Milverton Sun, 27 Jan 1916, p. 6

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The Milverton Sun And Monkton Times ARE PUBLIGHED LVERY y THURSDAY MORNING Ae. The Sun Printing Office Main Street, . - iverton, Ont JBSCRIPTION RATES One year, $3 onths, 60 cents; three month fo" in advance, St ace ber tm arrears Steins 10 pay $1.50 per year CONTRACT ADVERTISING RATES Year 6Mos. 3 Mos. M: $70 $40 $25 40: .<22 12 12 ue Bigh! ircents per line for each subsequent inser- n-will be charged for all transient adver- ements. Advertisements without specific directions ill be inserted wat forbid and charg ed ac. ingly. ia tie omics by noca Mon dar. BF in ft MALCOLM MacBETH, Publisher and Proprieto BusinessCards DR.M.C.TINDALE,L.D.S. ci to be of so exacting a chara Led Office: Over metropolitan ‘Bank, Milverton 8. “Phone Ni F, PARKER, M. P. L. TYE, M.D. DRS. PARKER & TYE (CEF.CE : FUBLIC DRUG STORE, MILVERTON Hours—10 to 12 o'clock a: m.,and 2 o'clock p. m., and 7 to 8 o'clock p. J. R, FORSTER, Eye, Ear, | °° In deciding, therefore, aie fleet | such a diet, then either a min of large aeroplanes England is profit-| ter lax: by the lessons of the war, which | saline laxati DR. Nose and Throat Eng. 0} Water! 53 ee Church, § Stratford. ‘Phone 267. oo. 8t:; opposite N OTES AND COMMENTS te | pelins nls ‘ceased for the time; and were it no’ the iain in the setvics-of both sides on tines P that colossal as are the partane Changes for contract advertisements must | ations, the decision of the With ‘Roeland wrapped in its ae cting fogs, the air raids of the Zep- HEALTH for the constant use of the fighting line on the Con- it the part the conflict in the air ‘ten. But wl me rei in the air, oth sides, | sis—or, @ offensive and de-| or meee is fen: oe 1| There is nothing, Sieeet a: Shecantly ieento t cents per line for first insertion ana | improbable in the ae is preparing a great arial armada | op ith which to attach the ammunition- ae actig centres of Germany, nor ee oper- may BEBE aeroplane and the Zeppelin so palled and astounded the ee before! habit is more destructive than mor’ routine scouting achievem: The | vietory direct to the nets hospital. seroplanes avew in its present relative: | thing to conjure Soteltor for Bank of Haniiton, LISTOWEE, es: tatewsl Merton oney to Loan ~ Conveyancer Pek BLEWEPL KC Solicitor for the Bank of Toronto Office : Gordon Block STRATFORD, ONTARI) Veterinary. formidable radius of a‘ ,|to be lightly taken, the aati esos in the pre: ter all, —— or e have, indeed, taken the marvel that an incident which would have ap-| ie war is now viewed as a mere , that as a fighting weal is oe = while enace of large Zevpelin veh thelr! not small-sized Asal apinent that can carry heavy rapid-fire] plan e and a large supply of fuel.|a ai finds that the sizable submarines, as) pl well as the more payer aeroplanes, | a give the real servic “mosquito fleets” in Raines i * case hav ing a doubtful value. an entirely diferent thing from." tho! drive itself. And, somehow or other, been a thing points as spring approa val is by te Calls phone or lice promptly attended to Societies. g' aa |e aan in the deeps and in the air Bue almost beggar imagination. of all the weird probabilities that tus air drive may w move that will give the decision is not sible. AE ee pers No. 478, R.C., Milverton en alwayswelcome. W. J, Zoeger, Secy. Stoney evening on or eir in J. E, Weir’ «Block. sata! breth- j h, WM, THE SUNDAY LESSON _ INTERNATIONAL LESSON, JANUARY 30. Migraine or sick headache, which 1s is acti in ne is might be for-| much more « than: g0 ads in @ ca8-|men, and usually begins at akdinpetai ae ‘tring the day there | and ae beer were forty-four combats f at England | in the blood, by fatigue, by excesses, witl a Y>\less frequency, it is obvious that the be a determining acon paticntamiuat: bew: the final issues of the war Virtually all of the popular migraine] , th eter inal out the heart and brea! s he Bread and Milk Clu but members struggle along somehow | yip.4ns SUPREMACY IN EUROPE, | he races and milk one day in each are| but plenty esence of aero-| tables, fruit an much good for and get rellte, fae. ths elimination of a arler co menthol, or rubbing it gently for| vas iy, unsweeten ed, without piple of coffee, caffeine, may be taken a grains of sodium bromide in solution. | aes on | *! believe in it. impos-| No, you as aust of the se cases in land would be gone. So says Dr. E.