Ontario Community Newspapers

Monkton Times, 24 Nov 1921, p. 2

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orable Milt isn't as straight as. the heat man who eyer went into politics.” went. rpplitics, aravied McAllister’ with provoking gr! "Who ‘ever did his duty in, public life and became the victim of hide- °: e school played both hoakey and hockey together. Why, T know him Jinside and out tell aa Theis es straight as a mee: “Your simile is arenas Ben, che straightest string can be tied in “T see by this morning's papers th Rives has bee ased from the “Good conduct ia got him out three Every Man For Himself By HOPKINS MOORHOUSE (Copyright by Musson Company) years ahead o: ae His sentence was fifteen, wasn’t i Wade nodded, turned from his tilt with MeAlls ister. “What have you found out that the US EEL had a new presi- me to be Tamscr hog begun as a poor ae ent, boy, st veshiog upward over untold) ed irectors held the retiring | good. persting, Miss der, ish he Sle that the} McAl ‘ len ae a space on aie ‘rable feet ause it rot and iindly “Old Nat” ned deeb give bublity to fous victim to misplaced confidence.) cions, or to attem: mat n. of the Nickleby faction. scot be vat te, “sifength of iis oe rer who ow and possibility that e having any’ thing to “do wih ne teh 5, Tur rae concern "into the “itch lobe! fren os = gutter pres apace daa aa Hight, and each determined to = s 2, in the brightly. nhighted Recorder bu shouklers ks ae of the ex- ee rt him hed been howl grails ae ore akias| Eve 4 to the preoortins of great cae rscnal| need of adding to the family e ee Lawson capital | had Sie into: the an a a Brad. gan sealloalal the time. Her gations n eonnection| pbiechians c the plan had 2 =i york a be eral aptitude for i rejuvenated the Society in the hans of the secretary ees into one of the’ at the Annual meeting i in ication i ar became ambiti d h seale and when the meeting was over Aen es Fa = 3725. S38 ‘She arived pene from a Tecital at -| you a marked co} a “Bluff! Listen to him, Nat!” er;| “I’m not in ue h| Wade.” McAlli jaw was set as! them _jeenaing the he patted the edge. of the table for| ae i imself, clearing vy was carrying, and from beneath m | shagay brows es railroad president’s shrewd eyes carried a glint of amuse. ment at the have committed himself to statemen t (To be continued The Father of Shipping. oe a London coffee-house keeper, Lioy @ headquarters of worl "shipping insurance, derives its ame. Heer (ie edt of tile xeven Gunite century fae interested in shipping matters were accustomed to meet at Sea core iouse Ih awe ‘This was kept by a man named Hdwat Lioyd, who subsequently removed to the corner of Abchurch Lane and Lom- bard Stree In 1696 Lloyd started a newspaper, ; | Which gave a list of ships arrivals and sailings. The newspaper, which called Eegamecint adaskedell aut ~ ade published an article ques- a decision in the House of = f | Lor oa: Wdward Lloyd was censured and his r| paper was suppressed. It was not un- til thirty see, Tater that he was al- lowed to re- a List” a: appeared regular- | abe monopoly of marine | for Jong, ‘snd in 1720 sere: [lowed ¢ two other companies to be one hundred years later there was a otis inquiry into the ata that it should retain {ts privi- ley "Ten years later, however, an Act was es by which marine insur- ‘wh open, and since that ut ine many other companies have been established, 1 eases for membership at ya 10 deposit such Sane for their ilabtlities as may be e| This security at the halt ihe amounts to over $20,000,000, e is a Lioyd’s agent at every a|“Captains’ Register” is Hialdinteea: which gives the record of every Inquiry Office, ve cpg World’s Wonder Clock. For twelve years a Frenchman has been at work on a clock which {s one of the most marvellous pieces of me- nism in the iz clock the uae hour chimes Suet Bouts Each ae 1 Hlength of time, ous to the Jati- up in this Interprovincial manoeuv-| Make considerable amends for its loss. of J. Cuthbert ring. Watch me prove it, Tl send) copy of the paper.” sas Seat e habit of bluffing,! moon, high in the heavens, flooded the he! ihe heavens,” and “ "| m the southern e|A moment more and McAllister might re jestic zone of “star dust” whi o Ww ablish it. Since then | as if they | Millcy in| house were net permitted to enjoy | The freguénters ‘of Lloyd's. ootiee-| W. of illumination. 