PAGE TWO 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. X-Ray Equipment in Office. DR. J. C. DEVITT Assistant Dr. E. W. Sisson Graduate of Royal Dental College, Toronto. Office, King St. East, Bow- manville. Office hours 9 a. m. to 6 p. m. daily except Sunday. Phone 90. House phone 283. X-Ray Equipment in Office DR. R. E. DINNIWELL Honor graduate of Toronto Uni- versity and member of Royal College of Dental Surgeons. Licensed to practise in Ontario and the Domin- ion. Dentistry in ail ite branch ès. Office-King St., Bowmianvillo, op- posite Bank of Montreal. Phone 301. LEGAL 34. G. V. GOULD, B. A., LL. D. Barrister, Solicitor, Notary Money to loan on Farm and Town Property. Royal Bank Building, Bownianvjlle. Phone 351. W. R. STRIKE 8uccasor to latm D. B. Simpo5m, IC. Barriater, Solicitor, Notary Soicitor for Bank of Montreal Money to Loan Phol. 91 Bowmanvillo, Ontario W. F. WARD, B. A. Barrister, Solicitor, Notar,' Money ta boan. Bonds for auIe. Offcs-Bleakley Block, King St., Bowmanville, Ontario. Phones- Office 102. House 409. FUNERAL DIRECTORS F. F. MORRIS CO. Complote Motwr or Horse Equîpment Ail caîi promptly Private Ambulance \~.V/ Bowxnanville phone 10 and 34 jBranch Store- Orono & Newcastle ALAN M. WILLIAMS Embalmer and Funeral Director. Cails given prompt and porsonal at- tention. No extra charge for dis- tance. Phonea 58 or 159, Bowman- ,ville, Ont. 3-tf. MEDICAL C. W. SLEMON, M. D., C. M. Graduate of Trinity Medical College, Toronto, formerly of Enniskillen. Office and Residence, Dr. Bith's former residence on Church Street, Bowmanville. Phone 259. 44-t. J. CLARK BELL (Successar ta Dr. A. S. Tille,') Hons. Graduate in Medicine, Abei deen University; Felaow of the Royî College of Surgeons, Edinburg] Office and Residence, Queen St Office Hours: 2 to 4 P. m., 6 to 8.30 p.n Bowmanviile, Phone 89 DRS. HAZLEWOOD AND BIRKS Physicians and Surgeons Office Hours: 1 ta 4 and 7 ta 8.30. Telephone 108 Office- Wellington Street BowmnanviJJe, Ontario. VETERINARY DR.* F. 7% TIGHE VETERINARY SURGEON. Day o Night calîs promptly attended to Office: King St. East, Bowmanville Phono 243. E. G. KERSLAKE. V. S., B. V. Sc. Orono Elonor Graduate of University of Toronto. Ail cases given prompt and careful attention. Office- Dr. McElroy's former office. Phones: Clarke 3921; Orono 18-1. AUCTIONEERS THEO M. SLEMON Auctioneer Parm and House Sales a Spocialty. Terme moderato. Enniakillen P. 0. Phono 197r3. 1-2. WIGLFXs More for your K. mone y Pu Keand thd best Peppermint Chewing Sweet for afty money cl3 1. rah hb. MHE CANADIAN STATESMAN, BOWMANVILLE, THURSDAY, JULY 19th., 1928. THE EDITOR TALKS 1 THE EDITOR TALKS Mr. F. lMounsdon, a Liverpool busi- Shakespeare, perhaps the greatest ness man, bas sent the editor a late writer of ail time except Homer, copy of The Methodist Times of Lon- made a comfontable littie f ortune don, England, containing a TaIk by (he was an excellent man of busi- a man signing "Histericus" on ness), but it was as nothing to the "Whither Are We Drifting"? This income of Bernard Shaw or Hall article is s0 welI and tboroughly writ- Caine, and is completely dwarfed by ten and so very timely that we de- the millions awarded by the public sire every Statesman reader to pond- of today to sueh purveyors of "lit- er most deliberately every paragraph, erature" as the Northcliffes and because bis statements apply as dir- Beaverbrooks and Rothermeres of ectly to Canadians. Historicus had our tinie. The ancient Greeks at the rcad a statement made in a daily heigbt of their glory and intellectual paper by Edgar Wallace that there achievement were as devoted to the is a slump in the theatre business in cuIt of athleties as the modern Eng- England and this set bim thinking lishman-with this d'iflerence, there and be tells what he tbought in these 1 was no money in Greek athleties. The paragraphs: only prizes were simple wreaths of * ~ *oak. or parsley, or bay. There were Assuming then that it is a fact, no silver cups or other trophies, no what does it mean? 1 imagine it big sums of money, no transference might mean one of three things. It of competing athietes fromn one town, might be mereiy a temporary trend, to anobter at £2,000 or its equivalenti soon to pass away. It migbt mean in dracbmae. that other forms of amusement were*** ousting the theatre from popular fav- Yet we are told we live in a pro-j our. For instance, the cinema, or1 gressive-blessed word, more blessed the wireless, or even greyhound rac-1 ever, than "Mesop>tamia"-age. Yes, ing ,the only f orm of racing, I un- 'but progressing whither? To tbe vold derstand, which can be indulged in1 of Hollywood, or to that great world at night. Or it migbt be the first lof light, and intellect, and physical indication that this generation was prowess where stand, and will stand beginning to take life more seriously. 