The Milverton | Sun] ga erat on Ti EVERY NODE euceeme The Sun Printing Office i Main Street = LVERTON, ONT, scription rates'—One year, $1.50; 812 monthe: Foc, In adv ‘Ghbeeribere in ar: fare will be Mable to pay $2.00 per yea Advertising rates on application Advertinements without specific dtrections will be inserted until forbidmand ebarged ne: cordingly Ghanges for contract advertisements muet be in the office by u00) MALCOL a Bee S, Publisher and Teoprietor } BusinessCards ; Medical ‘Dr. P. L. Tye Office! Purtie DRUG SroRE, Mi.vReTON Pee AS AS as 2tosp.m a 7 to 8 p.m. DR. F. J. R paeres Eye, Ear, Nose and Th: Graduate in “nedicine, University of Toronto. Bate assistant New York Ophthal nd Aural In: rbd neni Throat Hi to e a.m.; 2 to 5 pally: rm 7 to 8, Wedrendas atarday only: or by appointmen: (Phone 267.) B83 Waterloo St. S. STRATFORD ANSON B. KILBOURNE CHIROPRACTOR Office at the Grand Central Hotel. Every Tuesday and Friday. Office Hours: 9 a. m. to 4 p. m. Consultation and Examination Free DENTIST, d. F. SEBBEN, D.D.S., L.D.S. Windsor Block, Opp. City Ba - STRATFORD Open Beet; aa 7 “to 9 o'clock hat period of scarlet fever is from | Heethtth Talis} By John B. Huber AMMD i St. West, Toronto oe Take no cua A child with ie a sore throat and a thn i may be the means of ' spreading dangerous infectiogm The Address communications ae Adelaide Scarlet Fever. The incubation—the c ' not a then: Never neglect a sore ddenly and often at might, with foo vomiting, “red pat” sore throat, and — ahigh ‘fever; and also in severe cases, Questions and Answers. pc with: wh? young chilgren, with! convulsions,” There the “beef”| ‘cat’s” or rahacee donguen The eyes are anos not inflamed. Then at the end of the first, or during the endocarditis cigarettes? ‘throbbing when "siting or ined down. t a leaking valve or Endocarditis is valvular heat Cinco, in which a leaky valve a s is not soni eetic a bar ye} to. length ot days; an 3 comparative comfort, a atiotlen-glanas on the doctor is faithfully es ease, joint inflammations, pleurisy an pneumonia. - Scarlet fever is, like diphtheria and] measles, caught by direct conteg also| that is under your own hat. by Sees: in the minute dr a step in life ee; urge you to “consul 9 your “tem doetor as to Do you think ‘girls and young wo- din the ee e patient breathes is not m itself infectious. The disease is caught also’ from the towels, handkerchiefs, dishes and so-on which the patient has a in scarlet fever is not and induce a Tu from the sore throat ¢ in the, They apparently stand it; but what is beginning of the disease. All the| your opinion of their future health? Ans same, children with scarlet fever mi course be-isolated, quarantined, Kept apart from other children, until the skin is clear and all discharges think so. Anemia (blood poverty) thus result, Man “colds” are no doubt thus contracted. And the neglected cold, considering s e are mild forms of scarlet fever (scarlatina) as there are mild] ies. ‘orms of measles or of diphtheria; but| pneumonia result from “nothing but aa can catch the disease severely'a cold.” Comat H.B, Morphy, K.C. Solicitor for Bank of Hamilton. LISTOWEL. MILVERTON, ATWOO! Seis iets oe a Money:to Loan, Harding, Owéns & Goodwin Barristers, Solicitors, &c. Gordon Block, « STRATFORD, ONT. Money to Loan. Ww. 0, oWEKS %, 7, HARDING W. &. Goopwia Notary Pubiic. W. D. Weir, - Notary Public nears for the Coma tee of Perth ad Woter Eonvesaueet: eae wills, opr paeees: draws ‘od amtidavits Village clerk. Dffice: Weir block, over Bank of Nova Scotis A. Chalmers, - Notary Public MONS gr teielbere = 82%, es x the County of Perth. eal catate bought and 201d. acme for smmediate # MONKTON, few cholee ONTARIQ Veterinary. R. E. Beggs, V.S. VETERINARY PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office: Barr’s old stand Hotels The Queens Hotel ‘Best accommodation for eduimercial trav’ ‘lers and others, ‘Two large Sample Rooms.? BEO, PF, PAULI, Prop., - Milverton, Ont leties. Milverton Lodge,No. 478 ALP, & AdMe-G.R.C, Meets every Mi jay © ing on or before full moon pit Bate ‘as peer: hall in J, B. Weir's blo Visiting brethren hives weleo A. Harrow, W.M, HL. Nicholson, Seey Silver elie Lodge No. 202 1, 0. 