PAflR TWfl THE CANADIAN STATESMAN ROWMANVILLE THTTR~flAY IUMW. i 7H, i 09A I _____________________________________________________ New Shoes for Old Don't be too proud ta have yaur Huflbut's rebuiît at factary. They will corne back ta you about like new. They will be enlarged a size ta, keep pace with the grow- lng feet. [HURLBU T1 SheseChÎldren - We flot only seli, but recam- anend therm. 9 Fred. Knox, BOWMANVILLE ONT. en the care and ~vi1 . ent 'Yeu EAGLE BRAND Condensed M"I The Borden Co., Limiled MONTREAI e26 Importer direct of SCOTCH AND SWEDE - GRANITES and ouly the boat grades of VERMONT BLUE MARBLE I employ no cemetery caretakers as agents preferring ta seIl my own gooda thus saving the purchaser the agent's commission. A cal olicited. F. H. BOUNSALL Proprietor Bowmmnville Phone 326W Box 94 ~~.I~7 STOV E~OIH CHIROPRACTIC AND DRUGLESS THÈROPY DURWIN E. STECKLEY honor graduate of Toronto College of Chiropractie will be in the Bow- manville Office Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday evenings, phone 141J. Residential calîs made during i'ore- naons. DENTAL DR.. G. C. BONNYCASTLE Honor graduate in Dentistry Toronto University. Graduate of the Royal College of Dental Surgeons of On- tario. Office King St., Bowmanville. Office phone 40. House phone 22. DR. J. C. DEVITT Graduate of Royal Dental Coliege, Toronto. Office, King St. East, Bow- manville. Office hours 9 a. m. to 6 p. m. daily except Sunday. Phone 90a. House phone 90b. DR. R. E. DINNIWELL Honor -graduate of Toronto Uni- versity and member of Royal College of Dental Surgeons. Licensed ta practise in Ontario and the Domin- ion. Dentistry in aIl its branches. Office-King %St., Bowmanville, op- posite Bank of Montreal. Phone 301. LEGAL M. G. V. GOULD, B. A., LL. D. Barrister, Solicitor, Notary Money to boan on Farm and Town Property. Royal Bank Building, Bowmanvilie. Phone 351. W. R. STRIKE Succ.ssor to lat. D. B. Simp..m, K.C. Barrister, Solicitor, Notary Soicitor for Bank of Montreai Money to Loan Phone 91 Bownmville, Ontario W. F. WARD, B. A. Barrister, Solicitor, Notary Money ta boan. Bonds for sale. Offices-Bleakley Block, King St., Bowmanville, Ontario. Phonos: OfiRce 102, Hanse 409. FUNERAL DIRECTORS F. F. MORRIS CO. Ca'mpiete Motor or Horse Equipment AlCatIspremptly. attended to. Private Ambulance B'awmanvilie phone 10ran toe4 10 andStor3s Orono & Newcastle ALAN M. WILLIAMS Einbalmer and Funerai Director. Cails given prompt and personal at- tention. No extra charge for dis- tance. Phones 58 or 159, Bowmsn- ville, Ont. 3-tf. MEDICAL B. J. HAZLEWOOD, M. D., C. M. GoId Medalist of Trinity University, Toronto. Four years attending Phy- sician and Surgeon at Mt. Carmel Hospital, Pittsburg, Ks. Office and Residence, Wellington Street, Bow- manville. Phone 108. C. W. SLEMON, M. D., C. M. Gr#duate of Trinity Medical Coilege, Toronto, formerly of Enniskillen. Office and Residence, Dr. Beith's former residence on Church Street, Bowmanville. Phone 259. 44-t. VETERINARY DR.* F. -. TIGHE VETERINARY SURGEON. Day or Night calîs promptly dttended to. Office: King St. East, Bowmanville. Phone 243. E. G. KERSLAKE, V. S., B. V. Sc.1 Orosso3 Honor Graduate of University of Toronto. Ail cases given p:ompt and careful attention. Office-t Dr. MeElroy'a former offce. Phones: Clarke 3921; Orono 18-1. AUCTIONEERSt THEO M. SLEMONt Auctionear Farm and House Sales a Speciaity. Terms moderate. Enniskillen P. O.è Phone 197r3. 1-tf. WILLIAM MAWt Uic.nsed Auctioa.az Having met with considerable suc- ceas in conducting sales for the past 19 yeara, I now offer my services to the people of Bowmanviile and vie-t inity. For terme and dates see F. ( 0. Mason, Bowmanville, or phonet 288. Whltby, Ont. 12-t.e STEAMSHIP TICKETS M. A. JAMESt Te Europe-Canedian Pacific, White. Star Dominion, Cunard, American. A.sk for informatiou. Phoneo5.0 Statesman Office, Bowmnanville. BARGAINS IN WALL PAPERS IBefore ordering your Wall Paper Igive me a caîl, as 1 have a large Iselection of new papers at be* prices, aiso, specials. Phone 431. IJ. H. ABERNETHY Concession St. Bowmanville NOTICEn I amn prepared to aupply youra needa for almost ail kinds of fuel. No. 1 CHESTNUT COALn HARD AND SOFT a WOOD t CARTINO DONE Blake Wilkins KIag st. W. Bowmaavllie Phone 340 & 1 0 THE EDITOR TALKS "Make Canada a land to love" says The