1 everlastingly, the great saints, the, It is only the possibility of the third of these conjectures being true thati makes it worth wvhile to consider thel matter in a religious newspaper. Serious people of aIl classes and of aIl religious and social views have ong been greatly perturbed by many of the post war developments in this1 ountry. The tremendous devotion1 o amusements of aIl kinds._whether1 sport in the form of football, tennis,j or tiorse-racing; or indoor- amuse- ments, such as dancing, bridge, gramophones or wireless; or more sordid developments of these things,1 such as nigbt clubs and greyhoundi racing-all these things raise quos-1 tionings in one's mind. Whitber are we travelling? Wbat is our nation- al goal? 1 When w-e add to sncb considera-ý tions the inevitable sequel to thesel (levelopments, tbe fact that aIl, or aI- most al, the presperous industries in this country at present are iuxuryl and amusement industies-motor-1 ing, gramophones, wireless, silk' stockings. breweries and distilleries, 1 tobaeco comoanies. cinema vent1res:! etc, hil al te9reat sale tades that made Engiand great and wealthy are deprcsed-coai, cotton, wool, agriculture, mron, steel, shipbuilding, the questions rise stihi more insistent- ly in one's mmnd, wither are we tra- velling? What is our national goal? The biggest incomes in this country1 are made today, not by the men of biggest intellect in industry. in the professions, in polities, in literatune or in art, but by people with afl face", or 'propniotors of nwpp ens which purvey "piffle" or scandai1t spiey tit-bits, more or less accurat-( it is the spiceness that matters, not t the accuracy-or successful pugil- ists or other public ententainers. To- day the people who "earn" big in- comes are not judges, Cabinet minis- tors, mine ownors, masters of cotton or woollen milis, or shopowners, or groat engineors. The milionaires who are being made today are pur- t., sokingf, or mcotorecr s flm ctos THE WERRY PICNIC The Werry picnic of 1928 is an event which has passod into aistorv with other pienies of the clan .vhicb have takien place during the past 55 years. Weather conditions during' that period have been excued'nglv favor- able to the family gatlîeî hg so when an occasional rainy day h as fallen to theïr lot there has been littie of complaint, an<I geniality bas dispelîrd gloomn as greetings were ex.2hanged. After a night of rainelouds still hung low and heavy on Saturday morning, July l4th., m-bcn mentbers of the connection were hoping for warmth and sunshine to make perf.ect their pienie day. While there was little more than the dampness of a mist at Hampton Memorial Park where the pienie was to be held, local showers in various vicinities made a picnie in a park appear al'most an impossibility. However, loyal hearts won out, and these were rewarded. on arrivaI, by finding splendid accommodation in the church shed which was in ex- cellent order following the S. S. An- niversary. Thanks are extended to the Hampton United Church for their court esy. reticent cnilu irom narming imsefi by holding, within himseif, those diffi- culties and exporionces, which, if con- fided to sympathetie oars would be instantly dissipated. MY FAR-AWAY FR1 ENDS 1 arn thinking of frienids fan away; Precjous memr'ies are tbronging my mind; Bighter, these, than the light of day, My heant to my loved ones they bind. stokins, r mtorcar, fln FARM TRAINED MEN OFF TO 1,arn thinking of fniends fan away, mor prize fighters, et hoc genus omne.1 CANADA To mie they seem truest and best; Whither are we travelling? What is 'Mid sweet meditation I pray our national goal? Two parties of young mon from And praying and musing l'mi blest. 