| ae ‘crit, writing in the Medi- | eco} Piowine dill be instituted in pablk Migraine or Sick Headache. common in women erty iddle life, is me the other parent, character an sriodie seizures, eee which oduced by some aon retained ree mental excitem causes aside, ae should be me ee migraine Since attacks recur or ware of drug habits. eetaens tablets contain, as co esi ind of neural X The acetanilide the a blood corpuscles. rphine habit. it sends many Persons overweig] ave ie of sick eaiuche ought to joi ib—no hes plain fare of bread and milk or} “A diet containing little or no meat,| tendency to gautieden in ae of ral wa- ative or any of the undoctored ives, like Epsom salts, of |r yhospha lers, may be taken every few days, to toxic matter. in bed, bathing the head with | ining a few grains) 5 in lieu of that the stimulating prin- grain or two, with or without ten| Certain cases of migraine resj eee se of egular ration is advised by those ae How to Blow the Nose. the people. If they did just three- He recommends that nose | SKELETON IN THE TRENGHES | the men to charge INDIA COVETED will weleome us. \ are older. | Th “Suez Canal,” the dreams for empire eastward, the con-|have passed into | founding kingdoms and empires, sial don’t know how to blow |ing empire balanced bet Ci fected by this hoarding. ‘They prefer to Dat ee serine in gold to anything els verted into ni anklets. Immense fortunes in in tre: | kept i [rept Te is shown that. $1,500,000,000 | more of gold has gone into Tndia than | a aa HIS is the newest — resp! adopted by the French army * orbat the gas Sane of the G This appa will enable thee ough the thick- 1 clouds of rags gas Withoue:the t difficult figui iH x JEWEL OF THE EAST ati SAID PETER THE GREAT. | ide ead and aoe ass Have the Germans Designs on the) traders. land fou British Dominions In Asia? * “On t 0 ‘aised in See te of soda, or Seidlitx Tie ech atest and aitatlat power from whole country. Berlin to Bagdad, eems the appeal to the war manag te | the well-known Geneval von Bernhardi |" named India as the serial goal of the| understood “We to Ine e said, “and ae eee espe 8p pra But the Teutonic designs on India) st symbol en Asia, Feeactnace an capital of the Caesars for 1,100 years, the years ago a shawl of pearls, with an arabesque border of cise, rubies, mer: Ss e out. In 000,000,000 of ais ls | movement going on since the days of | the Phoenicians, e Prize of the World was sought! race. “You see,” Mother Bear explained, yald Jed to the achievement’ | Gama, | tinople by the Turks had laid a heavy | ¢ | obstacle in the path of the overland ugh! markable experiment of government the Britist the stronger |that “welfare work” for the people of | Taaie began to make substantial pro- in Tndia may be found the most ae spirit of are con- ecklaces, ieee and Fortunes in Jewels. India at stimates and statistics which show detail how this vast amoul of asure has reached India are aha By uth mtic records | rmment since s than a century j al fen eects) ne is oa show only a continuation of | a Franes, in the period just preced-| e modern age, to secur history] if The desire to Sony wea terniched h of the kan given to explor- ion during the fifteenth century and ‘of Vaseo da Constan- one se conquest: Columbus “sought the Orient rn Hemisphere. in the Sy ee the fam- ‘A Commercial Corporation, and it was not until the middle of the | “ _ One rainy day the three bears were jouse in First Father Bear would tell a story,) he and then Mother Bear would tell story, and then ae the tortoise, aid how the Bib gals has been absorbed, and these] tortoise was the first to reach the goal! e| goal quickly, liereect share of India’s trade Pact that he thought he could go to sleep| could make; and then, lan important chapter in the | of the patient tortois Bear. “If I were going to run a Grants Ree 4 lee his way ‘And Livtle Bear ay up en down ime, Bear looked s to cane be te Bear BG Py lame e oN EB When Little Bear Bragged. Gin seanae, ce a) Bear ald | one ea) mee ut the race between the har ‘ause the hare took a naj ssed .him and had won was so sure win he chose and cord come out ahead | silly!” Scenined Little a uae until e