0. F, K. Loth, W. Henry, W. F ne. Fin.-Secy. “He Looks Into the Eye"* ¥, THIS METHOD, it te aimiost > a’edek ts dgne by too Tooking fre eye, thereby locating | Weak Muscles Strengthened at inte de. States , ars: E PHL. sai : “ Byesight MILVERTON, ~ Jeff was four or five years older than I, a great flabby fellow. speak of, Mrs. Dutton had a lady visitor of hers over to the steamboat landing. It was a two- Tt was not sutprising that Merton) mile row, and I was to have fifty.cents eed was in.low spirits. His father| for the job. had received a note from the principal] «We were ‘ GRANDMOTHERING a little late in starting, of the high sel! saying that Mer-| and the wind was pretty fresh, so that a hard-row But " nsatisfactory, and] it would have been quite hinting that the Seay of the trouble} anyway for a twelve- year- he boy: was laziness. The interview that fol-/T could have made sees was not a cheering one. RAEUMATISM FOR. OVER 16 YEARS No Return Of The Trouble Since Taking “Fruit-a-tives” 108 Cuvrcu Sr., Mowrnan, | “T was a great sufferer from Rigu- matism for over 16 years. Leonsulted specialists; took medicine; used lotions; but nothing did me good. and in 15 days the pain w: Gradually, “/rwit-atives” overca my Rheumatism; dod now, for five years, I have had no return of the trouble, I cordially recommend this fruit. medicine to all su‘ferers.”” TL. Me HUGH. Boe a box, 6 for $2.50, trial sizo 950, At all dealers or sent postpaid by Fruit-a-tives Limit els Ofiaa. CPouth VD srg are different plang of poultry houres Paveeated by different. author ance has nothi: grace however, is more Sian ni building whieh is so arrani inside that the work cannot be ae ealy and that the fowls cannot make, eof the floor space, is * Secidealy detrimental. One of the simple plans and one of, the best plans, for a small poultry lee is one ewe 14 to 16 feet wide | and as long as js necessary, w shed Fi double itch pete In ae Sain side should be enough window: with two sa: ose in a cee to thoroughly ee the interior rae permit the sun to r every par fie flobr at dometime: dutig he Ma In the rear, against the seas, of the; north wall and high enough from the} floor so that the fowls can eakcloa under-it, should be a roost platform, an e this, sufficient roosts so that the fowls will not be crowded. The nests may be simple boxes hooked to the sides of the house, high enough so as not to obstruct the floor. they are hooked instead of nailed they; can more easily be taken out on cleaned, which should be done atmosphere was'so chilly at home that) weight to Merton decided to go to see his grand- | difference = en Speers mother. y might, with no as As he approached the pee g Bank -erot Ver Path He Hoeatibos 8 form rose avon an onion bed in the) without my passenger. Jeff st tod up| garden, and Merton aagtckd his| and waved his hands for the captain! ase ee th he had not expect- | stop, but he only tipped over the) at home. at. Sipe grandmother has gone to | make a call,” said the old gentleman, | “We got no more harm than: a good | to had come to our rescue to take was coming to me At any rate,| alive, doesn’t i | } “Well, I don't know,” replied Mex-| ee gloomily. “I gu y being alive isn’t any ie idee to me or to; anghoiy That waalthe line which’ he had: th) tended to take with grandmother; and although he had a Eee audience, he went on: “I’m amount to any more Sa that dat you just pulled up.” “That weed would have amounted to Se if Thad & it stay,” re- marked his grandfathe ni “phere is nothing to me,” persisted) @tandfather,” interrupted Mex “T_ghall never accomplish| 488s I have some brains.” a “So much the better,” “You couldn’t s iy it Jeff hadn’ amounted to any’ fine that time. Te! ad emqunterl to about a hundred and | gue Jeff as