Ontario Community Newspapers

Monkton Times, 29 Dec 1921, p. 2

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Main Street months, ae The Milverton Sun Monkton pines THE SUNDAY SCHOOL WHAT CAUSES $0 | Rax BYERY THURSDAY MORNING an. The Sun Printing Office MU frida) ONT. Subseription rate 40a year, $2.00; six ‘agvertio ite withor si specific direction path ita ‘until forbid sya et Ps de mate ‘tice by nove Monday, MALCGUM ‘MacBETH. Publisher and Proprietor, Busi nessCards }; Medical, Drs. Tye & Nicklin Once: Puntye Dave Sronn, MAu.vaRToR Howre: 10 to.12 a.m., 2t0 4 p.m, Pick and 7 to 8 p.m, Eye, Ear, Nos Late assistant New York and Aural Institute, e and G tata, ti DR. F. J. Le FORSTER id Throat wee in “Wnedicine, University Ophthal. corefleld’s olden ‘Square Throat Hos- Eng. (Phone 267. a5 63 Waterloo St. S.. STRATFORD, sor Ppp. City Mal i one 993 } os a SEBBEN, DDS, LDS, STRATFORD Open ce from 7 ‘to 9 o'clock Solicitor for B. LISTOWER Mi. ont ™ Barristers, So's Wiadsor Block, - 1. WAWDING w 0, owe YON, w H.B. Morphy, K. G nk of Baniditon Listowel, \ r woop, Owens & Goodwin RD, ONT. 1 avopwim | Real estate eis hutienccont Notary Pubiic. NADY Public and sold. pmediate eale, of Nova Seotta | A. Shaler, < Notary Publig! Hope cana Tester of Marriage License w the County of Perth, Veterinary. — ay R. E. Beggs, V.S. is VETERINARY PHYSICIAN AND SUR IN duties from the people than Solo i done and thas to gall therm still glishmen. Mia sie liane cats hs eke oh ion,| ‘The story goes that at a public | Whips; a figure for a incannins and| meeting in London someone punned ONTARIO j despotic government. Sco W. 8. inthis instance, bu = | Cal MP... Hesretorted, in his y ts oF punishment. y poss pun Office: Barr’s old stand Beat «ecommodatio; cllera and oth Pie The Queens Hotel oS n for ebaiestrelal sea: ‘Two large Sample Rooms. @EO. ¥, PAULA, Prop., Milverton, One Milverton Neuse No. 478 heuer Monday evening on or before foll noon every jonth tn thel® hall in J.B, Weir shiiss brethren fie SS some 2M, Lewts, EB. Slegner, Silver aie sLostte No. 202, Meets every F 8 fall Sver Ba alg! ik Of Visiting brethren alwaya "welcome r, We 2 am Bice vin. mee at 7. Hay oth, ~Secy. 3 i in thelr inmerman, ReerSecy L. O.. L. No. 45, Milverton esday on or Meets every Wed: dn fore fou moon in their ie Bt Petric’s tore, Visiting brethern always welcome, | |Selomon Ade /. Coxon, Master. be. hall above ttridge, _Sergtaty, Jerobo anna} ‘Prices, ordering. & oe ) a Y We are agents for the Z Appleford Counter Check Book Co. This firm turns out 2 only high-grade work at very fedsonabls See our samples and get our prices before ™ Sun Office JANUARY 1ST ¥ The Revolt of Jeroboam, 1 Kings 12: 12-17,26-30. Golden Text—Ex. 20: : 4, 5 Hime—About BC. 987. Israelite would Nee of representing e—Shechem, Beth el and Dan. is own son as bull or calf. much less .. The golden es were prob- ee hich were used in i a nati his’ mas idolatrous Abnnse of the Canaan- Teadership aml through fear of th ee and were appropriated by Jero- enemy, the Philistines. Solo for the worship of Jehovah, In map cee in holding them to-! cetting them le was attempting the thoroughness of his'to make the worship at his chosen erraniration ret by the despotic na- shrines s0 aterective that the people of ogee But ne ould not want to go to paces oe: to allies conseious of! sacrifice. theft tribal I aletiouane sen ot ther national unity, and the more natural them was not union in rae Dut ‘separation into tribal di- V. 29: It is too much; an appeal to indolence. Behold thy gods. Hava atte buted the deliverance fro these pareee dare nee isions. The first show 0: anything was bu; pon the con- or unpopularity in the ki ‘ingship read | foumenase of Israel it was that Je- he the signal for revolt amon; wah had delivered out of and this came witl the accession ‘noe This Jorobe inciting of Solomon's: son the people to apostasy from Jehovah. I. The People’s teenie 12.45, | Bethel; f ly-a Gamnanite shrine, 41: 26-40, | but: her Y. 12. Jeroboam. See ch. 1 ‘th the king’s cl “He attracted the attention of Solo.