7! al ly remote that our one universe of = | stars would appear r insurance | Yet their brilliance is such t near the hi tropics. th Jot have been ‘taken by Geach for monopoly enjoyed by. Lioyd’s and | )*7° Deen mistaken the: another kind which might help to miti- gate the gloom of the long night. These, however, are in our atmos- lphere, perhaps thirty or forty miles high. cal origin, and are brighter at some thete region of the hi ‘sie illumine ee darkness is Sor tai e aprenee them: altogether disappointed eh re disyiny. oe this counterpart of our “merry dancers,” as it is variously ve The aui varies in brilliance in the same way | ish master-mariner, and there is also| °° ek the electrical pees of the higher regions of the atm activity on the sun, play is often m« sun is c coincide with Shackleton’s sojourn in the Antaretie. the auroral Neue have a reddish or gre: effect of this ht on mi frozen. the months and the signs of Zodiac. grand in the extreme, STEERING SOUTH BY STARLIGHT the| ANTARCTIC WINTER NOT : ENTIRELY DARK AND DREARY. : The Gallant “Quest” Will be |* Aided by Lights We Never See in This Latitude. Shackleton and his brave compani- ons may not after all, experience such a dark and dreary winter as most peo- Although the sun's atene will be withdrawn for a greater or lesser tude in which the explorers are lo- ed, the brilliance the moonlight, for, one thing, should eee old chief, the late Cap- example, tells us how midwhiter (ane 22rd) “the full ; Snow with its white, pure light,” whilst “overhead. a my roa ee irradiated pale shafts of | the aurora aus! aca er and waned he moon, Captain Scott further re- mate 5 ereatly neravad the Disovery ex- lon by being full when at its most ee decilination, Starlight should be another import- ant means of relieving the darkness of the Antaretic night to the Shackle- perhaps not widely y large majority ff the most brilliant ve are either in iS Southern Hemisphere or visible from the Antartic regions. Nature’s Lamp-light. The three brightest—Sirius (the Dog Star), Canopus, and Alpha Cen- tauri—are all south of the Equator; indeed, the two last cata are SO: far south that they never appear above our Korfson at all ‘The Star 1s, of course, a familiar object to everybody in our latitudes during the winter months, No small amount of ittumination, too, should be derived from Sie ans ii gird. les the entire firmament, and a is most generally known in a country by the name of the Milk Its brilliance is certainly very mark- with us, but in the Sos ge re- it shines with a nt, ate patches which 1 had broken loose from 10% the should be another source ‘hey are so immense- rictet from to same dista orizon in the ti ff prairie or forest fire. minous clouds of “Merry Dance Files oe are Se ate ed to Ree of ri- ssa than at others. However, they re quite capable of ces a glow to To what extent the aurora agit sie sci exacts Tee aurora boreolis or or Pe aes de to u: rora ustralis it seems to me, oes our aurora boeralis, ‘This aviation 1s regulated, oe by When, for eee ae is unusual , the auroral dis- ore brilliant than when mpliet ot gene degree of intensity witnessed by series ae tee capsid and, likely ag ve sometimes he wastes of the ahatetle should be ame. ei name of O'Dowd and it al variations are ene eek “evelon Lamb come into bei f t of the Dudhda, and a names as Heth . erington, De ’eauharnais or Van xing} to but about the eleventh century. potions but were fas] Five hundred years before this the chieftain of the Clan O'Dowd stood high in the councils of the Irish kings and high-kings. i the organization of the clan took place under the The O’Dowds were one of erous clans which were in the first | than pl which together with the O’Neilis