The Milverton Sun And Monkton Times an Punta EVERY THURSDAY MORNING The Sun Printing Office Main Street, Milverton, Ont SUBSCRIPTION RATES six months, 50 cente;, three mit Jo advance, Subscribers {in arrears will be flable<o pay $1.00 per-year SONTRACT Ae aseNe RATES ic for fret tnsertion a subseq ins tsementa, ey Advertisements without specific directions Tipe snserted un‘ forbid and charged ne- ord Sana {or contract navertisementa sat bein the office n Monday. Mallor telephone orderswillneceiveprompt attention MALCOLM NacBeTH. Publisher and Proprietor Busi ness Cards DR. M. (ati! INDAL BL. D.S. (Successor to Dr, Ledern aed Gkapvare ToxoxTo ONrencpmne own and Bridge Work & special, Over Metropolitan Bank, Milverton Office ¥, PARKER, M.D, DRS. PARKER & TVE CFFICE: PUBLIC DRUG STORE, MILVERTON Hours-10 to 42 o'clock a: m. and 2 0 4 o'clock p,m. 7 to 8 o'clock p.m, DR. A, sa Me KENZIE, M. D. n and Surgeon ONTARIO MOD KTON, Office br yg So rine far as as possible from 1 to .m, and in evenings, DR. Fy ARTHUR PARKER Osteopathic Physician sencoares sei reatment seer and “iy Milverton, Wed reside: dnesday jences if preferred mito pate Wilt J. R, FORSTER, Bye. Tar, Nose and Throat only. House Sargeon New Yor nig and “Aral Tnsti- tute. fone an Phroat “Towpttal “Golden ‘Square and a leld’s Es pital, London, loo St., op} alte on 3 Wal Kei Cre, Stratford. Phon heea a B. MORPHY, K.C se ge + Notary Public, - "Gonvayancet Weltor lor Bank of tiamiitos, jeronae, LVERTON, ATWooD om ee. ee on s Mon: FR. SLEWETT: KbGhs Solicitor for the Bank of Toronto Dated : Gorden Block STRATFORD, ONTARIO’ Veterinary Surgeon Ontario Veterin J. W. BARR, yi Graduate of ‘ollege, Toronto, aft me oF otherwise promptly attenied to Societies. ren este ame, W. J. Zooge N.G., goths r. raver NP (itamermanc, 8, i Be EIR, Notary Publi, ‘Aus. ot Perth and Wil nd w. tloneer hee. hs Gounty | A. eaacatins Monkton, Ont, ig ry Pu ne S ___ Hotels. GRAND CEN CENTRAL HOTEL, Mil- verton, First-class accommodation for sommercial travellers and Dee is ‘Three large sam, tabling, Best brands eg of liquors aud olga, Us BORE Milverton, Ont. jon for commercial mpl a arm Good w: | Paull, Proprietor. THE AMERICAN HOUSE, Bei pays special ‘Splendid ‘samp iquors served at the Rates $1.50 per day, Wat, Wirt, iret Prope PUBLIC NOTICE! ‘| great relief of his patient. diseases which: in ¢ HEALTH Mouth Infection. For many years doctors have known that rheumatism and other, Lahr diseasé és are saneimes until recéntly, only an occasional Nee n put the know- ledge to nracied! use—often to the Within the past two or wee years, how- physicians have come to that may realize the evils follow suppuration riley the mouth — Meet it-is called. Pe: eg as Ik ittle gi fal most often eee for general ill health is Rigg isease (Pyorr- hea alveolaris), x ae Cine: forms of epee such as an abscess at tt of the tooth, can also do Be cause t ~ The may no pain or apparent inflammation, ae it may do a od deal. of harn the pus it forms passes into the blo stream, Among. m SCeSs rae or too! i SGeckteneh angemia, high Bomboremase wth Fenian g tee ache, or even heart andl iduiey dis es h constipat: asthma. Migdesemmasimuidentinantct the stomach or intestines, gall nd appendicitis °, all these conditions are more frequently owing to other causes, butt it is well to remember that they can originate in an_ ill- kept mouth. Too often, unfortun ately. we see eam and de teeth, 1c nd ed tar, in the mouths of per are in n thes respects careful nal hygiene. When such a 8 gums with a ahs line along the , and a very slight mrce out pus from be jong as such ‘a condition is _Brenent, it .is not much use to at obscure general symptoms of it ‘he alth. Thorotgh treatment by a competent. dentist is the first thing. to insist on. — Youth's Companion. Scarlet Forer. S and searlatina are one and the same disease, the lat ter being merely the name for a slight case of the former. Unfor tunately it is possible for a patient Scarlet fever suffering from a mild m of scar- latina to infect per: with a severe form of the disease, or to cause an epidemic. Cas may be so slight as to escape no- tice until pain ! they may be cause death in ; tunately the slightness may lead to its ‘being unnoticed, al. though the danger of complications is as great as in a serious fares of the disease fever ually appears withi 24 hours of inestnn, although the incubation nay last two or more days, The paver Shivers, complains ‘of head ache pnd nausea, Frequently there ig sic! A sore as a is near- citenactt the second characteristic rash ap- the front of the chee ‘and phate the armpits, and gradually spreads to the rest of the ody t first it resembles tiny red points, but on the fourth day the whole of sb skin is awit with a vivid red rach apis ig he dis: ease its name. fade land edter'a few dnye dieabpeate, Tn favorable cadas\the othey symptoms subside, and usually on the day the skin begins to pods r co oa € away in ane flakes from the face and body, and in larger pieces ees nas hands Sea feet.