Ontario Community Newspapers

Milverton Sun, 3 May 1917, p. 7

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The Milverton Sua | pagal Pines RVERY aoa rapes ‘The Sun Printing Office Main Street = MILVERTON, wa Gubscription rates:--One year, er Bbc Infadwance, Sabectibers i feare will be nb! Spey #4.00 per vertising rates on a; mavens Pe Advertise without » recto pits tnterted until forbid and charged a ‘hanges for contract adve ectlaeients must pein tie aaice by noon Monday, MALCOLM MacBETH, ronto, Publisher and Proprictor. | ® BusinessCards Dr. M. C. Tindale, L.D.S. Honor graduate Toronto University. CROWN and BRIDGE WORK a epectatty, |! "Phone No. 38, Office; Over Bank of Nova Scotia, Medical. elect of t this - Address care ot The ar eres. to Professor wi ern ean thoy are reaetv it is advisable where, innmadlate + reply imped and stars vals) Weetiene when Question—G, fps 1 plow ish . full crop of clover, would I have to bs took a crop and plowed in the after- math? I have no stock except fowls Dr. P. L. Tye Office: Puntic DRvo Storm, MILVERTON Hours: 10 to 12 a.m,, 2 to 4 p.m, an 8p. Legai HB. Morphy, K.C. Solicitor for Bank of Hamilton, “Listowen. MILVERTON, Offices: Pace ‘Milverton, vs Money to Loan, F. R. Blewett, K.C. Solicitor for the Bank of Toronto, t Gordon Block eTRATEORD, ONTARIO Harding, Owens & Goodwin’) “lover or ito other cover crop, for that| vay Barristers, Solicitors, &c. Gordon Block, - STRATFORD, ONT. Money to Loan, ATWOOD, i'ttle m: and two horses, therefore Tele stable manure. ones I intend to use a ne of pi ite. nsw Present price of -y in most fee ind the form ‘of faviltiesry, use a “torte containing 2 to ee turned under in his r It is|very questionable, and ecially at the aki btiee of practically all farm feed ai ee aa at the vate of 200 tivo The westion— Wha distance apart should the rows of Indian corn planted Sota what distance ie the KO MAKINO W, 0, OWNKG Ww. ¥. Q0ODWIN a 2 any: Kernels should Saree | put ina hill? wish to get as much ee ig cath AR Hipened a ee ae aml J. W = Barr, V.S. Graduate of Ontario Veterinary College, Toronto. ‘Tecals ali diseases of domesticated animals Alt calls promptly attended to, Soeole 12. i Milverton Lodge No. 478 ALE, & ALM,, G.R.C. Meets every Mond mains on or before full moon every m in their ball in J, B. Well vas brethren sine alkane W. J. Zoeger, Sec. Silver ony nanos No. 202 Meets every eH fae: at 7.90 fa thete tall over ne of Hamilton. W. K, Loth, G. A. Barth, NG, Fin.-Beey. Rec.-Seoy, Notary Public. W. D. Weir, - Auctloneer for the iets of BP and Waterlo Conveyancer, aeean: wills, eiinesd Lead and peer made. itr OMce: Wele block, over Bank of Nova Scotia A. Chaimers, - Conveyancer, Issuer of Marriage Licenses ‘J.P. for the County of Perth, Real estate bought and sold. A few choice eins for Immediate sate, MONKTON, — ONTARIO Nelson Merrick, - Auctioneer for Waterloo, Wellington and Perth Counttes. Estimates given om sales of facms ~ and far ks. Office, next to Bank of Nova Scotia, Linwood A, Notary Public your cas Notary Public x ther. south we go the “farther Hei the rows of corn Cadena by me Henry G. Bell. ent Ie to place at the a Ops the vadvice of an acknowh Py od authority pry a nities pertaining to soils and ct ee Soraeany: FB hal igh To Ht ay column lope tia enclosed with the ee ahi) be mailed direct, t|ripenedcorn aa possible. be} If he wishes the average milk ‘has been passed, and there is no doubt ae erage stnining will a the cl the product e' Taunton have one Presence of ane _in the ks 26 Henry G. Bell, in ssary that has been clean up t separating started. @ separator no out removes great deal of the and the greater the distance between ! out much of the undesirable Bactatie the hills, For instance, in the th | thi h part of the United States the im the milk at milking time, so ine ‘or the cow and for the milking iene marocthe aks this is reduced ‘to at ii is very gréat in least 86 cies ‘and