fur-| branch of the family, it is truly a r. Leacock also ree a a Soar: et meetin Negeri ahs oS nished a very large number of the suc-| given name. It is outa, but not ek itt very bad mi 1, in| And fe straight “lite “was the’ great: cession of “High-Kings” who ruled the | of the oR es era, for gies introducing him to the Annee ai s ancient Irish cfvilization trom about ing is “lamb-bright” or tale Jami “T can assure Mr— ies the shortest distance there, shee 1700 B.C. until it finally went to pi Said not the type of name to ‘ —er—the _lectu: Cecor Se under the terrifi taught of the Anglo-Normans, Surnames and Their Origin is Source—A given name. Yes, in a great number of instances. shion upon a anes were significant of parent- leadership of the chieftain] trom Flander: “Dubhda,” whose given name had | Middle Ages trade and communication nald.” | between these countries was close. ic and persistent oe He How did such a ee name as a sheep? Possibly, in some in-| wi ‘an: Rens- ene Through the inn or shop | his lectui selaer “have-nothing on it” from the | sign, as “At the Sign of _| viewpoint either of antiquity or im- ie Lamb?” ean mbert was this name. 8, for all through the a oes many people will be poisoned to Ye overcome by the: deadly carbon saphin a. svc motor. should see that the garag entilated before zen nating oe “ease to run for any length of time. This advice is'urgently offered by the United States Public Health Service, which has been making a special study cubic feet of exhaust gas per minute, and that 6 per cent. of “it was carbon 1onoxide. red matter of the blogd, contains iron, and owes to that metal its power to take RU oArERR: from the air breathed into the lungs. There is enough hemoglo- bin inthe body of an average man to hold tea pints of oxygen. But every molecule of carbon monoxide taken {nto the lungs and absorbed by the blood replaces a molecule of oxy- oxide 300 times as strongly as it does ane eS Jase the victim is overe Experiments made by the U.S. Pub- lic Health Service showed that three parts of the gas in 10,000 of air pro- duced no perceptible effect. Six parts caused discomfort. Nine parts in- duced headache and nausea. Fifteen parts or more meant Se of death. Ita car, Bive off only monoxide in a slcsea room of the size above mentioned, the would heocnis, dangerous to life in three minutes. Vhe bon SOs: don’t Fresh air and es of it is what he| needs. If he is not too 0: xygen he tales into his lungs will ae out the poison gas in an hour or a is human to exaggerate the charm dividual lives, More and mo: 3 get older, memory turns * our child. hoo and youth, fixes on the bright arly the rest and t think ris life was ten ty sports sy the dainty mad diversions | that really made existence seem worth ile Tn this, as in eve rything, humanity o general is but the individual writ Be. e look Face and say, Oh, se have our problems fi contend with, For them life was simple and easy and serene. Women had virtues. Men did not hurry and did necessaries in honest and Toduatrious content. Day by day mankind g 3 | 8 more corrupt and dissatisfied, an: It is one of the first duties of a man to fight that tendeng: the mash wbstle in his own personal or stré rane rmeerasiatiy: instead of sen- timentalizing about and made the same mistakes that we are meeting judge it iy high lights and pleasant toi slow, tortuous, uncertain march of pr become cony! vines (Bey a wire joing the ralls at this une. tion. A small box of electrical ating and desperate the up’ io sper bu a fon women raise any to atiow sheet the resent is as good as th LAMB D good as the pa: nw be Those Cheery Gisiecieus The other evening Mr. Stephen Lea- cock, the world-famous humorist, o} ,Turouh the S onbaaes ot a man | Montre ty certain chairmen he had met a fete, those present knew the if ures was a complete | There ae roadd that pass through group were form-| failure, so they were trying a new ex- ndor ed with no idea of any zoological con-| periment—they were seated what they ased in regular | could do with cheay