—A Physi- 1 hn a GERMAN DEAD MERE LADS, aa and Germans of Eyery Class Lose Flower of Youth, A Belgian despatch fecéutly call- eo attention to the youth en the age: f eighteen and praniy four, Each year a third of he army to civilian life are, of course, married ; hence there are few widows bein; hati fighting round ny compensation “flower of the made | Liege, if ¢ al for the rite oof “the the French and join the first ne Bib married and older German. reservists BL, 11 men! Mieniand cp elie rement aid n action. This is, by the way, Shaler eet ais Macerial, such we Guia UAIIKS kG xavoRt At Ghestern gia Abpie Butter of he a quailty volunteer regiments in which so ; MeUiSver: MEBAROE ny of the men were married. As for ‘the French and German non- ~ officers, they are, of ee course, in rt professional soldiers and family men, like their officers. But their soldiers are too R Y, FISH &CO, j citer mere boss just out of school, Webs y) without ain appreciation, a" LINWOOD toate of ant the war is al ia t _—_ n ¢ these armies are de- +i Dealer in wu. feaietalis? Specks ate sons of rich and poor alike ser ‘edt Coal, Cement and Lime for a year only, yet perhaps in Mota Stain, Etc, Grain, Flour and Feed and Furniture re Goods Constantly Kept on Hand crack ‘regiments; but there is- no class in France or Germany that wil pay a ¢errible price, in ait ae for the deta pnity that s going on to-day Fixldie— ‘Pa, w human ture?” Pa—Ti vhat’s nas War faithfu As he his sw f This i ment, scienc in suc exami tural the prefer rca 34. Father tive athe’ The ca: one to give him meat; or iaber where t he | own ki in the mals, means sick a) 5 = 3T- is ‘The ve or asi 40, one of an —Oriental in power on his throne, that ae was King lent glory to the ae And before: Kim shall ‘be Ba theted all the nations—Dhe fune tion of judge is not a to the hag in the Jewis literature en before a viet of Christ, cor Mestiat:, Aheugh= not into the world to world, ces of those The Cl evitably to the ination, tion they begin to judge though ated one from the other naturally. has no surer proof chan in this na. goats. The sheep on his’ right ha the natural blessed. edie re dates to the Rewsineiond of the good with God, you d. from the foundation of the w Notice from from eternity, prepared for jit drink. He may be a stranger among those who are not of panion of the dogs and thar: Al: ter. 36. Naked’. . . on—Three more” exce ressive degrees of need. Nak him mea' ignored, especial poor or strange. ular atnount of love in geon. man may be and wrongfully, cast into but the very f atohe fact tl carries a stigma with it, shunned ee ent hits out, Aart eed are Rents mgly ed, ie T bh ey had absolutely no re- colleoti have seen him hangyy: 7 tn prison, thea, and to told that they had ministered fee him when he was in sit need caused their amaze- ment t6 exceed all limits. Refugees gees on Foot a THE SUNDAY sCn0aL LESSON INTERNATIONAL 1 SSON, TEMBER 20. Lesson XU. The Judgment of Na- tions, Matt, 25. 31-46, Golden Text, Matt. 25.45. Verse 31. His glory—The Son. of man is pictured as coming in all] his glory and as sitting upon the | throne of his glory, and he has a following of holy el, $ Fy his ul and enthusiastic retainers sweeps into the ‘presence of bjects he is naturally thought companied by which his throne, ld sit up song oR is a new on of but to save it. rather, is seeking the ¢ who go before him that they begin * to judge” themselves, his followers in point of self-exam and in this self-examina- them- ‘0 the Messiah as a Judge n is tobe een 0 y in ch a’ way ne and hrist. leads the goats, al- together, separ the compa: separation of the sheep and indie: ep es those the goats on the left place where red and those accused wou , the right being the lac of Come, ye ete of aay —Those who ar $ a dene aes ey are the another point of natural kingdom prepared’ for the very beginning, a kingdom has een se who are good. a. mangoes hungry and finds al with thirst, and