long 2 as is he lived: was fe ight i Neyer could s ways held back; rai of course, even| in doing that he counted f thir that I said Nt oer said the old) anything. i Mh yen, Syed willl” ald. gpatid gentleman seis Not going, are father. “You can at least do a lot of| ¥°% me geet Aa acl harm" beck soon. = “Oh, I don’t mean to do any harm,” a aes be-eebeiig: homey’ | Seid? Mlenshitc. “EE i: guese.1 ahell Ae Merton. image sone haters never do any 00d, either. I shall be to do.” t a cipher. tae ne pitneihy: bow’. sata srandfather when his wife returned: | grandfather. “I never saw. anyone ’m so sorry that I v | pa Fras Fa Ra EST pa GN a she Did the dear tity Went Bag knew, Jeff Di by name, camé. thir i A out as near it as anyone could; but| "Wel as near as I could guess, mt he amounted to sometking, as 1) 80d hej-“he wanted 9 ttle grand. | found.to.my-cost, Jeff's’ mother had, Mothering. I'm afraid I’m not much | good at it,” he added modestly; “but I did my Best.” NATURE'S MIRROR |- a summer cottage at Hunter's Cove; Gacsaat Isa Costly Thi iS The end of guesswork came with us hands into our poset Sa ee in a milk-testing machine, ve guesswork another are whan ve west deeper down and bought a small herd of pure-bred-cows. ‘Axgood set of scales hung up in the stable, with a big sheet nearby to enter up the weight of the milk each gave, helped to speed the parting guest, as far as the dairy is concerned. Out ‘n the fields we gave guesswork the go-by when we began using seed corn and oats been tested good. ‘That ¥ as we did; for we had been brought, 6 up to think that corn and grain that! comes Fery woman wl w if put in Bouaiee hhealth—-but ae ha is Ped, dull eyed, languid, she has eS nor does she appeal ‘| but the test-proved that true. Guessing to aay is the costliest thing any mai ot did. it feelin; Guesswork got its final discharge ae Sauk a é change i bj i gig our farm when we set eae to gra our ile potatoes and other Fi ‘After eueing pain, feelifg ni Ber | of that ‘said to ourselves: vous, disgy, and dragged | Now ive know folks ‘will like these |+-down by Weaknesses of +t clear to the bottom, ie now say, VOI ‘They certainly are’l” No gues ; sie even word sounded ot mh a ms nd toriptl of tales by a-greater profit. a Good breeding. is reflected in the fleece as well as in the lambs. Select @ good ram for the flock leader, Ld lew York farmer’s letter. pease Lis ip ail the revenues from There’s more than rhyme, my brother, ‘i Drube fa eet There {8 reason in this jingle; ty ai or ula'Or' | Three men helping one another N.Y, 100 for trial package.’ Can do more than six smgle, sswork has been and is|- pe fae) shell and me a ies may abe be hung on the and the wa alley 2 certain extent mash feeding ly done from vee Mey meer subjec short, he is tans who makes! “hall the wheels of: repairing mgchin- Bees cb cecil osunae, eters are foes near a m: + engagements. He realizes the importance of i sh pve ber foconed ay bein well dressed at all times. He requires + bold ‘cllael: | ao ALITY” besides style, finish and correct a3 Gotae pins will have been taken out iloring. Try us for your next suit. 2. and not repla : Allcioek ashlar ell ave beot ‘ scatteted te the wind Threads m bélts Sn nuts will have gee Setered “ a it of its own, accos erence will be echoed up gndiiher are almost unrecognizal Bearings will have cried in vain for ith e| grease and adjustment. Parts will be missing, paint seratch- , each ed, and the whole machine dirty and unkem Sone nothing | Do t be a greenhorn mechanic.) has b Be no echaste at all rather than this. | . And*do not hire one! Sean. For Obstinate Paint Stains. Mix equal he of turpentine and ammonia woolen clon stinate stains, 'y to paint stains on “This. conquers Ob- If we enjoy our wor a holiday. r fount should be pet = on a shelf whch enough so that it will be rm and have a’ horizontal nyenient- oO tread; who sears able to give advice on® any a machine rea pe t the machine will we lose unless a has simply