ee one that Sappenet in To: It was the | second time. out the year 650 A.D. that!name borne by the patron saint of name borne by some Be here to-night. rer— osen by the warloving pagan Teu-|evening, that his name hae been a i ee | household word for years,’ ay t Ron Rute Enns in Closed Garage. During the approaching winter quite exhaust from their own auto- Tiobile. They will run ents ot this kind are to be with experiments on twenty-five The “hemoglobin, d coloring ane moglobin attracts carbon m ‘ygen. Thus the aoe on kis i ae cro the oxygen ut of the blood, and ie a searkably while warming u cubie foot of carbon ° atmosphere en a person is overcome by car- send for a pul- Get him into the open air. SERN Salas Past and Present. f the past. We all ts, the ee tel eta hours, Bsa “Why ig back the friends and the| When troubles thicken, and eople aia nist all the household worry, but gained the simple imes worse and worse Must still succeed the forme: y to- overestimate a neral. Study the past ab- will t it met the same diMeulties unquestioning aogae Ta ing in old age. Fa hours, hard toil, small returns, but hoateh and Ns nights and. safe fireplace he but I can t terrent. I can oi ream’ sions of frienis ba the mellow side a steam ae ines oe light watt until cannany comes to start the bls © you will find ne chill taken out of the seed oe frost Seid the autumn |, will bri ing aber rp to aid in the mastic tion of food taken into the mouth. Then, by their proper bahar th id appearance they lend beauty to dif the f hey Shapbencin te land tornation af sounds ne} tooth from the end of the t. Sound we pescanchat abou age of six years. wil er plaster turn into es what ought to be the throbbing heart of the home. The wide chimneys are stove! In the cities ae and country places of ter is being torn fee sabe built and wood bought by the r the new fireplace that has become oa ee he fireplace, which is friond: ar mies al comforter hooed -by many women because it yin with it some dust. But was doctor, is “ate attendant ardsiip? Children bring -privations; sacrifices, Wakotul nights and. tiring days, with a re of deepest joy,| bring long And Yes, some ae of : no other de- seaouiasiia tie ‘ob- en worked out before it, the dreams the joumeys “taken, the vi ‘ed ones go oy ea is siteten told before its onfi given with yes fixed on the. ee ae and _ room lighted by their glow. | Picture in individual than ner te a a eeth. = Germs develop, grow and multiply in the mouth on 1 ae decaying for teeth ork to do Stor which they of forest and sea, and breath of pine come to us with the whiff of burning’ 4, vood, So, n fri old andir and tongs a hickory fore-stick and don’t as an asset, =e vening Preser The primal pu ing the Teeth. of ie teeth Mortars fcundes: Every tooth is by hard, called stay Tai cone of | "the| rves See ortar the] are © worth more to th hid Gen gold cr money; for they hel The most. important Se in a kta is the c: fiaitis mouth are the six-y mola TS, called because they make their ap- Ue cheeks the teeth ere the means ae which the. ager ann it is this or that helps: farm who are fortunate) to ke enough to met inherited old fire -| places, open them up. Hunt: up vy and Poth . ood to fie guras and g them. Bri ine in an apple-tree stum: y t the boys and girls come |, inouth and aie it with the teeth jhome ere school, and for the ee ups shen they come in from the co U: sat the toner thi ech th wind’s roar] jt Becomes Tani Wi eae ales no ianaer “head, potatoes," vege |tor met, ready *t6. pea iiss also assist the organs| | They a are four in number, two in the ae: particule oy upper acd two in the lower jaw; a ords, can ea cognized, as they ae tech ifarthost back in the eek e in behind the first or baby ese taken for baby shoul they appear and. should be ly afterward, as they susceptible to decay. ES watched carefn are Should ac avity | have it filed a 2. well, ay health is better ie es as the econ and loss of this cause of loss of health to bout this age or tists loss of the six-year molars causes ravest