goal”! pees Bear laughed, but Father ‘olemn; be did not like ar think, Son-“Heary” said a hey| 0| than our old friend, Peter Hare?” “India, probably, has never been well by Occidental peoples. fr caylottation and philanthropy | ni se and blame. in} Per-| aggregate of peoples region, degree their predece: trategy,|mark on language, customs and re-| race began, India, as Von Bernhardi aad, eds! Jinan land’s feet cs clay. | Bear. Tortoise” | should bea to think, slepy- and wanted £0, T should take a at) shall see Grandpa jis willing to run a rac a oe like you, you shi If India is still a mystery even tol t ‘Gute “I know I should,” bragged Little “P¢ oy, ‘Goodby, randpi and ’d start t him before he had tae| Then, afterward, if I were) “Nery! well,” said, Father Bear, “t| Tortoise, and if he e with a sill and Peter Hare shall be So it came about ne) when the rain | was over, the friends of the ix-| bears and of the Hae end tip bortaise with! j met, in the Little Bear noticed that before ee th woods to see the fun. , the hare oise were laughing about east ing, id not e wonder what He had nothing to worry about. Aw |e ee oi a; cham, aah 1 toise!”™ yen Father Bear was shout- three it Jast the word was given: “One, | m cas three go! ed y went the tortoise, slow and} | fore ne had pi ve a drink of cup that wo “Thank you,” ve a turn again, Between times| as he returned the Lidie Bear ied questions. The three were until Mother Bear told ‘the ola stor to ame spi | swered Little p and did; Grandpa Tortoise walks slower than t wake up until after the tortoise|I thought he did. id pas: Beside the s] of Little leapfrog. that he did not even try i reach the} play with them, and : ‘e ‘was So swift-footed | showing the frogs what long leaps ie many bal the ful the the squirrels threw to tops and having a oyfal play- tree “Remember how the hare lost the | ee satin coats, who were playing mn. knew, he was cuenibg baby rabbits ff started Little Bea that he was out of be- sed the first’ ate ‘tree, fia oi stop a second and dew from an acorn hi feupeee Little Bear, p, “but that was — shall Toe. to step over ring.” Bear, “and, pring were a number Bear’s old friends dressed in ~ They asked Little Bear & soon he , ina little while by rabbits cante “The next that Little Bear rocks and oe nuts that ‘rom the sy di ee until that minut } ing. Little all have| laughing up ‘his mani neighbo | beet a ae Ree the goal, ust as he d neighbors shouting, “Hurrah for the pion! ners and, as his va it Grease Tortaise went, 00; he had questions, as usual, when the stories were told, but he did along, aia along, en he ran the Hurrah for Grandpa Tor- Bear remembered his man- mers, too, and did not let any- hh. * old friends and rs went home with: the three to eat blackberries and honey tell stories round the tt he was not Youth’s Compani ame to the] man world, Alexan- ief. Greece was me was Rome, and he barbarians, East West after : ty PICTURE OF WAR. i jth Srinigeurs he returned after the 0. O, F., “Silver Star cis eo) | as the capital of Russia, and left to hi: 0 Lod ,” No, . | those classes of laymen who go about : yi 6 - ‘Austrian secupation. fs every fia, Milveion Lesson V.—The Lame Man Leaping, nose biowing in the avvkwardest, way. keep in the following injunction: pay ie Ages returned to soipuc| A. Traveller Describes Devastated| “When I reached the ‘istrict in th Acts 3. Golden Text: 5 rbia. Visiting. goes tiny me parenene Tatas wade cvemice politeness at BE ice ts: tie comics coe ie OH te Sane eee ae oe Conditions in invaded Serbia are de- come, N. McGuire, N. oe |and that he who can exclusively con-| British rule wrote new ctf . eae Hen JH vn eve 1, Muth-‘hote were thre | hei outrs tensa ei howe who ues he cata of Burp” Hie |romance amd od facts of NAY anata Saran Army nent Hy the few. whe wk wars of prayer: forenoon, noon, and | G°'20 iy yo ee [aesstat has never been quite for- Kipling Se A a interpreter who has just completed a six months’ could de} sitanaitily aulndsle pei afternoon. It should be remembered 2 india, as of the British oceupa- c , Results as perilous as tuberculosis) tion, tour of that country in the interests W, D, WEIR, Notary Pablie, Aue aye ets of our are quite #5 are within striking distance of those| “Money atin of the World.” Romance and History. of his