|the northern kingdom. Dan; another mon, who promoted him to the posi.|@ncient heathen shrine near the of overseer of the forced Iabor|Sources of the Jordan at the base of the country of Ephraim. According | Mount on. In choosing these jo on intimetion in the Greek version, | (V0 shrines, which were within easy he fortified his native place of Zereda,|f o moetlien ‘tribes, iJero: tote eo Moped to tore tie pilgrimages nae irom Jerusalem 0--, *Thts “ah g became la ath: re 3 5 From being merely ornaments the arObliged to flee ie Kerpe’ it a | calves “became idols, It should: he Smith). From Egypt he watched de-|Temember at i Jerusalem opments in Israel, and peroel 06 temple there were oxen as ornaments he accessi. 0: but they were never worshipped, ch. might offer the chance of peniine alt? 25 revolt to his own advantage, he hu: pplication. fed back to Palestine. All the Deon The Teseon seh light on that is, Tepresentatiy the tribes causes af the social and etipe te un- e to Sbetien « centralj rest of our idee porvt, ae copter ah the’ new [io throw all the blame on the emp they “reco; pee ne hip. d-“his. ‘lating -to| Not ¢ ac cepting as pete ooo Wh spe the attitude D: dyna: ereditary Fight. of they to ‘rule, ust re-! of the despotic type! di ses ficulties is the ne ew ich. Solomon” had] spir of brotherhood in the hearts 0 Ba (Ses'vek) “Wex| all-the peenle snot the: dowpance-F ad nded th 0} one gy or think over their demand | tages Arawsy | 8 Ne ith ¢ > pl 4 Jeroboam: 14 ounsel of the young) died fas n, appreciate ihe stanly. Reh: ap the z ns iss d hac eh sown by [sho oug Boca ‘sho sae be | severe "ith tien from har- They ed that a people w es of neg! my. aves of their monarch, UIs: v4 oe aX oken, con- \fused, because of her own Bast Sow \F the seeds of suspicion, red and “ jealo build up ensive arma- ‘ Made paarrike ments, and teach eh people that ‘he y Kc {nn as. the here proposed to exact more \t i Solomon had some admirable he the seed of Li a bu ig a men's coun- qu vho ‘in, nongst tt evenie came to a i doy oke here refers to every other nation is Bioting against aad forced labor ib you, and explosion, eRe S eRe eons taxatio Heomatie nd Jokes on Names of Famous hi The “scorpion” g bag of leather stuffed with be provided le had been | In fact, he sai to anyone | Cain a ‘| Made upon hi he would give ie shillings lightening the ‘op- es pgs make a new one. } going to make it still Sir Wilfrid La nite platform, famvediatels Fi the Lord. (Rev. ed the impossible by crying out: | Don't you be in a hurry, Caine!” Some famous jokes haye taken the form of puns on names. Good Queen Bess, who liked to pion her wit f was me w ted with Gots this direction, once rallied her cour- provi anges His word; (Rey. | tier, Lord Burst about the Earl of Ver.) fo opal iy the prophet Ae te my ch, 11: 30-39, Lord of Bur Jelgh, ee less Ii Israel’s Revolt, 16-17. stir than my lord of Li 2 V, 16. What portion, eb: “ ee when he saw Mrs. Grote, f the prtorians not obliged t house (of David. did not recognize the hereditary 1 of David's suce them since David himself. belonged to the tribe of Judah. To “Disperse ‘back to. your ne ‘val, of nomadic days, when Tergel dwelt’ in. tents Na velie oa Cor your authority to your own trike of Judah, enter the ro bonnet, Canon of St Paul's 8, Now I know Bei phone Ne pered t rien ue Seabee stmas * ‘ans, the f Welsh ‘ossing 0 a un- non a summer d met a friend, '. Herring, who saluted him: by say- “Who would have thought of Christmas in the middle of a who would have ou: ce Judah. The tribe ‘to whien dria David, ‘belonged al would naturally ‘e- Sete main loyal to h cessors. Hence- ‘Christmas aoe, forth there were the two kingdoms, _ ROBES snd. hater te hat of Israel in the north, and that a mountain of cee: in the south. Thomas Hood the poet, was the pees sees :: 