Monkton Times, 2 Mar 1922, p. 2

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TIRE REPAIR MEN WANTED | = , About the House one live cen e Bane ee She Did Not Sell the Farm. Gi ee and reading in the ev very year hundreds of women with ing.” Mrs. Mornis ae sie sodenly find pene fac-| Plays e piano, Eiizabeth hout ae ‘chssen com. we also have good recor = music. tee Fannie 3 y fishing and bathing in Rock snecessful Pia ae a big} Creek vith @ party-of neighbors. Ail t, four Yeo 26: found} of us Tove Nature end especially the ree'f in ‘this al icament study of ‘birds and flowers.” efore the ¢: Ae a her ; husband, ire! even- NEVER COOK UP COLD MEAT WITHOUT IT oe =n Man For H ‘aacelt By HOPKINS MOORHOUSE Boiled Puddings. The famous suet pudding of ae land is rather a simple dessert, wm} make it, hap Sais oie suet. Add a pound. cf flour sifted nig porl (Copyright by Musson Company) lesa ‘oy those cod-natured a of lite aa any or ite wicu the nite Mrs. Morris hed had n yee os CHAPTER XVI. (Cont’d.) ar ee a of # n “ pr Jk. at ne"! tie Peaen oe ig stale tour about Fal ie was da. Boe ts subst anti by those i busines. we ae na sleeve ait the the way, through,” continued They come. ow Se Se ton eatieg at hour is a the rid she make a Mis i fold you he age ele and anh cee! whoop mete! Preiee hsieceta wth sane ee ie ee childiren. ial en sgh, ia found eee ed oe Louies hte ate ee hunger for goncime ment, chatting and A first she seats. a selling ie ten lying in wait for him at the Jes- maebiog | in their enjeument Then sl d that sup Grill which Stites would have to! ‘Thorlakson beamed, Tt was the ou eo eee ea ass. He alm that! toad peiese: lancet compliment they could ae paid: children’s father and arandfather had Professional con nas “aay A, is ty wma rie or si eat with many. sucks ES ‘ett thent-as-a. heritag was ited inside for a drink 1 e r% lof tongue kes of the she ane tim when Clayton| swayed a moment, then ae jimp in bathed the pwofey ankle nel wate Mis Mores ont tnesthacagnored ems, t some liniment on it and bound it cattle and hogs. Sha bas ermock at up, She was an dept ia suet matter! ag sheep and 6 lambs which keep down | r ing these ministrations Phil, the weeds about the pl Part simi down to the sater- tanks bu bub! baingr rents on — for the as he half expected, he foun : ala See and clover. Raa Ce ae ford to 4o|Roadmaster liad made no Gaietalke| faigria gone from the! top of the hol grove ot ye on chores Ea be yen ee he handed the Ege Teelander | low sump at sign of the he discovered that with ‘all his| the responsibility miles of! inside. arr coe had been. ies ee slickness somebody had beater him| the Company's lin ii ieee mais of | foes shem, Pedmore probably. | Bt ae iad of evidence! one of the loneliest Aiieionss Ip the | would a ee. |discharge of -his duties there was no [la aber. No | more consci witl erful meal cf oie pudding cries aloud am and jam roly polies are duff two other cance English puddings. For the plum in, there’s a mens yellow | CHAPTER XVII. that danger Magnus Thorlakson was in the habit iaane was safe; ot routing out his gem early. The | The lobacco of Quality. 2 LB. TINS and in packages puis bel © the fairer ee the gar and cream who works the land a fatter to ue prelscobey the tee Pit dst Ont oho cOintlead ic thle SmDOO AME The san poly is simply a paste] of t oe an ee SeTeaty, year. The children and Mrs. Morris| made with chopped suet instead of the agacious Hug: ghey was due for a did the work jin this field acto usual shortening. Rol it on the severe, jolt when he opene a ite pre-| Mrs. Morris believes ini kee cious envelope to whigh s de-| Lintiegies ences Baie so much. attention. i ae th (To be continued.) | F en Voth. Boil ‘ es oi BITS OF | cHECKERS—By Heck | SESAME Women Can Dye Old gre UMOR fe “The solution to Pr Faded Things New FROM HERE ETHER 2 ‘which app aa le 4 g hin ientious section foreman im a Se riinie piecotice gree closely, the employ of the CLS, He timed hk cuighy” said Kendrick when she tas bic a Limes t mb sec are Hoag willl tne ollot hare [+5 ing’ t wheels, the ri ike-mat: ular mo’ no “ie bie! had off his | a potatoes and was! anticipation of a. thid r couple of fried, artled exe tamaticn nus econd x hare inning in elping and eben nS x Each package of from : contains directions so s e ae es pte | ae they at singers! Be | mam ean dye or tint her worn, stat are i coats, stoc Saties fone | gs; everything, even if she has | Bus have| never dyed hetore. surprising at an an © other ki nts ees eee eee ais boca Diamond | the wild country ant are guaranteed not to spot, fade, | Dy arly hour; ce % eed young or Tun. Tell your sroseis Denti child is strosen the work he | likes b Mar: wes for the White ere chiens some of which worth $50. beth, who is a is "Dia mond Pret in Diamond Dyes | farm. move andy W. repr “the