Montreal Witness. Hon. John S. Martin, Minister of Agri- culture for Ontario says: Ontario is a land of sunshine witb a moderate climate, and is a province of thous- ands of fine farmn homes. Ontarl o ha3ý upwards of 200,000 farms and an annual agricultural production aggreg-ating nearly haîf a billion dollars. More than haîf the populaiion ne- sides in towns, cities and villages, constituting a convenient market for the bulk of farm produce. A splendid system of -permanent bighways connects the various parts of the Province. Schools, churches and other con- veniences are everywbere available. In addition to primary education there are excellent facilities in this ,Province for higher education in ag- riculture, arts, medicine, engineering and other professions and occupa- tions. Also the rivers and lakes vary the scenery and constitute an excellent water suppîy, as well as in many places xnaking available hydro-eleet- ric energy at low cast. New Ontario has millions of acres of virgin soul, much of which is tirnbered. Here land is available to the settler at a nominal price of fifty cents per acre. Ontario invites men who will work on ',the land, men who desire to se: cure a farmi home under improved conditions ;men who desire to secure a farm home under pioneer condi- tions. Women wiio are willing to take positions as domestic home workers. Anyone who desires ta visit in order to see fine scenery or hunt or fish. W* s* The Farmer's Advocate of London, Ontario, for June 3, wus a Canadian number and a person who reads what is said of the several provinces of this Dominion must feel proud to be a ciliizen of this wonderful country. Canada covers baîf a continent and is stili a "new" country. This basic fact alone masures development and a vast increase in population; for one cannot conceive of any ca- price of Providence that will prevent the milling populations of the world from seeking out the lands-of oppor- tuntty, nor can one believe that the vaults will be locked on the available capital of the weaitby nations wben such untold natural riches lie dor- mant and untouched. Hon. W. R. Motherwell, Minister of Agriculture for Canada expresses bis faith and pride in Canada ir. the following message: "A cou ntry pro- ducing annuaiiy $1,500,000,000 worth of merchaiuble agricuitural products from its 700,000 farms is a country wîthout a peer, and just such a country is Canada. Canada has a moderate and healthy clim- ate, great farrning possibilities for those in a position to take advantage of tbem and insures, toalal wba will work intellige-ntly on ber lands, a comparatively sure return for their labors. Durîng the past quarter ofI a century Canada bas increazeed her output of bard spring wbeat by over 1,000 per cent., and she bas now at- tainend the enviable distinction of being the largest exporter of wheat in the world. The production of live stock and live stock products, coarse grains, fruit, timber products, minerais, etc., bave also increased wi,.h almost relative rapidity". Who wouldn't be a fariner in sucb a great country with sucb a record and promnising outlaok for the intel- ligent industrious agriculturist? It seamz, to us that the free out-of- doors life is the naïlural life of the human race. Tbe persan wbo can travel tbrougb Ontario's settied dis- I tricts and not be tbrilled hy the scen- ery at this season must be a dullard indeed. A. J. Charman truthWfullyl writes in Farm and Home: There are days at almoso any seasan of tbe year in our nortb temperate latitude wberein the air and the cartb make a harmony which stirs emotions like those awakened by good music, and mankind rejoices, tasting for a mo- ment that simple joy of living which is a heritage we have aIl biu bart- ered away for a mess of pattage in the rush of modemn life. On a spring morning in this coun- try in its sweet promise of returning life to the earth, wben the siivery .sprays of the wiliow outside my win- dow are waving gently in the mildest, of breezes and the robins are calling in tbe underbrusb, there is nothing ta desire of aIl that one reads of the glowing bours of soutbern chines. Nature bas done so mucb for Can- ada. The mucb boomed southern coun- tries of the Republic ta the souihi of this Dominion can offer notbing that would take the place of our earliest days of