organization. The coun! tioneer for the County of Perth and | Pe ae as ‘ird, sixth, and nint ho fieglect the proper technique i Sch ti that hu 1 b speaks of lies in the nor thwest, from |of a woman whose husband had been ‘aterlos pr Coliveyiuer Deeds, Wills or hours”; accuracy could be secured engety “To bl h | each nation that has| The period of British rule is but a chich the Austrians were driven out killed dn battle “while starvation sand Mortgages drawn and Affidavits made | only by the use of a sundial, and only| 71° seu j aa yea + eee i ose ‘ever aie cin in the great re-| small fraction of India’s history.) ;) their first invasion. ease left her only one child out of Village Clerk. Office in the Weir block |a few people cared to define time ny (2 properly ay Je be ta leek nown as India has béen com-| Pastward from the Teanan plateau)” nc village, which Sear a an Bank, sg shotgun, the nose as the muz-| mercial and not ca As Admiral beh yee. 00 inhabitants and 350 houses now over the Metropolitan ‘A. CHALMERS, Monkton, 01 oiaey Piablie, Oouveyancer, Tatusr of) ieee ‘icenses, J.P. for th erth, Real Estate bought and weld. ‘ew choice farms for immediate sal ofl Hotele. “GRAND CENTRAL HOTE rate ni righunah and Anas ‘Three bling . z large sit ms, Bert bra ample breads of I Chas, Ritter, Proprietor ani elger, ‘L, Mil- Se ‘accommodation for intermediate hour: @? Bealitiful--Wa have uo infori tion as to the gate thus nctebed: though the epithet was appropriate to ore than one. 4. Fastening his eyes—See Acts 1. 10, where the same word appears. — Who characteristically place. haye—The same phrase (“what she could”); 3 aM iN. Are You Insured THRSARA Rar gr Sint ‘cost. ate siiget mana ee ea cage es Tt NG : QUEEN'S HOTEL, stinet is to count up what they have + URES Mona Marri, uk ag tare Mone en, er bis aes al aepanlad on his accepting, its Tn _ Yooms, Only the chotoest of ines, Li- Hame—See A 38 The man © quors and Cigars at Good Ti Sone eid. of the lame ables. George f Poul Proprietor. {man whom Jesus Man hetied Jace name therefore could pr the + THE AMERICAN HOUSE, Berlin |thrill of faith which made the heal- pays special attenton, to Commercial | ing possible when Peter gripped his ned Naore puis at eet a hand and showed that he Be meant Rates $1, 8Oper day. Wat. Wirt, Prop: Rie ose w commlets cu, . Feet and abi banca Che words @ t Fee among the medical terms chatae ; teristic of the Lukan bool well- , : nown corroboration of the ‘marly rs PUBLIC NOTICE ! 8 {dition that assigns these writings to 8 See S| Paul's “beloved physician” (Col. i RS. C. BOR . DEAD: M’ 1p band metal plckline Cement aad i a ae such as ure is yh vivid—the eiiale Batter Pee cider @! first we followed by a moment’s a a janager @| stand: f ti in the case of the paralytic ark 2. "2, the miracle was too 10. rand amazement — A combination of two extremely strong nouns to produce the efféct of a es lative. | 11. Poreh— loister, a colonnade named ae the royal segnder of the emp! first t Saree = form in the in the} @ is eit restricted to Ms | solemn responses, and es- pene: Fk of councel in law courts, is appropriate for this} ai [eres “aptogia ar takes the case} i 3 of Naz: to a court of ii hy— superfluous question, we might think; but ourse tl the 1e people were faiveady climax, the se as magici: their then 4, but is | France. id ec- | the letter says, “and everyth a reat to admit of praise to any but G abl e | Com: is in| began to fon 2 2 ‘the a aeetis of $ bie of | tl ae the gun ond the chest as the, air Sativén chest with ai obstructing the Foetal with one violent expiration, force the air from the chest through | the n chamber of the nose. should be ces on the other ie of the n “Tt is a Saal process, but a very) important one, and one which seems | eth ftom, ose! gar hinders the work of ienefacaers in the subject and only when it is teal ealth in many instances de- Toa it does the sige finicky attiiude. become dispelle GERMANS SICK OF WAR. Mr. Sa alent * Vienna, who g. in the Panehas in norther ‘My whole experience at ar front,” ing I hear these roa strengthens my conviction. aay ev ‘ing to with ‘this war is, sick Mt these men who tic to go to the trot sacral hope se seas a ay t live to's see on. this ae and that thei children’ children will be spared uch horrors thi i on he thes: sted 5 Sane. fighting: ‘until a lasting peace is declared.” ¥ When He ied. Tae Lowe, the great English ner, Was exceedingly Gar ale and galas Nes eee Bon occasion of a w marriage ser “When I mar- Beat; /have been eanried in 9 bu shoulder.” it th Asi “It is best to take a deep noi and! po Men in the Trenches are Now Ardent 3 avo is | from the e | India. ice.