26-30. prince of English punsters and found pag it "To offer matsiacea, ete. (Rev own name a fruitful subject of his v.) During the reigns of David an eing shown a portrait 1 eoph ad fe rmed the|himself very unlike Aes (es ee “alt a was cua ctl continged it might shee ar charity to the undertaker, who waned 80 he to keep the people at| “turn a lively Hoo home by improving their local shrines One day at Babar rakes oe Saale if V. 28. Calves of wold; wooden im-|force was dining ages over! ‘he calf|some farmers. ae was ae Nanay (proper): to the elf “off his side p mind of the people because its gnified wed, “Try dey's strong! ball in} food, my lord." ‘The Bishop 1 ti ide t See ood, my lor he ishop imm ca late- the wilderness. and cured the people eae iubwegdircouen to worship it. (See E: Ya 0) lath Us tet SRV REN ree fs ae signature cf the Bishop ot Oxfor SHADGW TES Victims of puns rik resented this playing with their name. Thus, Joseph [Sees at one time clerk to the Liter- ae Funa, and afterwards editor at 8 paper, often had pu eee on “nls name... 'To he ie eee apie Tie Metdouia et see the dri A hee narod Little—a tall nian, wi by the once pressing the cate: ot lis “cllwebain tthe course, of litigation. The opposing solicitor was, curiously enoygh,a.man named Big- gar, who, becoming “somewhat Heatly, turned to the Court, and exclaim “I may not be taller than Little, but I'm Bigg mc Me L Looks Into the Eye" DH te almost B'po impomaitiet fo mak ‘work 1s done by. eooy thereby Aelia fect fect ght at its so Women & hel T Tree Ph Planting. Weak Muscles eb yiaceon aadathaa Goeed he women of the Prairie Provinces Tide “enetpellaniy tian up the sub. es in many ca‘ ject of tree planting, which Liana econ wandidegeter: Crhtteny -Reeneateiy ehemiincd ie een? anking questions, SATISFACTION GUARANTEED} P.H. BASTENDORFF “Eyesight peste’: MILVERTON, ~- land this side appeals especially to the home-makers attains its maximum . maar at Che ee of ee years. ONTARIO ex. y.| At dealers or sent postpaid by Fruit- id| one of its greatest advantages, MUCH SIEKNESS | “Constipation Responsible for $0% of Disease “FRUIT-A-TIVES” Corrects It It is generally See among the medical /p: ion that Consti- pation ‘or taifone Action of The Bowels, produces nore ponsible for atleast 90% ofthe disease in the world today—hecause Consti- pation is responsible for the Indiges- tionand Dyspepsia—theneryoiisness, Insompia and Rheumatism—the E zema and other skin troubles~the ae = Backaches. — Why is As you a5 it is the duty of the bowels to carry off the waste matter in the system. If the bowel muscles are weak or the liver inaetive, then this waste matter remains in the hody and poisons the blood. Asa result, every organ in the body is poisoned by this waste. “Fruitetices” has been wonderfully Constipation, even though the trouble has ‘been chronic for ten, fifteen and twenty years. Thousands of grateful users proclaim. ‘“Fruit-a-tives” the greatest remedy for Constipation that the world verknown, 0c a box; 6 for $2.50, trial size 25, has a-tives Limited, Ottawa, Ont, CANADA A COUNTRY OF MANY CLIMATES | WINTER IS ASSET RATE ER THAN LIABILITY. Roses on Vancouver Jeland at | Christmas While Quebec En- joys nee Bonspiel. Winter tir advantages 8 has joys and | The pe | nis statement | Alsjown. with that it is too cold; ay - and unhealthy; that it coal and clothing ills, Janee of serious illnesses and the anterruption of traffic and general complains agreeable duces. heavy bu Canada is a ea of one, but of many climates,, with roses ee ing at Chris fume ca yan Isla hile Winnipeg, Aeneas Quebec are: getting ready lor their nual curling -bonspiel. As a matter of fact, the climate of Canada es one who -will take mG eae dreaaee ata rae of t will ob- that Canada ee in the. same Tatitude as the virile white race: Heme, and there ean be no que: hat the climate of the northern tem- porte series is more favorable to the pment vt healthy r: than are