spring and one is fartunate ta live wbere their gra- ciaus influence may be fully known -for it cannat reacb luise heart througb walls of concrete and steel, nor can the robin's voice ho beard amidst the roar of cities. Life in the <>pen is the real life. A writer in the agricultural press says: During a year's residence near town, after fifteen speit~ in a remote settiement an tbe coast the writer ba.s been debating this question of town or cauntrv life very earnestly in bis own mind, and this spring finds bim resolved ta retturn àxt the first oppartunity ta a way of living that seenis natural and proper ta bim, perhaps by înherited tenden- cies from miany generatiins of yeo- men farmers. The ordinary farm offers a reasan- able assurance for tbe future, how- ever plain the living-whieh many anxious people witb families have riot, in the cities-and occupation of a wholesoxne and can-,enial kind. Witb these ta aid it is a poor soul that cannot win ta same cantentmest and peace of mind. After ail, it is a question of what, n life, seems desirable tû )ne, and t was a wise mnan wbu ,aid, 'Tbougb we travel the worid over ta find the >eautifuî we must carry it witb us or we find it net". THE EDITOR TALKS Folks who are fit for -country life, and who know the desire of the earth in Spring, usually realize their mod- est ambition in time, yet would flot some practical seittlenient plan of helping our own people-as weli as newcomers from overseas-to estab- lish themselves in country homes witb fair prospects of a living in return for labor be a boon to many, and good business for ail? In many 'and various waiks of life -sometimes in very unexpected quarters-we have lately met those wb.o have cÔme ta the realization that for them and theirs the oid sane, simple wayý of life of our grandparents offers the only relief from conditions in which they can find no happiness in their own work, nor cao they play any more. If any onle can find the happy, geniai lîfe in a town or city that a good home on a good farm in a srood comniunitv affers we have no desire to discuss the country life vs. urban life witb them. But for the m asses country life has much to offer. The Globe's Vacation Number ap- peared on Saturday, June 12th and the fourteen pages comprising the Summer Resort, Hotel and Travel Setion are of intense interest and value to tourists in the Pro'vince of Ontario especiaily. To n'ost town and city f olk- when summer comes the call of the great out--of-doors sets them to planning for their annual holidays. For health, recreation and education the man of business, the professional man and those engaged in shops, factories and other indoor employment the greait out-of-doons appeals strongly. Now that niotor roads touch almost every great Cana- rdian waterway in this Province and give access to the fashionable resorts and great strtches of wilderness like Algonquin Park and other Northern ,wids the desire of the tourist can be gratified and The Globe's splendid Travel Number wili materiaiiy help ail to make sélection for spending an ideal holiday in our own country at minimum of expenditure. We congratulate The Globe management on their capital vacation edition. BIG DOLLAR OFFER We want to add 200 new sub- scribers ta aur already large lust and make this liberal offer: To any persan who has not been a subscniber to this journal for one year, who will send us One Dollar, The States- man wiil be sent from now to January 1, 1927, ta any past office in Canada or Great Britain. To United States 25c extra. ,This means eight full months for a'dollar. Enclose a dollar bilI wth the address and we wili do the rest.I I THE PRESS The annual meeting of Selected àTown Weeklies of Ontario was held -at King Edward Hotel, Toronto, Fri- tday, June 4th., when these officers fwere elected: Hon. President-J. W. sEedy, Journal-Argus, St,. Mary's; President-C. H. Hale, Packet- sTimes, Orillia; Vice-President--F. J. ýA. Davis, Central Canadian, Carie- ton Place; Secretary-Treasurer- Geo. W. James, Canadian Statesman, Bowmanville; Directors-H. F. John- eston, News, Tillsonburg; T. L 1Barnecott, Express, Aylnier; G. M. eGoodfel]ow, Gazette-Chroniele, ,W>itby; L G. Jackson, Era, New- 1market. r The Selected Town Weeklies fis a cooperative organization of ,representative Ontario publishers who