| willingly in times of famine, but a eer “all the worldly pale x with ae a endoyed my | Mahan pointed o1 a Tea constitutes a highly im- portant “base” of military and naval wer as well as an area valuable i Teclf, As a source of wealth it is the Hie chest. “possession” on th e earth. It yields annual revenues |e 500,000,000. The Hales of trade is always in favor of India. As a re- servoir of precious ictal Indies hare barieally splendid. This fabulous ac- cumulation of concrete wealth is an interesting theme. rom comes a vast amount of interesting information concerning the absorption treasure by this great country. “different writers “the great sink of pre fF vand the “money ae of the pork For twenty-five centuries there has been| n a constant flow of gold tees ‘Complaints of India’s ap) gold began in a time ‘of the Cartha-| r genians, who in the fourth century B.C. disposed of gold they procured from that ES Pliny tells of eee protest: le the first year of the Christian era’ a exportations of the precious metal Roman Empire, nearly a 5 000,000 of it being s Queen Elizabeth, ine fase ao in vain to counteract oo flow of gold as 1864 a writer citimated hdia, in trinkets nted is $2,000,000,000.. aid has beeh used through the centuries by India taller thi ‘One of the most se eecintaniare |¢ cannon of solid gold| © yullion sole “Wel not endow “you with th dear,” it in “The Problem of | j; pire. the latest_commerce reports tl petite for supersrition, ‘Mary nd |? s; we | the other day a eS ee ane bolee ndon bi ed it ta and the susiey of Luck- ines and mutinies; of d Christian missions; MARY, THE TRENCH cow. e Front. The . G. H. Donald, in a letter to the ‘otstewation of the West Par- Has Supplied Milk t to Men ‘on Section of th i it the: ‘ mie ot ee the Sica had built.’ ‘e in the books as a ‘trench store’ a nae supplied us with excellent milk. She has been rell tended. Ration bis- ger “athe mt of content, andl Il burst twenty- five yards from tie aug, and ruin- with bullets a and mu those surviving has ed up. This village had formerly sented by one or two. met a widow who was the sale sur- va tyranny and enlightened governnichty Au q.jothers wi the | ® he | ca e| Josephine Br has his day, but, aa as 1,100 inhabitants and — only ding s to In this same Snare) a family of 28. ere taken awa’ ig to Colonel 90 | pet 2 said Col- onel Govaars, 46 families were wiped lace’ ae Bs y as prisoners, i “Tn ruins ee d” te by the invaders. There was nO and persons had nee Hey aie: "Thelt bones were elite sea buried in a — AN f 90 civilians had fete a and e Pei es Went a és Silent watches oh ae night al and an sruenic swept away 805 of ise we forget to plum 1 bearing elt at the time of my visit, was no one to pick and dry no ‘means of transporta- bear aed I Lg on the: of use which 1 earby. In pit the bodic xii., 21. ish Church, Aberdeen, a bey in the ar age: “I had n¢ in its enctineel” fullness; I had converted by the Phedo, ai the Gospel. me eee rough the agent be tga philanthrop e introduced m Cieaasieaity, so ns say, by vr.” Bi ane upon guides who are centr: tral eee an ae “Sir, we would see~ ee In his book be ae “Fragments ae and not by Christian conversion now % of | © whose name will not). in the annals of English mi an inner are pilgrims who knew the way Familiar With the Inner Door, | - fand who know the direct way to the! ae do Tot, finc he ini of the imi a i Uauicatad dogma. cover the simplicity that rist Jesus, and sheds oe pen Hits infinite ‘love and gr: was there of ministers of the 1 ‘inner door, ae directnes studen' mn} Every do: seer, they sieeys want. more, outer vestibule and Bal to he uae aloe ‘of; ‘4 ve found |s HES ‘The. ‘ttle “child ‘of the e urgent tee may know ner door by an intim: nen ‘were brought into he nce of the yy | All who know the Lord may be ily ae ‘is way home even though snight a Sotely pushed Bee a map We ni rt bi ¥

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