such a high life as this when we accepted Christ and re- celved from him. a new llfe. 3 Men may give good words with the lips, while the "heart is full of bitterness; 10. For, He. that would love life, and seo good days, let him: refrain his tongue -*-om-evil, and" his lips that they speak no guile. The ob- ject wished for Is not mere life, as such, but a life that a man can love instead of hating with the hatred that is engendered, on the one hand by the satlety of thd pleasure-seek- er, and on the other, by bitterness and wrath; i Turning Away From Evil 11. And let him turn away from evil, and do good.. The objectives which are hers: expressed will ne- ver be attained unless there is de- finite determination on 'the part of the man to achieve these vir- tues, Let us remember that we can- not do good until we turn from evil! These things we do because the life of Christ in us impels us British Columbia, CENTRE, as auxiliary of the Royal Canadian Navy, were review- E. W. Hamber, licutenant-governor of : "as they hated the closce| Jarvis H, McLeod, collector of customs at Prince of their training period at Esquimalt naval base. The| Rupert, who recruited many of the skippers for the Skippers of the Fishermen's Reserve, the latest | sweeping .and machine-gun practice. will be available in case of need along the Britis . Columbia coast. Pictured at the extreme RIGHT is 1 The Reserve itish Making of Cheese "An Ancient Art Origin of its Mandlacture Lost In Mists Of Antiquity ~The manufacture of cheese is so old that its origin may be said to be lost in the mists of antiqu- ity. There does not appear to be any country or tribe in the world's history, stated P. W.rMcLagan of 'Montreal in an-address on the de- velopment of cheesemaking in Canada to the meeting of the Ca- nadian Produce Association, re- cently held at Montreal, which has not made milk fat its susten- ance into some form of cheese. There seem-to be hundred of va- " rieties. Cheese is mentioned in the Bi- "ble in' the Book of Chronicles, _ where it is written that at a time when the "Israelites were at war with the Philistines, a farmer nam. ed Jesse sent his young sen;-David, to visit his three brothers who were in the arm, and to carry-fo them a quantity of parched corn, but, to the captain of the com- pany, hic was enjoined to present ten small cheeses. ) In the recent excavatjons of Ur of the Chaldees, the birth place of Abraham, a mosaic frieze was dis- covered representing dairying scenes on a farm attached to a temple, more than 5,000 years ago (3,100 B.C.). There is a proces. sion of 'cows, two calves are seen -issuing from the barn door, and nien sitting on low stools.are milk- ing cows. Calves duly muzzled are roped -to the cows' head-stalls so. as to encourage her to give milk, Another part of the friéze shows two clean shaven men wear- ing fleece petticoats, the official & The. BOOK SHELF. By ELIZABETH EEDY "THREE MARRIAGES" By E. M. Delafield This clever "wuther: who. writes co entertainingly has long beén roted for her satirical portraits of women who get married for the sake of being married; or of wo- men who just fall short of doing. that." Come to think of it, Mrs. Delafield can be cruel as well as amusing, In "Three Marriages" Mrs. De- lafield treats three women of dif- ferent types, different periods-- Rose who lived in the 1850's; Vio- let-the little prude who belonged- to the Mauve Decade; Cathleen, a lovely-souled creature "who meant to be happy" in 1937, but was _ defeated by circumstances. Three stories, illuminating com- mentaries on women and marriage and what the former think about "the latter. X "Three Marriages" . . . by E. g _M. Delafield... . Toronto; Macmil. 