damage to teeth i by cae Pa ate ages of h aly Putte “this period. "Tk thi vad growing or undergoing developme ni t acqui rdi red the hi ue and hav ant goes that tl Be will ] ould be s and Bale Sing Lag pero 4 th n building #l that lees ee pi Hees eae a-| of life. mouth and s have east Ke do in kee; orthing worth while that did The ten, after ead ing ne retiring time, ard foo gives th ivary glands e stomach to stimulate ae Baa w liquid Bees i stomach to digest it. lected on this ac- be examined pear, be sure to by the dentist, 8 agree that the and making. Do la Inventor’s Rai Strange tricks as mavetians have | he perpetuated by an Australian. But al- “ahaa though it seems like a trick, it 1s real- ly a’ great invention, For a long time Mr. Angus has been | experimenting with steam engines, and 2 last he has pica iy pro. mt au ucing the “fool-proof” Such | 088h the liability to coe fe t doe: from blighting the Dresent, ‘ut from | nabling us to understand it, Oniy |¥°M ntion. The engine is stopped a by appreciating how men have suf-| ™ fered and struggled can 1 We get light te n the wisest way to n ies and struggle of our own time. paz by shire consideration of tte bu et the suffer- the’pest can w steps of humanity in ti & e 3 ES howevi S honest men eons: | ter, but to Aste Haake tow of be eS ate Dowde, ©’Dowda, | Variations—Lambden, pela Lamp- Heving in 1 Dood kyn, Lambert, Lambert: i pail Oriani Racial Origin—English. — al, told some of his peau) Tiers: in introducing him, ued Mr. Lea ‘I don’t. think ‘aid He that, because in ihn denen to the driver, the a r lec 0 and vad prevents the brakes from go ing cn and steam being shut off, Di- ake steam is shut off, bis sympathy must be broken it tag cabo te sa) ates a broken in any w. The system ee Sweden and is to. o in Great Britain "almos t immodiately, And w es Mere sr pps ead, ola tau ple man knew time, We yearn ofttimes for new sae For a short cut o'er. the wa: T mentioned it to pe chairman, | And Syl as weep when ae are ae the latter replied a given name, and in many in-|you need be afr: lace septs or divisions of the still! stances it ig given to children to-day | the people who heard you before won't more ancient clan of the O’Connors, | because it is a suri Our sae of life to-day, Yet since the first man travelled, « Switzerland is ‘ways to save ‘importing led, error is rendered Banibl aly Electricity is the secret of this i cally “ ie anothe ne impocal ree d, nple eons attached to the ove the rail do} on the track All outside the boiler, and a com age under the hand of the driver, 1 sympathy between engine 88 ectly that sympathy is broken the are applied ek and section Of ae or if the | stalled in Ried active ust The Straight Road. that eem sublime, that lead o'er vale Yet since the first man travelled years With his laughter or his. care, ‘The straight road was the great oe It’s the shortest distance there. “Fool-Proof” | :—____ it | [oxeckers—sy Heck ee ae The sorutes, of problem No. 8, pub- ek, is as follows Solution of this position will appear t week, Black Ah showers of tiny frogs a s es are not unknown, re aware that at veel bed eee the old See Mee experi. peculiarities as a | even many pc from “the Seta. ‘Bed i eruptions isa ‘boon: known to remain aspen 8 on in the Such phenomena as “frog showers” showers” are due to strong _ currents, such as local — and “fish ascending air whintwiade,, which m the ground and— piere Maes the force of gravity brings _ Seu eae Britain and Slavery. rom 1840 to 1848 British war captured 625 slave ships ai re- les cay $9,088 slaves, who were set at ———2-—__ ment is sails of the great. bert itatles her rail-| est econ in See ee mn Rains: ae “milk rain?" se are caused by such peeled bea. as noe plant-pollen, flnely-divided suk In 1903 there wag a downfall cf “blood rain” in England, and this, on examination, was shown i Burs fies en fe mpregnated with miner- al carried by airdritts in Voleanic air for carry these Nght through the atmos- 5 en-of- ~ .

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