in a lan @ drink indred and may he in the w and og Old Maieanent, the no one inviting bith t) sbel- wsick, . ¥ in pris- edingly. ex- ‘ill-elo} Tt was more dif- clothe an fl anit wa: at, or drink, or shelter, ‘The re Frequently abandoned,or jally if the nee “is en saw we thee — The surpris- n they are themselves prais- For had they: y would have would have ‘bi vere: tkey » or thirsl is tranger, or naked, or a " ae inconceivable feet in awe ry thought that Inasmuch as ye did it unto ug fire is “| particularly, Pitiable Sights dn the Road db tas alias and Brussels. Kinds of Vehicles. these fae ve did it unto me — pis se words are He ¢limax bring bringing fear to the ones who still ignored. To count as a serv ice to the Christ the giving of the piece of bread, or a cup of water, r the right hand of friendship to anyone whom they might have found in the streets or out in the open country, was foreign to their minds. and yet when attention is ealled to the rela tionship between jsuch a dnty and the duty of | loving , they see the c the two, and they realize ‘xutigh Fh bi eel description | their and. obligotions in a new 41. Depart from me, ye cursed é cursed of e F as the blessed are blessed eh “the Father. 1 ‘athe: curses no one. And ‘the everlast- not prepared for but-is prepas and his angels. The fact are the devil that they place which was to be the abode aE the Evil ‘One and his close ciates makes the partic this upon themselves. 42-45. In these verses the tive of the facts set 39 is presented. bring nega- t forth in verses 46. . Bternal. punishment eas etetnal life—The word . ‘‘punish- *’ comes fromthe Greek verb punish, the thought be- ing of the free that is ng Da ed, but is cut back so as to giv a chnnee at another ty Satae rowth. The word ‘‘eternal’’ comes from the Greek word m i stn of Man are to be cut. back, pruned, and be subjected to this treatment for along period, so that if there was any aa in them, to bud ) nd develop phreali atone ever, this judgment is mot to “be taken as referring tothe future ve -al- life, as though ithowe who hav ly passed t micas towa: unto them bs they are, he 8 the righteous in oy parable A nana Mies donde remmuadeie y had never seen him, and yet by ministeting unto their fellow n had ministered unto tia} #0 may he who has no powers to dis- cern the actual being of God veal vital relationship -to ad in every act. of loving kindnes pt BRET Heaney HE'S EVERYBODY'S FRIEND EXCEPT HIS OWN. My heart grows soft: and thellow when I think of one dear fellow, Among the many fellows I anion His preaéiice brings me ot bea and chases tears and ne is Fete 8 ae except He jis clever. and einen and is never heard abusin; A man in an ithertabls tone, But he eyer tries to teach ae that his sta can reach rae is everybody's fr fone? bextopt his own Then he never makes e Cs if you ask him for a dol ‘0 help. another hua, quite unknown, | And he’s liable to make it a couple if'you'll take it. He is ae eribody: 8 Triend except his o though This poeevsle funny how he throws 8 money, te: i he wonders where And “3 enya cae anid his* a aces He “twill be-all the same hereafter: uhh He ese eeae friend except Oh, his faults aye sy many—and © never saves a penny; set hin inful Meade oft make the areal But iets he wastes: his ney, emile is bright aeees sunny He oe seit las friend except And still he keen.on living—toiling, trusting, givin, And ayer dhawing néarer to the I vous iti in eas en he’ll be seold- forgiv pens aykrbodt s friend except his own etal: Suly,. 21, 1914. these my brethren, even / A Continual Stream of Refu- PTESCSOTV TO DODET Young Folks SL LBSSOBOOBA™ VO Jack and the Lily Tt was a lovely li so. One tall slend by three of the be soms, Mrs, Elwin was very proud of it “I think that if it doesn prize at the flow , Thomas, % will cs ep be highly commend id to her gardener one pean n crowned | rerfect b & his mother’s side eachout oub one nd clasped: it about ack stood by it, my boy,” said his-mother qu “Gt is very ten- dst, and a raughandteapmte iakap res days sessed Raman Eeias the evening before the flower show, and Jack was in the garden by him a bi great wish seized ‘tia closer, He clasped about the pale rew it towards ‘him: almost on a Bre i) ‘his face. when crack he sti ¢ lender and the beantiful red lily could hold its head erect no longer. The ie ott boy's face went ali crimson, ears aa into his great honest blue “Run Wea run anyone sees you,’ away, before pe came into hs. giah read Urusned for it