teaspoonful of cinnamon, Quite True, “I see that Marconi has invented a device hs ae you ¢an:see through | brick w ‘Someboty i Who y| spoonful of salt. Ci vented that long ag A stated cree is given to each |of the children, ‘The car bought this year is Sonar as “the children’s car,” | and its upkeep is to be paid out of allowan: Th he heautifal home life of the Mor- n best ‘be judged from| Dy Heme rar The man fas ast thovght of put. ting windows in suet was oni ie sed soot Weigh: ee E “The way as Sts country, e breaking of | ‘4 Knowitall, “is to put thoroughly wise, the words of Mrs. Morris herself. “It] tenba ble teibre He honest men in eon has taken me twenty y: to oe trol “on aan my home what it is . = hav ugar, a IL eee and “Yes,” answered: Mise Keen, “but were to remark while you| time for reading, I will: w il ted] what are we to do—there is only on! er, ‘Don't you think | but I want good things fn He “| at 90 © is bigger than the | and in the h Pi Boil for three hours, ene rT ue ‘would you say? Mi, a ome individual molds of hard »‘On the contrary, mad- | children of the sauce, each one topped with a stoned | scite than the other.’ ” like to have them te. Tact, The shoe dealer was ongaelng ax assistant. “Suppose,” he said, “a lady cu it nearty ¢ bate been po at akson vitened profanity 8 s rod out the The big Swede h oked up with at the Still ereenae ‘Say, paw, amples, somethin? *bout fin mon divisor.” ea is always open to the neighborhood for we join in our music ly at the do: m ening, hioriiak: ns Lea Set these ndrick, “May we come in? Teacher said the great com- A Royal Wedding Dress. i lary is the ie bride | Paw (in the Britis ch Royal wer ‘aven't they dress on her wedding typifies| Why, ee ia fea flung: Empire. yas and: sailors of the War Ser Guild of Sailor and Sober Baticese spent weeks hard at on the wonderful border of sil ——+ Raising Trees on the Prairies. ndoubtedly there are more difften!- disgust) —“Great gust) ies met with the found that. were buntin’ Scott! thing yet? for it when 1 Surnames and se Origin MacKINLEY | DRUMMOND gainst| Variations — Mackinlay, Macinally,| Racial Origin—Scottish. Macloally MacNally, MacGinley. rce—A locality. cial Origin—Scottish and trish. Ask ce average person the nation- eee | given name. | all e family name of Drummond 3a bay ne is ies to opine that it is Eng- pe Se train, | tis Scot knows better, as does satin on one more or less confused, concerning the | sivioqy ene with the names of | side and woven trom silver thread on claws from which the various forms | the principal Highland clans. the other, come, so that the following explana-| Still, if you want to be unusually po Ree witriod sone time ago een as general, and | articutar, and trace te name back to | that the daffodil, ne ene emblem why” he sald, mple, | fr | tion must be accepted ees = oe a i rae’ cet inset! lof «Wakes aula Me Sree ae pas Sle year ae caee rnin tak | - ns sat ot ou as as i ptive surname, you'll find | symbolic design which found a place the Tent comes on—that's all there ig | Make the raising o Ae English nor Scottish, | om the Prince: mt e y that elf i heavy, flanne oe b Very Simpte. “Tam ashamed of my failure io keep ” said the to the ‘on! here that reas mand we would I e some| The origin of these family names is eat | ng WO: iffe waved them ainsi Sith deat ae man gave him a patroniring smile, pit suspi longer mingi- t with cur in his keen, ligh ‘None of these: condl: enizepped allowances made for _Mrs. *P- | there are numerous individual excep. eg it-dg ti ted by oe eaiy obtained, tree een A Gues: on the prairies can be made Jue be A leading citizen Ses an Ohio town | successful and, perhaps, eve: stricken with appendicitis and an | certain than wheat BTS The | M. Rees, Dom, Forest Nu ndian Head, Sask ‘his s the form im which it | its par he embroidered es der. was - brought cies England from Hun- Worker’ in ae ene silver. tl hreads to the, advent of the Nor-|are al ngiand, the Sear land. for Scotilanc a e for u wonder what Hungarians t with Tittle nie leaves représenting most of the aa thie | Dominions on | A maple leaf stands for Can spray of mimosa for Australia, a ae bud ae India, and a fern leaf for New Zealan The Nice: and beincess Mazy, de- cided to use for. the dress, whi For the me then, these names | are founded on the Gaelic given ame | 7s t part Nest an y Station, ig it to shar broom and agments of 7 hit pt a e fr Scottish family | lay, Finlay, Finley, Fin-| w Oley et — At ma 3 tM at | layson, and the like. told her 1 ae Riis ie Sue table EO UnE tier | connestio Deltclousi boar y” (which aoeaing The mother of Edgar eaeie. the te is not to be met with, ah Gaelic form eet Anglo-Saxon succes being “MacFhionnlaigh.” English Crown at the time ot on ai tGruMC Es Macnee Mackia;| man fnvasion, was Agatha, daughter lay and Macinall e King of Hw th Edgar mostly among descendants of the Clan | in ire flight to Scotland and the a Buchanan, but there was also a Cian King Malcolm II. Mal a et a jase rae citizen, Rufus | G. Gethem, will enter the hospital ab morrow to be operated upon for peers) a his appendix by Dr. Smit will jeave a wife and two children.” ety a the isla 6 rtateen. and ee thief. ‘o his surprise he was immediately sed, but on the condition that ha car small sealed pac ep pag th ak hee cf tween them grew longer. 