stayed} The-services of such a man are deat) jn y price—are dear even if they every day is 2 GOOD HOMES. ATIRA oe ¢ tain factory distr n s were paying high for. ily. ducking; but the lady hired the man} sei on the city’s outskirts eae tioabler Ane hte; {th bade Tatiirainen:cantecptieind| manent help. To get it h the excitement the! ad what seemed to many a vain thing. | and when they left invariab! Going to one’of the biggest factories, where the unskilled worker rece rom. ived | two to three times as much as h epared to pay, the farmer! had” x announced that he wanted men. tated the wages he expected to needs d the living conditions his farm, and offered quite liberal al- wrances of fuel, milk and vegetables. Th let ae men ps the propo- Ce over for . A week later . meee to the fac- More than a dozen men snout hire out met him. They were no’ inexperienced men, but steady, illed te From these ee he § | was able to pick the he wanted, and his hired nl tule in short eine fe charcoal is most useful in re- pa es was t ay ee pers: it in pisshseal Go pride an| moving ce, tee ee NEWTON WOOLLEN MILLS | of an official housing co attractive home for hired help, it which learned much about rural labor] ought qneawe“ho be diese} ee Fe ati cists pad ph ABSOLUTELY problems while ei studying $B investment ta sure {0 retiirn: good in-| Ue Me ater Dene A Cogs mote conditions. of this com- quickly. Crushed quartz and thorough- PURE WOOL ‘erton has just been here,” said, Mission says that the solution of the rural labor problem is entirely a ques- tion of suitable, attractive homes for [ara hands; that the farmer who has a clean, neat, comfortable home for his EN ean obtain labor without much |qittenty even in ition of labor abie class of help farmers must have. former commissioner of agricul- |ture, when he returned to his farm Seare-) ters i ity, and can also get that steady, reli- fertable and-attractive. CT 60 00 TBRED HELP ¢, when} from college, immediately built a good ae | home a #08 hired man and his e has never had .ai ioe BOse Mor How‘ pe are ead: Sis woman is as old'as she looks— Bey youn Pain ee you in the Ag of lifeand yest your best years, Fight Rhe Th - Sole agent is Buverot 8. PETRIE, Drie! ist, etc, tor cate “ Hallmans of a 2 a Green WEESeR @ BETTGER, as cies Peer tae for Atwood, EVERETT. = G. COUGHLIN, x GS rit you live gut of mail $1.04 to the above ad- Everywhere you see the hallmarks| * dresses or to Templeton’ a tinted, 2 King St. W., Toronto, and of the greenhorn mechanic—that fel. T.R.C.'s will be. sent postp: ewan race ieee shout: machinery) but thinks he know: nm La u = the wron| THE SUCCESSFUL 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 TH B TAILOR, MONKTON 0. DUFFIELD, Drinking Water From wanted money, as I felt that it was Cisteins” something to be quiet pee fact, < almost ashamed of. Now I do ne main things to consider in a) jt that way, and I call the Salen on cistern from which driaking--water is ae phone me tell him how obtained =e SOR Rite tightness) need and for how lo at top, sides and close sereen-' a note, which T and w epi ipes, provision the job is done. a the time ee for exsang toms the cistern the first. to pay the note. I « eque. f each rainfall until the roof out to the bank, with interest sit, ecome rinsed thoroughly, a first" and in a few days I get the note b: class filter of clean, well-selected sand, meried paid, and the business is aap nue Sauk | burned. charcoal. | flow in the filter should be] New I wonder if you pur gk ut er and so slow that effective risky.” Perhaps it is. filtration (oe rapid straining) is se-, business we ide is risky in ce et a3 cures vastepipe e pro-| or another, at some time or another. vided Sukh seeausce surplus inflow The banker I deal with is from the bottom of the cistern where| whose interests are h ee A matter impurities tend naturally to settle.! of a few dollars would not make him Periodic and thorough cleaning of the’ run away, If he embez: sled a half mil- cistern