would not be true!” ¢ sid ike Jack, and he ran indoors as fast as ie short, sturdy legs would carry hin Mother looked up he wnile'es he entered the room, Then she held ou her arms and said: ‘““Come here and Be me what. is the matter, resi "Oh, mother, mother,’ sobbed the little boy with ‘his curly head “T have been ery naughty. I touched the lily and it is broken. Oh, mother, please for; give me, but punish me first if you other seiiled: It was such an absurd ending to ‘his speech, and ae never had whipped Tack in all on her shoulder. ry, vi < = the five years of his life. ‘“Nherag! there, darling; ie tpey patting his ourly ‘hhead,. ‘let 0 and look Per! hace Pi is not so bad sit, The stem had snap- at ne in me right place, mother tly where she ‘had intend- oO joy! ! the lily took the prize Ab. the flower how after all. But mother said o kissed Jack's sete Riniuay face the night alter the flower show there something a valued far more than the prize, and, that was a little son who was brave enough to speak the truth. paid aah GERMANY’S SECRET HOARD. $30,000,000 Stored Away in Tower Spandau, The German Government has. 130: 000,000 marks ioe tgs) ,000, - 000) stored aw vay ‘war chest’’ in the famous iia Tower at Spandan, an island at the con mapa tary reserve fund of. six millioes sterling,”’ Early Jast year it was reported from Berlin, which is only eight. miles from Spandau, that Be ferman r programme con- templated tripling the treasure, but if such a move was made it has not been annow; f The Julius Tower mbotdeds. in mystery. has been demnity paid | he eines German war. Although it en estimated that the money ea ‘ba exhausted in a day and a half in case of actual war, the fund has been reserved for the expenses of a quiet mobilization of the Ger- man army, to pay for horses and supplioe already contracted for an ngen vs The tawer of Spandan stand the midst of a citadel surrounded by barracks and officer’s quarters, not far from the great German ar- senals and manufactories of war ca eld It is cylindrical, massive magonry, about foxty feet high and almost as thick. he Ba sh is guarded by three steel | posing to invade and conquer Is- was | CO! INDICTMENTS “Peac2 on Earth, Uiood Q) T the Lord, Ye shall not hah a nzainst your brethrea,.— Shri ue 4. (2) Go made of one blood all nat rh "ot men for to dwell on the face of the earth—Acts xvii., 26. utara command which He had gathered to- ge are told, no less than “an Runa and onsmogte thous- Ty ich were war- pro- th hese he was rael, which had reballed against his rule. But no sooner had he. Saf tialled this great host for the car paign than there came the rokel ‘of the Lord forpidding him to “fight against (his) A oriers return to “his ved And behold! the narrative | ells us that the King and his men “obeyed the word of the Lord and returned. Regarded as Brothers, his pipesnetsiarrinatis have a perfect understanding of re- ligion’s indictment Speiaat war “Ye shall not fight against your ”* saivh the L But who are not ou “brethren!” ? Tn @ ly, as intercourse was iw retail He Ideal Which [ust Be Realized AGAINST WAR Will Among Men” Is An Pomel atahioeaip broadened, al relsitionshins tribe and tribe city-state an city-state. By and by nations. were formied~ rent and torn full often, to sure, by civil conflict, but still na- tions—and all men’ within the bor- » ders of each nation were regarded | as brothers, At. the Jews pneines the les. now, this later ar of civilized develontianes the more or cidental ba: riers of nationality and un the field of Racy tact Dis ly; bub, still surely, we are ete to recognize, the essential Kinship of Humanity, ‘¢ common membership of all na- fobs and races in the one great family af God, Be univensal en therhood of man, To-da: no separate nical 8 nationalities, We are ‘‘m pee xl’; we are dowered with one we are brothers, and love is the a of life. Nes Just here do we have the divine truth which is destined, sooner or later, to make wars “itt rumors of war impossible. word, “Ye hall not fight Kenney your breth- ‘ich applied of old time 3 =f applies to each nal “on the face of the earth” *) ward every other nation. Brother= hood is now seen to be universal, and therefore ee on earth, which opened by a en of simultane ous keys held by different persons. he Chancellor of the cae) holds one set and the president the committee for debts of ihe opine another, The t by twenty-frane g that was paid by stored ik bags in ths built: in the walls in vari- 8 levels