some men even e assurance that milk delivered plant clos at the dairy, where pasturization tak2s | n The ce of kernels to the hill |Plsce, is free, or reasonably free, of tty of the oily ordinarily the| 20, in his turn, should reap a bene- her the soil the closer the corn can|t from the ultimate consumer to be paar, pipes says he wishes to get as much th If he does not care for the size of ears he can Plant much closer than if it is large| "The farmer's part of the undertak- ears that he desires. “The Nebraska| ing 6 supply pure, wholesome milk Experiment Station, found inst etre wit thont that 8, 4 or | cautions previous, even to the secre. ence. than with three and still less with five althly: than with four. One plant to the hill | Stes aly gave but two-thirds a Fae @ corn 8 /evitably get into the milk pail ma did three plants, plants gave) be as harmless as possible, he ‘ut H) sy less to the. acre than did Provide for a plentiful supply of sun- x 5: The corn was planted in light in his ctables. the! 5! fille three fest eight Inches apart each taille dea aiways Rapeae clean (or a Uttle cheaner) ‘all. the year round, as T would recommend that H. B, plant they would keep themselves his corn 86 inches apart each way, un-| good, well-drained pasture field, ‘and less the soil is extremely fertile vhen| the milkers obliged to. wear well- he might plant “a little closer, and| washed clothes, and take a bath fre plant three to four Kernels to tho hill. quently, the chances of the milk being to drill it, the stalks| satisfactory are pretty good. Of should be ten to twelve inches apart in| course, aeration of the milk and thor. @ row, unless the soil is exceptional- ough cooling, must also be attended to. eee ens Mothers and daughtere of all ages department. Initials only will be pu “nswer as a means of Identification, Iven In each letter, Addrese all correspondence for thi Woodbine Ave., Toronto. In the vacant spots in border res eee Phlox in white, ink and y sun. It is senna as be ety keeps oe fest, but, ts absorb moisture throne the rane of their leaves, and the: fore much benefitted by spraying | put Dahle roots should not be the rice until the weather is seitled and the ground warm. They are very | liable to cae in wet and cold ground. 4.| Bia you ever tty calles forthe large din the ces Can- nas being ite plants need space to sh ie best adva: ‘The Queens gre Rest ecremoaaiien for eoeeteat tear ther: ‘wo large Sample Rooms, OKO. F, PAULL, Prop., - Milverton, Om, ) CENTRAL Onena’ Beut Practical Training |) bees with Commercial, Short- |! Get our free catal DA, petheniree «= Principal | i A REPRESENTATIVE WANTED at once for MILVERTON a Aol tk tnclnd- rhea. Atk bia sein hs pre: STONE & WELLINGTON Whe Fonehiit edo hie ee 1897 TORONTO, ONTA! Revolution indicators for motors have been invented iy fe pee bheiwa to enable an ayiator t roughly his speed and distance faveiled. STRATFORD, ONT. jlotion on ds cunning cotton. ee | Tl is eight or ten figs in diameter, ease ricinus (castor oil plant) centre, surround with two circles of | cannas, hi King Humbert, outer Alphonse Bouvier: and Staion for the base bali leirele. As the canna ig tender | ‘plant it cannot fe ssknsterred to the) ;Permanent bed before June ist. avert, during aay, August and sepe| | tember Be careful to cut out all dried blooms and vod rods. It en- courage treer blooi ee eteas a conic ich I hope you will an ll ot pistache, % oun [refined table Walt th devine Poet resin, % dram; powered alum, jdram; white wax, 1% dra drams, Rub well into the fat bedtime, also after bathing nthe| nds. 2. Lotion for red, oily nose: | Sulphur precipitate, 1 dram; spirits of | |camphor, 1 dram; glycerine, 1 dram} 1s is mn to be about two and} one-half quarts, the amount depending | , much upon the temperature. of the: ain | at school. : Most Write on one side Mailed direct it Stamped and addressed envelope Is enclosed. in the |family physician