'lan Company of Canada ,.. $2.25. Definite Weather Forecasts Coming Reports To Be Moré Accurate Shortly As Soon As Extensive Studies In Northern Canada Are Completed Weather reports will be more definite shortly as a result of me- \- E auxiliary comprises forty boats and 200 men and the | Reserve, training -conrsa includad navigation signalling mine : Eee seeeces -e teorological studies undér way in Northern Canada" and a study by OR a States weather men in 1937 *on Ellesmere Island off the Northwest coast of - Greenland, Capt. Clifford J. MacGregor, Unit- cd States weather expert said last week. : He said dhat most: weather con- ditions in the Lower Lakes vegion result from movements of polar air masses and of air masses from "the Gulf of Mexivo. "The polar air masses either came down by way of the Pacific . Ocean, or ovir a snow covered or dry Canada," said MacGregor. "The warm-air mass from the south comes either laden with moisture from. the gult or from the desert: « - "At present we chart the South- ern movements pretty completely. We are now beginning to check more closely on the polar masses. "We can tell where they'll meet, = when they'll meet and whether the result will be snow or rain and so forth. When weather is chart- ed like that, it ao longer becomes a question" of 'probably rain or - snow: tomorrow-or-the-next day.' "Instead, we can answer all the questions definitely." : * The first 1,500 of ten million "steel wigwams"" were distributed in Islington, Greater London work- ing class district last week, to the - puzzlement of residents who asked "What are we going to do. with them?" Government regulations require the buses of the alr raid shelters be buried three feet underground in the backyards of homes. T 3] . = . : . Inaugurate Toronto-Montreal Air Mail Service . reproductions--of ever-pop- | dcavor are In our knowledge of God 'translated "answer" means to'de- - fend one's self. To every man that "agketh you a reagon concerning the hope that fs in you. Yet with meek- ness and fear, : 16, Having a good conscience; that, 'wherein _ye are spoken ag: alnst,- they. may be put to shame who revjle your good manner of Jife in Christ. A good conscience fis the best reason for the hope that is- within us: -An-apology may be well learrigd, well expressed, elo- quent; but {t will not be convincing _ unless it comes from the heart, and not afford." is backed up-by life. 1 They Fixed Skulls 40 Centuries Ago Evidence that trepanuing opera: tions were performed by primitive man In Britaln nearly 4,000 years ago has been discovered by arche- wite while burfal mounds near Long C in Dorset, found in England, Piggot dec ES --y fostruments" was dug up by are cheologist Stuart Piggot and 'his fnvestigating anclent richel This is not the first evidence of a prehistoric trepauning operation lared, But it was the first with evidence AT Has A A De 7a / ologlsts, that gave 'the date. of the skull, A skeleton whose skull had been This was determined by a pottery operated upon 'with flint "surgical vessel found alongside the skeleton; If C Wi By William if HIS URIOUS ORLD Ferguson va i % -- [] CI AT IS 3 THE WORDS |! " POSITIVE". AND 7} 'WEGAT/IVE" % a ELECTRICITY 4 BELONG TO THE [* Ws DAYS WHEN IT [ 108 WAS REGARDED | tues AS A FLO im A BODY OVER.- | { CHARGED WITH THE || AN FLUID WAS CALLED : N POSITIVE; AN Al UNDERCHARGED 80ODY WAS : -- CADE} ] NESATIVE. \ No - 7 >tA : ES. DOWLARK, ; nA = PROBABLY WOULD BECOME ) ZN (s THE AMERICAN NATIONAL BIRD 3 \50Ve, SHOULD THE EAGLE EVER. BE FORCED TO ABDICATE ITS THRONE, NOME, : wD < Fi ¥: ALASKA, |" "jw eo 1S FARTHER. CA h tIR [ANG a ¥ + wWes7" Sopp 3 VER S72 " akg , : : -- STHEAN SESS ; I PY ARTI Se cbh,ANI 1 -- . HONOLULU. 3 rH w - COPR 1333 3 nia SERRE py, © LIE id © 59 NO king has the full support of all his people, and so there are those who oppose the bald eagle as the national® bird of America. Because of the love and respect held (or the cheerful. meadowlark, his name often 1s mentioned as a true All-America successor. to the | RI present ruler : : ) ! . --- -- ; eininine Athlete ~~ HORIZONTAL "Answer to Pre 3Sun-god-- ------ n= ~IPictured 14 Myself. : 5 American M AR ClOIN ! [LT AlLLLIA] 17 Lock parts. : ib = pedMALIMEDLIFITILIN NIGEL 1 2c parts. tennis ace: ABT ERC ] ol 18 Guns. . 0 10 Soon. £ EIT OITE 20 Complained. 9, 11 Golf device. A 3 23 To put up an 12 Bundle of [AWE BIS ITIAITILIOINKII I ante. official papers RIAITIE RR IN TIE MARC | 24 Girdle. i 14 Musical note. [QRI11V Dll D ON 25 Government ) . 