and filter is necessary. From. lion, then he might be expected to run; ey te ay the clogged sand ee. but what I send in wouldn’t be wo be emaved from the filter) the _ fare on a very long run. and ths cinty charcoal replaced. ind that the banks rather like this Te rractice WF throwing “eharcoat vert, of business, set Aistributes their ini sorb the odors of! work sm people come organic sites is of little} to the banged id banenbaL Wehr: rede tern water, or | is no one at aN bate the mail busi+ hei is to see ness can be ti ate precaulonil injur ne 1 it, chess “fs oa pan saab ae chit ie iis emp! nyees the wholesomeness of the water oat wing money of hele ‘banks, mye _Blways Ween O t flass'should be regarded as emergency patel they need it or not, jus }to g rented fatms s much more than wages in! farmers al-| lp; There i the labor problem. Some | ways seem ate others never seem able tq | ried hired men, or a fart house for ras em \have less difficulty about. labo t live with the family—a Toate which often ends suddenly the busines: and le relati subject is two- An outsider dscieainy under utara ically will rent 01 joney spent-will e: class of labor. eves the hired man, then his quar-! ret L class. “ lected sand free from flay loam, help farmers get is little ter’ 8° H ; WwW in the kind of quarters given the! S"d vesetable matter, is tt H. Cc. AGNER esxesand the worst. st is ; yet to come | Z it was measures, r own newly-aequired or| wns Large on| farms where shes feria mar) ax din, ployees aval cared i and filled with some suitable ae small farm where the sis man trying tie kone tore damper on family] }, terest an the cost, because the farmer cee a iteera| ie big dividends by ateracting: erdeaireble} ¢ When a separate house can not be at ocquainted with the bauien Bitte filter vali wober ehtcchivelys (het! edaar doing business and to establish | method of filtration which resem lesa line of © can establish okt reasiy ap albi oneclaticn, of] aGanlts halaman ba very convenient rainfall inte the, ground will give the| some time when there is a pind > greatest degree of saa Such don’t know whether a vou ee this, a filter can be made from a barrel or! if T é'dn't need it, or not, though T ge galvanized ison tant, vlased believe the idea As sah eonaliaeine eaters, d so it can be eas Se centages filtering ‘material. The water as it] adopt some system of crop rotation (drains from the roof shoul PASS) and make it short a one as ‘labor through this material before it enters will permit, the cistern, the rate being kept dow | Sand is one of the best | available fterTig materials, and well ly clean pit or beach sand, such as is ixing mate are aes exe ensivel, The grains peal te quite anitornt eatenoela Biahkets, Yarns, Flannels, Tweeds, Sheetings and Wool Batts. uch that all could be sifted si ; through holes. made | i a cpa of sand of Sdifteront ONTARIO pede 1? | halt | with f Fone! until eventually the a | is reduced to twelve or fifteen inches in pees The sand removed should) be washed and Teturned, or replaced, {ith new sand. It is advantageous to about six inches. of well-burned | | Check Books... We are agents for the Appleford Counter Check Book Co. | bank'ng by telephone. | very much ditfere it than most farm- rs, an 9 live six miles from my hts e times ame- ‘hi thing aint fairly quick and which i formerly meant a trip to town. / This firm turns out Now 1 have found that practically only high-grade work? all my banking business may be done without going to the bank ab-all, When at very reasonable I want to deposit cheques on my ch prices. account I just nae a list of them, on the slips that the bank has on the ‘See our samples and get our prices before sonally, and go I address the letter his name, nd one else gots at it, ordering. ‘he of depositi ' : the time. Then in a few the receipt from the bank comes fate an the ae is done. want to borrow a little ™ Sun Office mone Hor an emergency. I go Raat bank when I! trip in to the a Sh