rake ly fertile, when this Aitanes may be reduced to 8 to 10 inches The man who Bi cows is well fix- ed for raisin, es will eat ‘alfalfa vale and pay well for it. Tha’ wa: ‘oved the Ike age or other millfeed which it was customary to feed. t is essential that the brood sow be fed a well bal are cordially Invited to write to this ublished with each question and ite but full name and address must be (i of paper only. Answers will ®® | suckling the litter. Dairy by-pro- ducts, such ag skim-milk, buttermilk is department to Mrs. Helen Law, 236 85 the feeding Theta ne also splendid: foods sd thaamomit etiaierk done cc Pal ¢or" the: litter we omaing: times TF nt in a ‘rom an exam: { of any sediment disk Mane a , after all Donaible Lesson V. take fer. Fourteen INTERNATIONAL LESSON 9. —John 12. 12-26, Texto 120138, he common hike! ple (mai PN Fs is 8] ae di the masses eer the es,” § e brant oe aeecially as- ocii with Tamernacles, mot = ie of the Feasts Hosanna— ave!” (Psa, 118, 26: prayer ad+ essed to’ God, come to be sed rather like our “Hurrah!” but with a religious tone, like “God bless you!” He Hi Le cometh—The Messianic name. In the name—Join with Bless- ‘ound—Mark tells us how. a cae a of foe Hiliment a gent ale he would ¢ the people the pense i we animal su; ing a symbol of war—it way. sis ot for nothing clse—the ass e Zech, 9. 9. he oe ext is all concerned and pray and work for? It ig an in- tensely practical ideal—which is more r some “Second “Advent” dreams. 16. Glorified—For John thi “glory,” or complete self-revelation, culminates on Calvary. 1, The crowd that saw the great Sign j is busy telling. ehosecWhb gue tok story. harisees where the iede tel ean, who won their purposes by m: powerful their foul work for them (John 11. 47- . Here the e a to be the Divine way of truly enthron- ing him over the world—a vaster world -|than they could se He Helped. On the new brakeman’s first run there was a very steep gra ane engineer always had more trouble to get up this grade, but this time he came near sticking altogether, evenneys however, he reached the eT ooking out of cab, the engineer aw the new brakeman and said, with 5 a sigh of relie! We had hard job getting up, a ar did,” assented the new re , “and it T hadn't put on the tr ake we'd have slipped back.” Value of Seized Vessels, Roughly valued, 9t German-owned ment have a gross tonnage of 629,000 | actual value in view of scarcity of bottoms caused by war is much great- of the largest and | eas could carry 40,000 ieee ich is twice ag many as could od.|dairy by-products are not available, of this water is derived from Sats il nigavtan GULAEe Hie eee Ji4 A good ointment for dry skit supplement these feeds ie | made _of lanolin, two ounces; boro-|" Kitchen slops, ground barley and cold cream, six ORD formed the greater part of the | nces. 5, Whether one should drink | oto) of a pig which ‘took fost prize | mj oun or cold water before breakfast de- |" recat Ae Siig neaee pends upon whether the gastric juice| yun of an alfalfa pasture, he ha “| is too acid or not sufficiently acid. If/stroam at the foot of the ill tn the ne’s stomach does not make enough)... Ganaurted by the entire available merchant fleet of the United States, a ships will Gate to be drydocked to epair damage and it is estimated earliest time any of Vata could be put into service !s three months and ‘many could not be repli that soon. A conacience without God is a tri- |bui unal without a judge.