1 Limping bet ? |ily pai mi, ) fi an ction s * during he fey “Phe ie was ans requine for e wie Wk. ONS for- was Si tongue, but ig I lady th «she was. epniline 8 on e v tee aes te hair Nes ake lane ime, folk to. With augtientn are Leight,” ae painful || which of her s sept of this name in the Clan MacFar- | Stewarts ean | Mor) went one “Maurice de Dive! ef Sometimes, too, these names /a Hungarian nobleman. Dryman hanged spellings of “Mac-an- be Me with the Scottish monarch an entirely different name, | and received trom nity dee of land is found principally among the | in ae Highlands, his’ first fol- of Appin. But this there wes Piet the clan ich So mich énberest is oe penaltias material which was used by Queen Maay Woacaie awa ae aie King. that ae wens white <atin dress should be draped with the very "yeas English eae ree whet beautified Queen Mary's wed- A little girl in a poor family has to wash a great many dishes. begen sympethizing with her remarking dg et toa neigh Her Good Idea, boring mountain chief. ‘The migstonary was so grateful that, Someone | meeting a detacliment of nglish sail aay, ors froni a battle-crulser, he deelir ust |to accompany them to safer territory | The cealed packet should be delivered one what “drudgery” it as he had promis oe But great fun Fe ly be rendered in| w bears the name of a place g-dress, and thoze of other y or MacLeay. | Hungary under the changed spelling ins beta re her. sea Sia ‘and Mac gu of Drummond. ‘This clan played-a pro® ) are also derivatives of | minent part in the battle of Bannock- en pera Spit "te hem of the| 1 talk to them while T am washing | am the foregoing sept names | burn under Robert the Bruce, and in ivory satin gown, and there is also|them and drying them. —U pretend | transplanted iE many | the rebellions’ of “15” and “45,” losing | q niece of the lace sania in Biraight iat 1 am dressing them. 1 like to though there are other chan-| their lands and thelr chiefs, who fled | tines trom the _ shoulers ve them all nice and clean. And through which similar, names | to France until the restoration of the tm sure they like me for looking after | [ie ° eloped in Irel c bles. so well, It’s lots of fun "ane ve been developed in Ireland rights of the Scottish ne Birds Rob pe the! © with thi ra i a Any observant person may notice Z > cion He made no mention ‘of “the : = that Spatrons are no sas humerous | ata t cle : > in the street ut ¢ of Pocmore’s ¢ plore ist) = ‘ in. y e, Royal| “No.” she replied. “It’s T have given each dish a name, and} are all my children—my dolls. | di of the” n, tueked was a mes 7 fe form: “water- nd we're h iin Thotlakes n shanty Phil ee ned what had oe _ them, =f ain ears pe t Phara =n, ree | and of | ensions are b paid” to and a half ‘milion men, women, a h Ministry he would eae “The been: sick. their wa teas; to up a living in the and outlying tarming dis: few c mere alll ” feo. had fallen of the step he um = Only axctions| was “grateful for the c generosity in con- fifty doar reward carry y you toa ot tle, if He, nodded ts Ea me," he effered at last’ i t, vould be he was 4 matte Ne ATLANTIC CITY.NJ. 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Yaow, that vill ae outecsi Havin; ned lacked bee) a Sweet scents of wild) perfume of spruce and the’ flu 250,000 FARMERS Receive “Seasonable Hinte” Free! Are you one of them? If aot, cut this out, fill in and mail in an envelope addressed : Publications Branch, Dominion Department of Agriculture, Ottawa, (No stamp required.), Give me the man who 3 they make, when boiled, most excel. lent food for chickens '3 turn back; who stif- A Great Feat. fens up Hise others weak- Robert — “Mother, was Robinson Crusoe an acrobat?” Mother—‘I don’t know. Why?” Robert—“Well, this book says that after he had fini ie Och day's work he sat down on his’ Seal at fa ae by the Dominion Department or ‘Agriouitase, Bae for ‘BBASONARLE sonvatatne asorul fats Zor brederarie—c} Wome. sly e ventured to look hind at pei very pretty young ‘at beside the stove, Her renee stumbli: ay Post Ofdes .. BB, Mo. and smile clumsily Sh reddened f: ecstatic d the doorston With ‘over the doorstep wit! face and a rapt of “Delicious!” ie ea pbeentees peipearte ties me ep think you are. she laughed: softly.

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