15 Before. DiR[A MIA E H official. 16 Conducted. SEHEILIEICITIRIIIC|T|AINEM] 26 Mother. : 19 Small trans- - || INEHUINITIOM[UMIP IL [0] 27 she is a -tall port boat. NIOIMIA DL [Q]P | - girl, 21 Wing. EDI [TERIAID[1 OJENIOIVIA] 30 Finishes. ie 22 Otherwise. WiTRIEILIEIS]S 1 [GINIA[C) 32 Race end. 2 _ 23 Instigates. J a 34 To behave. 25 Hair tool. . 39 Cover. title in 1936 351 ine of color -. 28 Lik 50 Inlet. (pL). i sike. ' 51 Toward 38 Hostility to i 29 Writing tools. dwar. VERTICAL law. ' 52 Father. 31 Starch. | 54 Tiny © 33 Morindin dye, 0% ny vege- 34 Nick. table, 35 Male children 56 She was 2 Honors. 39 Drone bee. 3 Deduces. 4 Folding bed. _41 Sea duck. 5 Foe, 44.Tatter. 40 Vulgar fellow ATRIPTO T } DOCTOR'S / or " Reg U 8 (rh A AE 2 Pat. Ocfice THR reg srved aad to th 7 . 2 nt. 4 ki io dress.of priesls, pouring. milk ACE TTT 37 Rectified. chosen . 6 Preposition. 472000 pounds. ER ther in' families, fr nations, as a through a strainer into a vessel sct i 40 To punish. woman tennis . 7 Tg feast. 48-Roof--point = race, to. seek Ceiba oat tha on_the ground, while twa others 3% Ladies. player in 8 To exist. covering. iH smooth working of this complicat- are collecting the strained liquid English coin, 1937. 9 To ignore. 50 Railroad. i "ed fellowship, we are to rid human into great stone jars, perhaps pre- Ghastly. 57 She was ---- 12 She was ----- 51 Note in scale. 5 "fellowship of its envy and jealousy. | PAratory to making cheese. bi: Sead, of the na- in the finals 53 Form of "a," : and thoughtlessness and fll- will. : , _ 47To exchange. tional tennis - in_1937 55 Like. ig ! 12. For the eyes of the Lord are 17. For it Is batter, if the will of | TE PRD a4 4 0 nto hate ond pe cars | God 'should so wlll,_that_yo_sulfer_ --t q t =Supp. WE Te for well-dolag than for evil-doing. ¢ ace of the Lord Is upon them that It, wo know otirselves to have com- = wt) ne _-- do evil. Tho springs for-all holy en: mitted To evI-W8Fthy ol suffering, : J and his Son, Jesus Christ. In other 503 31 ow Lid 201) Jor the $5 5 le |° | - en words, the future rules the pres | oo. tw: 2nd no sense of defeat, and 3 i ; oh) Beavey controls our actions on we can pralse' God every hour of | i 2 0 | | earth, : RL BW 13. And-who is he that will harm he I at asl RA z 3 you, it ye be zealous of that which" HEE God 13 everything : Is BET is Fear of Man 18, Because Christ also suffered 0 J 3 } 11. But even it. ye should suffer for sins once, the-righteous- for the + : A-11.¥8 Should shite unrighteous, that he might bring us 3 i for righteousness' sake, blessed aro to God: being put to-death in the . r - 4 4 ye: and fear not their fear, neither flesh, byt made alive fn the spirit. 37 * be troiibled. Compare the words of The suffering' we endure is never a; { our Lord in the Sermon on the . } something that we plan for; the Nl ©} 5 Dount {yas Whi gr suffering that Christ * endured he y ! 2 : o righteousness here spoken o purposed, even-in the long ages be- 4c h 4 a akg fore he came down on 'earth, for : h ! k but the Son Ela ond we | Dy hisisufferlng, even unto death, | tn, 0y rating the first air mail flight between Toronto and. Montreal, via 0 ; ourselves practice, after our cons | 1° Wa8 able to make atonement for North Bay and Ottawa, under the new Trans-Canada Airways air mail : £3 version, in doing the things that - all unrighteousness and thus bring | service; Capt. M: Wi Fowler, LEFT, and First Officer Humphries look [4 J ! N ried 9 d. r : "fro to, : 4 are fight, Fear not thelr fear -- us to Go \ over. their mail cargo shortly before taking oft "from Toronto, WI ; & the things which they would dread, | ; : - . . 3 and wi hi ; A i : h Nd ro For watch hey will threaten | REGLAR FELLERS--A Heart Attack : . By GENE'BYRNES Q 16, But sanctity in your hearts . . - Vid : ni; \ 3 Christ as Lord.:Peter says that the RT ay wT 3 'holy fear of God will lift us above YOU HAVENT BEEN 5 i the: fear of man, Being ready al ACTING WELL, PINHEAD: ) ways to give answer. The word TI. THINK WELL TAKE i

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