—Lamartine, |hydrochtori acid, she should drink a | little cold water half an hour before Meals, because this will stimulate si a tric glands. — If one has too mucl cid she should take a glassful of rot trata tall nit Hout becore. cathe: if your Je girl’s school Mie fare not so as you would| Sweet cherries are yearly inereasing | cies reason may Petia her phyalenl| in popular favor; «and thi It is not at all likely vor will inoreate or diminish only as Shed is wilfully lazy and fered |the product put on the market is go od, | The first step would Here to have ¢ weby inceasing the demand; or} n exarination | poor, ther y deereasing 1 the consump-_| c brat ayesdatectavadetbld arowtiiy den- | tion. Mab nikiy ynce igo tie eet tal diseases, and things of that kind, ee | If she is free from these, it telat practically the same price per necossary to look elsewhere for the|basket; the sweets are much more dif- cause of her failure to do well at her pe to produce and to market than tho| studies. it perly nourished ? the right quantity of food at meals and cherry 2 tftie kind silted to. hee age? She, {should not be permitted to nibble be-! too much have increased u mdy. Too much food causes poison-| cherry orchard i Pall tesa | oa rae jng-of the train, while. too ‘tle of sides asset to any farm. i unsuitable variety causes the brain to| Location: Sweet ¢ shodidobet funetion freely owing to lack of planted on a steer, Ray nourishment. the second place, are you allowing her to have too much | spond any potter ‘tor abort treatment, | “gun” out of achool?. If she remain but planting on an unsuitable aatlie up late at night, and does not get suf flclent sleep in a well-ventilated room| prove fatal: she will be unfit for school work be- ing a locatio cause of physi Ean exhaustion. As gy: like 4 01 Therefore, eee choos-| a es, furnish sane ne he air which is ae Chase B proxi good, of course, but long, and frequent where a requisite number ae good pick- rides = the ch: in a state of ers may. he. had, nervous tension and eae which ee shipping facilities calle sour varidane were mar- | tl soil. No other tree fruit will re-| be soil will shipping quality, toca toteal NaDdleet Bigarrea (white), D and ae and frequent, and) Lambe bl SWEET CHERRIES: SOILS AND VARIETIES G, A. Robertson, St. Catharines, heavily and set sreoiy; When’ i full! mia few hours of kot sunshine as-! sisted by the presencs of saree of; be followed by a week or ten Boa of cold wet. weather, with perhaps a few degrees of frost, but if properly set. e calyx of the blossom forms a lit-| tle blanket to protect the tender full and this ation swells or as the stem insure a er creased steadily in ee e and ihe ee |when a few miles inland the few de DE ee but /grees difference in temperature may shorten. it materially, ae nob destroy. | ing it entirely for the season mercial standpoint, annu: aring is’ the most desirable, and coupled with this a fruit that is food, , color-and flavor and also ood in! The tree shonid be a rapid grower, strong ae hardy, if er: of ripening are: Black Tee oe 1 arn} ave also fr Sonu W Welcomed As King olden stlnguishing on, oe. Here i if the turning point of the Pl are ever’ vessels seized by the U. 8. Govern-|keep the tons and valued at $100,000,000, but | | ing the day. help In ainda Ae sarintles "the Christian’s natiy. daily bread,” is the lows raited Thtonet it come wisdom ripens after the Wind-| edge Made to-Measure Sane and Overcoats, Ithas always’ been our aim and ambition — 2 to give our customers the best possible é » satisfaction in the tailoring business. Our suits and overcoats are made in a high- class, careful manner. They have’ earn- ed their reputation from the way they are tailored as well as from the pure‘ma- @ terials from which they are made, The 3 : quality has always been a prime factor in our tailoring and always will be, We invite oN to inspect our stock, 0.D UFFIELD f% pate Talo, C Poulin Sell off all hens in their: third year, ' 88 soon as the rush of laying is over. ‘he last call for hatching“is now prove good winter layers. Brood chicks that are closely house- ed and fed too heavily are very likely to develop MAS too fast in propor- tion to their si it will me “the farmer no more money to raise pire “bred poultry than it will to ere oys aubest ake ent separ? cel from Sten Tf the two are cept together the turkeys are likely ee fae chicken diseases. Byes i cuipewmauts e fitted by thie n, Children's eyes a razed without asking quieatlon SATISFACTION GUARANTEED! reen Se? Produce 15 to 44 per cent, more \ ees at a feed cost of 15 to 86 per P. H. BASTENDORFF “Byeaight Specialist (MILVERTON, =~ = when gi sd vance Ate Stie ing. fowls egulire more eare- ‘ul attention than at any time in the year, All the accumulated debris of “ENGLAND, MY OW) winter lies ie surface. 