9 Government Training Farms in Eng- * * Sland and Northemn Ireland sailed for 1 arn thinking of friends far away; At he ametim th ,Canada by the Canadian Pacific S. S. How thankful for fniends 1 should be; At he aie tme hechurches are'I "Montlare" on Friday. The partY And I nover arn Ionely, for thoy haîf empty or more than haîf empty; consisted of aven 60 mon from ClaY- Are whispering comfort te me. the poiticians are ignore d by press don and Brandon Training Farms, and public; newspapers-such as give Norfolk, England, and aven 60 mon I am thinking of loved ones today th nws, accurate and impartial- frmRc-ilTann ap nte Whoae faces my eyes cannot sec; -are dyîng or are being bought up by North of Ireland. AhI these mon But they'ne in my souI's vision aIway putocratie and competitive vendons have acquired a gaad knowledge of 1 Sa, I know they are ever with me. of the popular snippety piffbe; serjous the essentiais of farm work duningi books have littIe or ne market. Two their course of training, and go f or- II arn thinking of fnrienda fan away; or aims only appeal to the vast major- ward ta assurod jobs on farms in On- S eems distance doth make tbem more 0. ity of the mon and women of to-dayljtanio, Manitoba, Saskatchewan, andl dea- e. -pleasure and money. Such is the1 Alberta, under Canadian Pacifie aus-1 But love knows no spaces, they Say, picture this age often seems to pros- picos which guaranteo farm jobs at ISo, my far-away loved ones are Cent ta tho onlooker. faim wages for Governmont Farm HERE. R .Wry trained mon. Bofore long funther R .Wry contingents will be embarking from Montreal, 1928 f That is the reason why Mr. Edgar another Training Farm, that of Brog- t Wallace's article attracted my atten- boro ugh Park, n ear Becly Bed- ihodntgdfrmw mi s -. tien. It raised in my mind the fordshire, where the same opportun- due squestion, Is it possible that this may ity te acquire farmn training for Can- When it is in the power of thy hand ho the first sign of the turning cf the ada exists under Canadian Pacifie and to do it. -tide? Is it possible that the present H udson's Bay C ompany auspices, andSa not unto thy noighbor, wild whinl of pleasure and monev is proving very effective for abhe-bod- , oJ n cm gi hunting is net to go on te an intensern ied young mon eager toe ecuip them-Goancreagi andeve itener ovmen, b ttha Iselve s for heaîthy open air work over- A nd temorrow I will give," a hait may be called and EngIand ne-,i.seas.-Exeter Western Times. -hendtrnu hat it byitle. trace ber footsteps? Is the day cem--Mdm edesBb.j 7. ing when the Prime Minister ef Enz- land cf the time wil onjoy a larger1 HOW DREAMS MATERIALIZE Red Rose Orange Pekoe lias salary and greater famne than the earned the patronage zrr'd ('barlio Chaplin of bis day? l t h e It is our desire at certain timesof et ood will of nr e ii;ç day coring again when an Archbishep the year t,ý get away from the din;gf oetea r ig- wiIl draw a langer income and attract of city traffie, and out to whore the ers than anyote hg- more attention than a successfui slighost noise wouId be instantîy njt- q u a 1 i t y tea in Canada.I pnize flghter, and when the President iceahie. We often think of ljeiîjg Judges of good tea glad!y of the Methodist Cenfenence will bu1 aheard a steamer eut in mid ecean,l give mnore for Red Rose btter known and more heceured by where time hangs peacefulY upen Orange Pekoe because they the youth of this country than th( I your bands, and the werries of life mcst highIy-priced centne-forward? 1 have fled. We dnearn of thesethng know that the value they re- * *yet little do we roahize that these i ceive is worth many timnes dreams can corne truc if we but pausel the few extra cents they pay. To somo people sncb a future wouhd for one moment to think. Wbat of i- ho unimaginable. If they read these inîand waters? We only think of linos thoy wouId laugb at the idea. them as being fit for anglers and, They would say sncb a state of things those who deligbt in canooxng. But_______________ neyer was anI never could ho. I amn of steamers with broad white docks, not so sure of that. If I ock back where wo can sit on some quiet corn- on eighteenth-century England and er ani gîve ourselves up to drj'anîv compare it with this age what do I thîjught. <le we over tbink ef -ucb sec? The namnes cf some groat pos.sibilitiesq? Thoy do exist, ami figures stand out-Chatham, Bunke,,ithink of it, fer two wvhole days oný Wesley, Swift, Sam Johnson, te takei an ocoan of your own, ombarking at a few at random. But 1 cannet re-A. ort MeNicoîl, sweeping out acr-o.