tke more southern climates. Vital statistics bear this out. Nowhere in the world will a. health class of n be found Des in Canada, and tate of heal ren is aps the best ind! ication of the a the ¢ ais dea e per 1,000, for example, i james than thet: of dt gland, Germany, Hungary, Spain, Sweden, United States, Chili, etc. it were not for Canada’s climate, we would not be producing the finest | milling wheat in the world; the primest of beef cattle; the growing output of timber and furs and the fine, vigorous race of young men and wo-| men that 80 cheerfully demonstrate, in the recent gre atl its ability to tant Solicitor, in 910, endure and accor eral Solicitor, in. 1914 Lage sienaten dees with Widit gr0y hief Counvel and Vice- Pre ing season, put the quality in “ Ho. succeeded Lo Northern”; bracing cold weatho hessy ag President of the C Poue scant trim um eaannts on | 018, “Mx, Beatty. takes a great, in- horses and cattle; snow solves the | Te ater reg lumberman’s and fur trapper’s trans: | A Hat Sterc. ee driver, pista ores cwhile to the lover| 5. 435 vage Gs enMIe ane poeee ERG o winter time 98 a Sel ine’ the voyage betwe ula and son torbe anticipated the island of Hawaii, Mr, Homer Croy, Se ae a ieee as ae tells about his adventure. in Me Lane } leaned too far over the ral, iikarenoyeinto tislewinter prep: 0 snake out logs; and hunters look to the strings eke snowshoes; sleds and toboggans brought from their summer seat te places.-and_ enthusiastically cor ed; ski-ers d mpS as they usher in winter with an initial run; and hockey players: get eye x at) for the strenuous gam the C: Gerais “Falcons” into na pred er place at the /Antwerp Olym- pic cHme uate ne ts of 1919. The ramparts—Duiter! at old Quebec, appearance lit int days cf Wolfe and oer within a radius of 150 mous hostelry “Ghateur ete nac," skating, curling, ski-jumping, ae to- bogeaning hold sway. A kalet f colors and costumes hes the ainsi touch to an infectious of who now it not—who annually suddering to Flora, “california or | Bermuda, whos e yet lacks a taste of Canadian water, will con- til be among ritics, but Keates having tried it, they “ind it good ie if me bacl They realize, 48"have others: before jy aoe Canadian winters may well to the long list of ie coun- tye mat resources, and that Can ais rs are undoubtediy nie, eee capital letters, ——_o___ Some people learn mostly through study—others ny, through their “mistakes, sie | ese driver, street and aw: before a could, E,W. ort “the Gana ona Western dia one 3 Sir Augustus Nanton, C, Shes Bes ian of Montreal ector, math is pees, it a, domed the pasty. at W n= Pacific Ra: ip: of aeaperuon over the Directo) . W, Beatty, K.C., E. President C.P,R. President) ailway, is Seftor Sir nipe g, anoth- oe K est in Canadian education, and in branch of the business there, In [1898 he became president of the. Ys| Winnipeg Board of Trade, Later he Sir Saakek Holt. Senator F, L, Beique, ~ was’al a) ed president of the WwW. in! ny public movements, such League. nF nipeg. 0r: 1 The travels as far West as been the promoter of many commer- Victoria On the trip they are be- cial enterpris ‘ ng euineiained at Gorltes large een- ave ‘better’ ; of glim Se of their prograinm est. | He. resid ghows that sy ones First, where he is sen’ eitidahiedae ieee Evrtha eh: firm of Osler, Hammond and ficers of the C.P.R. ‘at Winnipeg; | Peti = ae a Si" Angas. +t ve + ess: 8 conn: Bie: Raat none ticbar TeBINGG NOD Lecce Breen eeRURE the Bar in the district of Mont-|member Winnipeg Teawine® ae aid real, Senator Béique has been: en- eat aged as counsel in many celebrated acTier, who is now Vice-) M " ases. esident of the lines e: Chow i Sir Herbert Samuel Holt was born] Arthur, like his former chief, David) ed, after which the train 4s conveyed| i Dublin, Ireland, in 1895, a younger |MeNicoll, was born in Scotland. Hel by barge over Kootenay Lake t Robert Grattan “Healt, came to Canada when a young man| ‘son; Penticton