81 Sree comes x warm spell, and the surface | Not what we hres but what we are, of the ground gets muddy, \shile the} ghall sen to everything |) f egal cbt) rr that touches it, This i sla direnled arnaci: hens dry and to give them Not ‘ia ee are, but what we pray straw to stand on and to work in dur- shal ethers her glorious oyer land and EAS Ee OD, Not oe unworthy prayers, but God The term.“Yankee” is ieee to alone ; have been derived from a corrupt pro-|Can make us and His untold purpose | nunciati ion of the word “English” by one. ~ PRAYER Through Communion With God Come Wisdom and Knowledge, Moral Strength and Decision of Character. —Jane Prothero Nott. “Ask, and it shall be given unto|the habit. of doing so ‘ night sna vin, you.”—St, Matthew, vii. our bedside, Our hen faced by. the great seat ies | prayers are certain ml peti- of life, which force one to realize his! tions that have become a own weakness and inufticliiey, thesrapanyes almost To jyearning for help from some higher |upon one’s knees is wholes, Tt power without hi self almost com- | humbl before One greater than pels a man to Lincoln used trae, and in those Padi of the say that he ee upon his knees yee jday s t aside for prayer pe bree cause he had nowhere else to go. cilowsthia custom, but pray realized that the pee len eels fifticul, | | offered without so do’ fis oes ties of decision which e to him | without ceasing,” says the Apostle— ‘could not be solv an without ‘the Bae aa carer, as we walk, as we vide, dist: tad or in the ye Mallee aid ane is a recognition of| of God's santas the: Christian prayer ia ‘far more! than this tl [thee ingredients ie into all forme ork: ig well we do it, nee manual labor becomes so mechanical as to require {but little thought. Study may become »jan intellectual habit aa require no fe ‘ort of the will, but in prayer these He has learned that simple petition factors are more eranly balanced than for one's material needs, while permit-| in any other oceupatio ted the forme "GWelus thle day our)" Prayer ig sasutGniia? est use of pray- er. He prays ser Prayer’s sake and while the soul is cleansed and expands | and is strengthened, the mark of pray- | er and God’s presence is stamped upon ‘The Power ‘of Prayer the cor Un LenALEE, so that Moses cover- Prayer. is communing with. God. rith a veil, sha oie hess and knowl- looked aan ‘Stephen “saw his een the face of an ange! eee Hons to is the Chatatin ia breath, | _ Effective nd moral strength, ier aceaaet promising, being of good velops decison ot character: we descend from: the mountain is the marae of ort, the early,|size a nd ey 2a I may also add tions, difficulties and dangers taken tofand | zsioln our fellows in the valley manner in which you are bringing up. y: et rs from say | Bing, both o being grown in the God in cs lose their power, and inj as we take up “a shee daily pur- the child must-be scrutinized to dis-'as early ‘as the 28rd o tthe tee peibening about. the, their place come seconity, strength, site ‘ne will “take knowledge of u¢. and cover the cause of her backwardness sometimes a¥ late as the 10th of: Mes), same orn, and is an excel. discernment and pow of our popular varieties’ bloom tently ‘favored cheery “ with Jesys,"—-Rey, t of us who Trey have formed, IRobert B, Kimbei HELEN, Div You DAVE M' NES Tom, AND | PUT. iT ie Back IN bys The Doings of the Duffs. =| Rook on rhe MaTcned | SHELF -—OR ON THE WINDOW SILL IN THE 5 BATH-ROoM —— ee Sythe ft

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