-. caîl the came cf a single prize-fighten Lake Hurjjn, through the great Son or jockey or other caterer for publICI(Canal, ani out over Lake Superior, apiti-ement; the naine of one great the greatost body of fnesb water in i -David Garick-aione occurS the werld. Your dneams, thereforo, tîj me. con materialize, ani more se if vou * * ca1I upen the Canadian Pacifie Rail- Wbat about today? L; there any way, obtaining aIl infojrmation ne- î:inser of any religion in Enzlandgarding this wonderfuh trip, and fin- %t bo excites sncb general interest aliy asking them for reservatîjns. Wýrl a-.Jibr Weevilçl n îstim? heC. B. Kent, Town Agent, Bowmnan-i moi), îj i i nthle compliment cf mob- ville, Ont. 29-2iv' 1)i1ng hl;m. Tjiljv it is net ministersi of religion. but footbaill efenees who- - ar~e mebbejl. T'he crow<l are, inter- CHIROPRACTIC AND DRUGLESS e.stejl in thenm. 'There, is no minister THEROPY of religio)n wbemi they wouId think itWh wîjrth while te rneb. Vast crowds DURWIN E. STECKLEY ola preacb in the cathedrai at Flor- of Chiropractie wilho in the Bow- once. Today they wonld flock ta manville Office Tuesday, Thursday CANADIAN see Chanlie Chaplin or Rudehph Val- and Saturday evenings, phono 141J. entino, but net te hear the Archbish- Residential calîs made during fore- op of Canterbury. noons. F. M WEDDING Savery-Welsh 1 A very quiet wedding took place a t the Newtonville Parsonage on Thursday, July l2th., when -Miss Loin, t eldest daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. Arthur Welsh, Bowmanville, was un- ited in miarriage with Mr. Lawrence Savery, teacher at Salemi School, sofl of Mr'. and 'Mrs. William 1Savery, Starkville. Rev. Thos. WVal- lace performed the eeremony in the presence of a few friends. Mollon-MacInnis At the home of Mr. and Mrs. Hect- or McKechnie, Valparaiso, Sask.. at 12 noon, Saturday, June 30, their niece, Catharine Maebelle MacInnis was marrîed to Harold Blythe Mol- Ion of Detroit, Mich., son of Mr. and Mrs. J. T. 'Mollon, Toronto, formierly of Bowmanville. The cereniony was performed beneath a gardon 1bower overhung with streamers and wedding belîs, Rev. D. P. Morris, Tisdale, officiating. The bride was given away by her father. Miss Laura Moir of Imperial, played the wedding music. The bride wore a gown of white georgette and silk net veil caught with a coronet of orange blossoms. iShe carried a bouquet of roses, car- nations and white cala hules, tied with white silk tulle. She was attended by Miss Edith Humphreys of Saskatoon, w.ho wore a dress of flowered si]k ninon in past- el shades. She carried a bouquet of carnations, gladioli and pink lil- ies tied with pink tulle. The groom was attended by Mr. Cameron Mac- Innis. The groom's gift to the bridesmaid was a pearl bar pin and to the grooms- man a pair of gold cuif links. The wedding breakfast xvas served on the lawn. Mr. Morris proposed the toast to the bride. The bridaI couple left by automo- bile for a honeymoon in Saskatoon, Banff, Victoria and thence to Ontario to visit the groom's relatives. Mrs. Erie Dart and daughter Ellen, of Bowmnanville, ivith Misq Ada Mc- .Millan of Oshawa, are returning home after spending the past year and six nionths in California-Mail and Em- pire. Miss Freeborn and Miss Helen Rushton of Winnipeg, who with five others are on a 3,500 mile motor trip, spent Monday with Mrs. A. E. Mc- Cready. Mrs. Fleming and Çeneral John Hughes, and relatives at New- tonville. They have already covered 1,500 miles, have had several real thrills and are enjoying the outing immensely. They will visit Toronto, Detroit, Chicago, Minneapolis, andi1 other cities before they reach home. j great minds, the great men who have Only about sixty partook of the made ýthe world what it is. usual chieken pie dinner but it was The movies, the gramophone, the interesting to note that these included jwireîess, the motor car the aero- cousins from Alberta, Cleveland, plane, the electnie greyhound, will Woodstock, Toronto. Oakwood, Islay, neyer make anything-not even such Ebenezer, as weIl as points nearer material things as a Pyramid or a home. The first car to arrive brought IParthenon; still Iess the creations of the Elfords wbo came with the good the soul and the mmnd. Yet this is.wishes of their niother (Aunt Anna an age of