in. athe: Okenngai one d entered the service of the C.P.R, Valley: is seached paraets ing’s Coun-|as stenographer in the e tho Kettle Valley Railway; and afte t Trinity Col-|partment in 188’ ming: assis: ‘a stay there of three hours the train nat train to the ce Care ht Seen ; ? s civil e 88 Ray She manhood he came to Can- (1801, to 1896 Me waa inthe Car Seoul jada, and engaged in railway y was not jong: eget he became Ro con- associated with J in build: iz 8 rail sin On- Kent, when as tario ere subs' tly, near. sistant to the dent, In’ p e Ca Pacific |Dece 12, he? was appointed 5 elnter Me Holt feord |General Ma nager, Wastern Lines, ki icago and fo the Cana-|and in 1918 she. be vie & “lala Nomth weet dent, on S. Holt, James Ros 2 Coleman, the ©. P, R. Vice- hen proceeds by way of Edmonton, and D. D. Prosi Bont et hes west Port and Saskatoon, where the Canadian {a ¢ thar, has had a remarkably rapid Club entertains the party at a lunch- uch’ a “responsible “Pualtions eon on Monday, the 26th Sep’ Seabee earned it, for he is kn Dow n d. Wentworth Heatly ths Short| eles as a man of e. ident of: the Canadiar fie Montre Born at Carle born at Thorold, Ontario, P) Mr; He moved to Toronto wit! long tn when he was ten years guiding: light in He studied in Toront 1 Rnd |at Hort Willtemn School, Upper re one. Ne ihe. most rapidly, he was pe ated Superin« Harbord Street Collegiate | successful Ress institutions in| ‘endent at Nels in 100tscand tu e Hall, he|America. He is one Srivesnionsera! ndent_ of University of Toronto. Graduating [of development 4s from the University he R study law with the fitm of tice narthy at Toronto in_ 1s Mr. ah ie be eae entered | | | Toate Xte | After arriving at the island he elimb- ors we bk wildly z a to the curbi mB the propelet or, ecling, ion Winnipeg Th General Superinte nd in 1915 A ager, Western ed into a Rectal and told: the eed 0. nd aS replied. the ine ee to Ah me Ko “I want a hat, not a ea Mr dw “I want it-for to pointing to his bare head, “y es, for sure, allvright. ae Mr. a SS With that the eab whirled down the jay to the other side oj the town, while the taxi bill was mer- rily running up. This time it stopped barber shop. eae a pes t Bit anything taken oft nt something put on who was now vi) Croy, T un vgn elica the onary, with a Th ey went clattering just as far to the other side. of and drew up as an afterthought spare carried a line of hats. a twice the price of a hat o buy it, but this didnot Paes re ee before a comer, and} ots finally ‘nt The far gide of thestown drew | ie : nent i In thoewindow ott eit) ae ee hem, beds te r the ae La ihe pant street, en whieh | & i e dri Interest in Fora Tree ton various plans for repls aia the crests of ‘ound a solution in letting the. squirs tacts ‘by thelr ae pit who, aft vers, lanting. constantly the Canadi: 0 ertheless ae that the are lie is waking a to the need cf doing © something to. reforest denuded ate where the soil is not agi going the press setting this. continent. e have Dluejays reforest. cut-over secreting nuts | r in securing 1 tion ts" public opinion, and from the the.ground, where | Amount of discussion now gcing on tt a min oF birds have is-evident that that Power is heingven- will bogia | ated tn. this»work, itious scheme Te Al ax biear 3 the @ of twenty herigaart Quill pens were fused 563 A. os king mo to /PeYS In a soc ANS the nee of |stcel pens were invented by ot demand-| Which are (plelged::to ng Francis proved by Gillot, | trees per ye It is naive derstand all |] pay y te | THE SUCCESSFUL | || MAN TO-DAY— 0. Is the one who gives careful attention to his clothes. To him his business suit is of as much Consequence as the clothes he wears for social ean cents. ee the importance of eing well dressed at all times. He requires “QUALIFY” besides style, finish and ay falloring: g. Try us for your next suit, DUFFIELD, THE Te ALOR, MONKTON

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