Addicts everywhere

... sprawled figures: arms upflung like a restless child's. But what else had Charlie Wong in a place that was a cesspool of garbage? For three rupees, maybe, he could fetch the world. As old man Khayyam has it, wilderness is Paradise snow. Coolies, who ...

Published: Friday 20 June 1947
Newspaper: Fleetwood Chronicle
County: Lancashire, England
Type: Article | Words: 187 | Page: 6 | Tags: none

MISSION IN RUBBISH DUMP 0 Underground I Church at Kentish Town

... themselves, who, although netween 60 and iu years of age, aigorously set to work with spade and pick. They dug out II lorry loads of earth, rubble and the garbage which had secumulated mr several years before the could make it in any way habitable, . _ The ...

Published: Friday 03 March 1939
Newspaper: St. Pancras Gazette
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 195 | Page: 1 | Tags: none

SHOCKING NEGLECT OF CHILDREN AT

... eating a law turnip. , . , The way the children had lived was by col; lecting pcitate peelings and garbage, and they | made the fire with cinders picked ofi the vil- lago gieen. , , Marsden was sent to Derby for two months i hard labour. ...

Published: Saturday 20 November 1909
Newspaper: Derbyshire Courier
County: Derbyshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 213 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

PIG BINS

... Boosting Shecrness as a holiday resort for the summer must scem rather funny to winter visitors, when they have to pick their way through garbage and potatoe peelings! Many of the bins are tipped over by dogs, and the contents raked for tit-bits. The trouble ...

Published: Friday 07 January 1949
Newspaper: Sheerness Times Guardian
County: Kent, England
Type: Article | Words: 209 | Page: 7 | Tags: none

THE CARRION CROW

... nothing but the backbone. In the season they resort to the seaside, like their betters, where they surfeit on any garbage stranded the tide or pick living from the shellfish. When pu7.7,1 by the hardness of the shell they show sagacity which is rather reason ...

Published: Saturday 04 June 1904
Newspaper: Cork Examiner
County: Cork, Republic of Ireland
Type: | Words: 222 | Page: 12 | Tags: none

BUTCHERS PROSECUTED AT COLNE. THEY (LIMB DOWN AND REPENT. IGNOIUNCE PLEADED IN DEFEM E. STRONG REMARKS BY MR. A ..

... that the garbage and refuse was there on the floor, and was being allowed to accumulate; and that, at times, had been taken away in a milk cart, and this did not comply with the requirements of public health. Mr. Sugden had, indeed, seen the garbage on the ...

IN ALL THINGS

... meaning, he Win refrain from transgressing and a gentle rebuke will enure the onservamc • your wishes. With regard to picking up garbage sir Wood, train hint by dropping pieta what when be will And theim Dueetly be approaches, give the cautionary - No, ...

Published: Thursday 28 June 1934
Newspaper: Shields Daily News
County: Northumberland, England
Type: Article | Words: 191 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

RATS AND REFUSE

... refusal disposal, and the destructor situated at Prince Rock is only capable of dealing with about one-third of the city's garbage. If the scheme were adopted, it would t\.ke some time before could put into operation, but would materially assist the ex ...

Published: Saturday 02 February 1929
Newspaper: Western Morning News
County: Devon, England
Type: Article | Words: 191 | Page: 8 | Tags: none

HOUSE FLIES

... explorations of filth the fly picks up disease germs. These germs are transmitted unaltered to any food upon which the flies crawl. The best method of combating the house fly menace is to prevent breeding by ensuring that all garbage containers around or near ...

Published: Friday 28 July 1939
Newspaper: Aldershot News
County: Hampshire, England
Type: | Words: 210 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

What's in Your Backyard?

... still to be extracted from to look at Tabs,. What's in your backyard? garbage pails. Science has hardly begun to utilize waste. Scraps of iron, a line of fluttering wash—a garbage It's surprising in how many ways rags, bones, and old pail—a litter of ...

Published: Sunday 24 May 1914
Newspaper: Reynolds's Newspaper
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 386 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

FLIES, MICE, RATS! You Don't Want Them; Why Breed Them?

... kindhearted women. And then those women crawl round their bit of gardens on their knees by the hour and sicken themselves picking slugs. Picking slugs is the birds' business in the slug season. Dont swat that fly! Stop and watch her clean herself after going ...

Published: Thursday 23 July 1925
Newspaper: Edinburgh Evening News
County: Midlothian, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 582 | Page: 3 | Tags: none