are banded together for mutual benefit. It is regarded as a model organization of the kind ,and its efforts have resulted in bringing the weekly newspapers very proanînently to the attention of national adver- tfisers-Toronto Globe. Weekly newspaper publishers of sCanada hold their annual convention at the Chateau Frontenac, Quebec City, on June 16 ,17 and 18. A wel- corne will be extended to the Asso- ciation by the Mayor of Québec, and also by the Premier of the Province. In addition to, the regular busi-ies3 of the Association, there will be bd- fdresses by proniinent American and Canadian speakers. Provision is made for a trip to Ste Anne de Beaupre and also Montmrency Falls. The 1city will entertain the wîves of the 1publishers during the business ses- sions, in boat trips on the St. Law- rence, and social functions. At the rclose of the convention there will be a trip by special boat to Chicoutimi. A stop will be made at Murray Bay on the St. Lawrence for the evening, where a dinner and dance at Manoir Richelieu ,will be given. At Chi- coutimii the pulp and paper milis Lwill be visited and also the big new aluminum works now in course of construction. The c4ties of Three Rivers and Sherbrooke have also sent pressing invitations to the members of the Association to visit these cit- ies. THE NEW ALBERT COLLEGE United Chape), to Assume Financial Responsibillity. % Important changes in the adminis-ý tration of the fine new Albert Col- lege, Belleville, are foreshadoiwed. The United Church is, taking over tQbe college, and it will be carnied on under United Church financing; a new principal will be named short- ly. Rev. Dr. E. N. Baker will be President Emeritus and will be given a very important work to do in car- rying on his ideals with respect to the new Albert, which hereafter will be a secondary coilege for boys only. 3 o Ddt MâaRiýne wSTARRED Wirth Goodycs Achli vementé TNDUSTRY today stands debtor to JGoodyear for money-saving, time- saving, profit-making developments in industrial rubber goods-belting, hose, packing, valves. Those who remember industrial con- ditions ten years ago will'remember that Goodyear forced on industry's attention the virtues of a new kind of rubber belt. The Goodyear "sealed seam" elim- inated ply-separation. Goodyear praduced the all-weather Kling- tite farrn beit which forever took the belt troubles out of farm work. Goodyear first used tire tread stock for the caver of a conveyor belt-stack so tough that it immediately added greatby ta the life of the belt. Goodyear, toor used this same tread stock ta givc industrial hase the protection it needs against abrasion and rough handling. I s. Goodyear developed the houe construction which elirninated the costly, trouble-rnaking wire winding. Goodyear pioneered the production of special hase for special uses. This palicy of development and advance is continuous with Goodyear. It neyer ceases. Any tinse yau cansuit a Goodyear man, ho is able ta advise you with the knowledge af the latest development of Goodyear engin- eers. For any problem of beltixug, hase, packing, valves which you rnust meet, get in touch with the Goodyear Industrial Goads dealer or with the nearest Goodyear branch. The Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. of Canada, Limited, Halifax, St. John, Quebec, Montreal, Ottawa, Toronto, Hain- ilton, Landon, Fort William, Winnipeg, Saskatoon, Regina, Calgary, Edmonton, Vancouver. Goodyear means Good Wear "«BUY FROM THE DEALER WHO DISPLAYS THIS SIGN" GOOD~A m A DE 1N CrA NA'D 13ELTS BOSE PACKING The -Joq of Cool Cookinç with a FindlaYi Ii7ectric- z ~. flot Plate Hot Plate0or RangettepltwtpraW omen, for less, in many cases, than the extra wiring necessary to instali an electric range. The Findlay Hot Plate does the same faultiesa Cook- ing as aur rnost expenaive alectric range. The elements are each adjustable ta three degrees af heat.' The aven, which is sald scparately, is very efficient ini raasting and baking. The Hot Plates with speedyý range eleanents require an extra wire ta the meter, but are misa furnished with smaller elements ta attach to walI or base boqrd sockets. For sale at Blectrical deaiers and Hardware *tores. Write (hJ 9Hisfory VALVES THE CA14ADIAN STATESMAN, BOWMANVILLE THURSDAY. JUNE 17th.. 1926. PAGE TWO à 2 L .290W <1 ý-