progress! Is it? I end, Maria), who will be 96 years of age as I began, with a note of interroga- on August 23rd., next. From noon tion. Whether are we drift.ing? to supper timne the cars came from * *Enniskillen, Burketon, Backstock, Every parent and teacher of young Casarea, Janetville, Cadnius, Nest- cbildren must be keenly interested leton, Sunderland. Cannington, 05sb- in the recent discussion on the great awa, Kedron, Bowrnanville. Bethesda, importance of surroundi ng very Bethany, Salem., and other phaces, Young cbildren with helpful whoie- bî'inging with tbeni also cousins some influences, particularly at pre- fî'or Mounit Forest, St. Catharine., sehool age. Here are some practical Hanmilton, Toronto. Crystal City. ideas: Sehool-age is too late to com-1 Manitoba, Lindsay and elsewbere. mence training the emotions, in rhe' Wbile showers interfcred somewhat opinion of Dr. C. J . 0. HÏastings,1 witb the sportz- soine races w'erc rnn Medical Officer of Health. Toronto, off and late in the afternoon thf, son who say, at four years of age, the!shone on the baIl players, which may foundation of the character of thel have accounted in part for the excite- child is formed. It is therefore im- ment which prevailed. portant that parents make a study of About 200 persons were preîjnt for child-psychoiogy and guide and mould the supper hour and metbinks a ist- the emotions of their cbiIdren in the ener-in would have. rio doubt.s con- interim between birth and'the fourtn cerrling the fact that everyone was year. making up for lost time ýn general * * *chit-chat and social intercejurse. In Boston the teacbing ebjîdren to AIl too soon the ,had,)%s began t train their emotions, particulariy fear iengthen and good-byes weré over. -the most common emotion-has be-, But kind memory stores ut) for us a1 corne an important part of the health wealth of pleasure which will be« education program in the public ours as we think over theso happy schools. According to Dr. William ne-unions from time to time. P. Lineham, of the Boston Teachers' An interesting feature of the day College, the eradication of baseless were the stunts put on by Miss Edith fears by bringing thom to school and Peardon for comrpetition by boys and vorbalizing them to sympathetie ear8 girls and they created oceans of fun <presumably those of the teachor) for ail. pisys a highly important part in Being unable hîmself to be present mental hygione and the cultivation as he had hopod to be, Mir. R. 'Luther of physical and spiritual health. So Werry, Montreal, wrote the followixjg the Boston authorities are trying ta verses expressive of bis own senti- co-ordinate, with physical training, ments and those of many others wbo thatpsychology which will keep the could not be present. NELSON'S STORE of Bigger and Better Values King St. West Bcwmanville BOWMANVILLE ONE DAY ONLYj Wednesday, Aug.I Barneti Bros. Circus FRE TO0 ILL-ONE NM O F MAGNIFICE4?PARAD-12 &aP#m NOOM O5V 0F SHOW 2PERFORMAN4CES DÂILY. A" D-qq MdIIes 1. Md. t S I wd o THE WORLD'S LARGEST POPULAR PRICED AMUSEMENT ENTERPRISE Show Grounds on Scugog Street Bowmanville Admission: Children 30c; Aduits 60c. Tax Paid 1 1 3 HOSIERY SPECIALS If you want anything in Hosiery think of "Nelson's First", we guarantee you a saving of from 10% to 15%. FULL FASHIONED HOSE-Well dressed women like the 'feel" the snug fit, the radiant finish of our full fashioned stock- ings, besides their double lisie hem and extra foot splicings make for extra wear. Also note the savin' gs in price. You may choose Atmosphere, Pearl Blush, Evehglow, Dove Grey, French Nude, White Jade ,Mirage, White, Black, etc. No. 1 Medium Service Weight $1.39 No. 2 Extra Heavy Service Weight $1.79 Sizes 8to 101/2 GREEN STRIPE HOSE-Noted for its durability, is one of the most popular makes offered-we have just put into stock a new shipinent of the season's newest tones, also White or Black. Note our low price-and try them you will want more, sizes 81/., to 10. Our Price 79c Pair VEST BLOUSES, SLEEVELESS-Very popular foi' comfort dur- ing these hot days-we have 15 travellers samples, in both silk and1 mercerized broadcloth at less than haif price. 98c to $1.95 BANDEAU SETS-Travellers' sample lot in heavy weight Crepe ck chene. Set of hair bandeau and handkeî-chief to match, only 25 in the lot, worth $1.00 each, While They Last 39c Each 1