reached (by a spiral stair- li guard is usually mad s tiwenty- “fia! men, eight of them n duty constantly, changing every van hours. A patrol ismade about as Jed at ae tower inside and on year the gold is weighed By bulk for an official ac, Th of the. trea- ge Bs Tie nee changed, There was an attempt at robbery on the part of a drunken co! sbbler, who got into the mysterious fashion, he was half way up the staircase db his. neck. Only one aig at thas been known to a Angeles. exter, Madoniag to ae story, ask- the sentinel to see the ‘com mander ea then sli ihped into the (the sentry turned hi back He ot into serious trouble with the Skandia authorities for going too near the treasure, but finally eserivited them of the inno- cence of his purpose. The tower has excited great curiosity on the part of German tourists, but sight- seers are not relecmet on the T ‘land of Span Other aptie! ein considered it a waste of money for Germany to aie the Anya reali dau, because n cos last rae about a de and a ance) so that the agy might last as war, gregate fund long roy a week in time of 4 —— GERMAN MULATARISM CAUS It Is to End It That Britain Must Make Sacrifices, In a letter which Mes read at a meeting of his constituents in Ber- sae oneer Sir Edward Grey, ref Foreign Affairs, made “olowing report on the war ihe situatic OW. ish our sincere and strenuous eflorta to prevent a European war ld gladly haye stood aT : PEE S nme! to waive that condition and condone the violation of a solemn treaty. There could be Init one honorable peal we should indeed have been detested by our friends and despised our enemies. * “The Ee Rend ees war has re- vealed what pts immoral thing fev pants snftgari m da. It is against German airman that we m The whole « Europe would fall under it if Ger m Jd be successful in’ this w f, asia result of the war, the. sadeeadenes and integrity of the oa Europeran states can be si and. western Europe itberated from the menace of Ger- n militarism and the German people, ae freed from militarism— ‘ot the German people but i i Which ~ has nnn and Eutope into SLSosessssSSen se Fashion Hints Fads and Paneies. sae is a modish trimming and appears on Se saa on ot mall pats skirts well as~ sleeves and sash A new blnek ee hat is un- trimmed say r ee rire, of smaill, ‘brillia “a tspread ot and fastened flat en the ae of the hat. far many of the coats shown button rather snugly about the throat, ne anes ott of mixed in a the ¢ es shows inked a ol k sada and the se Belt ine fold close about the neck. A cape of knitted wn and ab: tached by snaps to Heecne 8 ripe is a nove: eit ty that attracting a \d deal of ablentiod pees people ue like a light weight and compact Tt ou the wrap for outdoor sports. to be a great favorite in tumn, A cape asa part of the frock oy coat is ee ustial thing now. . Ofte: a part of the reel? aus cially pretty cape costume of figur- ed crepe has an attached white sat: m cape that hangs from a frilled ruff fastened by straps to the should ers, There have been many showings of fur and velvet Sea in the last few weeks them ae br ean proportion The | fur coat is always more iatareotlng in appearance than the sort one, And the eanly models, wide, flaring skirts often tapes of with @ contrasting dur, are pe seri Jux- i Some of t) erous model is ot gold t shraade on the collar along the lower edge. Pa has self-covered buttons of lar size, and still others show sitar and pewter ‘buttons. =k BISMARCK'S WAY. Preferred Killing Prisoners to Take ing Them Captive. Reports that uh Germans have. een giving “No quarter’’ to any at the Belgian, Deasantry who op- - josed them are, it i Rusaeented, abit suck la ey us ald to” Bism *'Priso) prisoners |" exclaim ce at tants Er one of ‘aa nce Frederick Cha yictor= jes. “What the devil 3 we want with prisoners! Why don’t , they make a battue of them! an a "ree ed to m stormed be i * of 18,000 y volunteers Fs 7 company’ granted terms of surrender, een thonsond prisoners who not even Frenchmen !’’ he’ cried by. on earth were they Pituara tot may, have BivetAde the taking of pri na but his pre- judices obviously had no effect in the Fraheo-German War, rag ing to Moltke, who wrote the . ficial: histo: the campaign, French pyigoners pe. the ex- traordinary woe and, 702,048 men. But ly 250,000 were the vd who were “ies nominally + $0,000 nore sented the ribs aos deductions, ersyvand men were pe ally. imp sever an were seleased ‘only when F iy 207 mses declared, doo: its! one entrance, each