PAGE TWO THE CANADIAN STATESMAN, BOWMANVILLE, THURSDAY, OCTOBER lGth, 1930 LEGAL M. G. V. COULD, B.A., LL.D. Barristor, Solicitor. Ntary Meney to loan on Farrn and Town pzaçerty. Royal Bank Building, Eowmanville. Phone 351. W. R. STRIKLE Barristor, Solicitor, Notary Solcitor for Bank of Montreal Money to Loan. Phono 91 Bowmanvllle, Ontario. W. F. WABD, B. A. Earrister, Solicitor, Notary M6onoy to Loan. Bonds for Sale. Offles: Bleak.ley Block, King Street, Bowmanville, Ontario. Phones: Office 102, House 409. L. C. MASON, B. A. Barrister, Solicitor, Notary Loans - Investrnents »owrnanvile - Next to Royal Theatre Phonos: Office 688; Houso 553. DENTAL DR. G. C. BONNYCASTLE Iloor graduato li Donistry, Toronto UDIverslty. Oraduate of the Royal CeoDage of Dental Surgeons of On- t&gla. Office: King St., Bowmanvllle. Office Phono 40; houso phono 22. X-R&y Equlpmont in Office. DR. J. C. DEVITT Amistaixt Dr. E. W. Simieon Graduate of Royal Dental Coloege, TUonto. Office: King Street East, Nawmanville. Office hours 9 a. m. ta 6 p. m. dally except Sunday. Phono 90. House phono 283. X-Ray Equlpment in Office. MEDICAL C. W. SLEMON, M.D., C.M. Graduate of Trinlty Medical Collego, Toronto. Offce and residence: Dr. Beith's former residence, Wellington Street, Dowrnanvllle. Phone 259. J. CLARK BELL M. D., Ch. B., F. R. C. S. (EdIn.), D. P. H. (Successor to Dr. A. S. Tilley) Non . Graduate in Medicine, Aber- dma University; Fellow of the Royal Ojiege of Surgeons, Edinburgh., OMfce and residence: Queon Street, Bowmanvine. Phone 89. Offce Hours: 2 to 4 p. m.. 6 to 8.30 p. m. CIROPRACTIC AND DRUGLESS THEBOPY DURWIN E. STECKLEY Honor graduate of Toronto College et Chiropracties will Ine in the Bow- mnville office Tuesday, Thursday ad Saturday evenings, phone 141J. réesdential cails made during f ore- Ileon. FUNERAL DIBECTORS F. F. MORRIS CÔ. t Complote Motor or 44 Horse Equipment. Ail calli promptly attended to. W / Private Ambulance Bowmanville phono: 10 and 34. Branch Stores: Orono & Newcaatle. ALAN M. WVILLIAMS knbalmer and Funeral Director. CeUs given pr!ompt and personal at- tution. No extra charge for dis- tSee. Motor Ambulance at your evlce. Phone 58 or 159, Bowman- VS.. ont. 3-tf AUCTIONEERS TEDOM.ILMON Fum and Rouie soEW a Speclalty. IW mdote In kW > . 0 VRTEDINARY E.G. KEDLAKE. V.8., D.V.Sc. O- EMreGraduat's of the Univeralty of Teno1. AUl cams given prompt aââ osrutul attention. Office: Dr. Urr oimer office. Phones: CUke Mli; Orono 18-1. TRF.ASURER'S SALE 0F LANDS FOR TAXES Town ofDBowmaavlie SCoumty of Durban Te Wt: Dy virtue of a warrant iaaued by the MMor r f the Town of Bowma.nvtiUo bear- ~Lthé date of the lSth day of Àugust, ft landsa in arreas of taxes in the ;::,:of Bowmanvle wiII b. heMld t my once. t the hour of two o'clock Ini thé sitsruoo on the ixth day of Doeszbe, IM, untes. the ta.xes and cote &re omer pu.d. Notice La her6by given "~t the it of lands for ea.Le for arresru of taxes la being publabed in thé Onti'io GUette on the 23rd day of Aulrust and Ut coPIes of the sald lust nay 6e had Kt M OMMo. TressurteVs ofice, thie lAth day of Auuia, ut. . JOHN LYLE, U-18 Treaturer. THE EDITOR TALKS father breaks loose. "These thingsi may be ail right." ho said, "at school, Agricultural Education is a favor- but they don't belang here." ite tapie of ours and we have rnany ** times cofgratulated boys and girls "We have not got the cows milked who have grown uij on the farm and 1, or stables cleaned out, or the pigs fed, attended a country schoal. Dr. G. and there is a lot of grain ta go to I. Christie, President of the greattest markcet oariy in the marning,-you1 Agricutural College in this Donm-I had better forget the schoi," and hoe ion-The O. A. C., Guelph, graduat- shuts thern up. That sounds as if; ed f rom a country school in Dundas it might be a joko, but that is going! County; and last April ho delivered an in cammunity after community, a very interesting address ta the an- not oniy in Ontario, but thraughout nual Conference of Rural Schoal the whale land, and I asic you in al Trustees and Ratepayers of this Pro- fairness, how do you hope ta estab- vince in Convention Hall. Toronto. lish the iink between home and We consider Dr. Christie's address sa school when the teacher tal1ks one very instructive and interesting ta thing. and father and mother an- urban and country readers, likewise other, and thoy do fat corne together ta Young people and aduits that wO ta understand each ather. We use are publishing the major portion of the children as a shuttlecock between it f rom the Canadian School Jour- the two institutions. and wo want nal for August, 1930. them ta hurry when they are gaing * s *and when they are caming back. Dr. Christie saîd that on e of the ee great features of the marvelous de Agriculture is the easiest taught voiopment in Denmark during the1 subj oct that can be presented ta boys last few decades has been the atton- and girls. Lot the teachor ask the tion given ta co-operation. Ho toid boys and girls on Friday ta bring of the large percentage of the Young, samples of soil fram two or three of people from farrns of Denrnark who' thoir fields on Monday morning. are graduates of High Schoals, as in-Irnrediately the boy goes home with dicating how successful co-operation the question ta father, the fathor in farming communities is based on goos with the boy ta get soul. The educatian. The reason Deinmark is chîldren bring samples oif loaam soils, going farward, said Dr. Christie, 's sanciy souls and dlay souls. The teach- simpiy because her people have se- or places the sampies of the sandyl cured an education that enables and dlay souls side by side, and says them ta co-operate inriIndustrial 1f . ta the ciass, "Asic your father when S* * you go home tonight which is the The Captain of the boat told Dr.1 heavier soul, the sandy or dlay soil." [Christie that a few years ago when * *. co-oporative wark was started min fat is a pretty gaod question ta Denmark and farmers were shipping send homo ta father. The boy asks their produce fram Denrnark ta Eng- the father wha replies "why dlay is land, the shîp hands who had little the heavier soul. Anybady should intorest and less care, would go inta knaw that. fhe toacher aught ta the supplies of butter, and in their take a plough and go on the dlay hunger and dosire ta get some food, soul at this time of year, and ho wauld 1if t off a tub of butter and wauld find out the greater amount of put their greasy hand in, and take a power required ta turn over the dlay hunk and eat it, litIle thinking what than is neoded ta plough the sandy they wore daing ta the butter. ;Vlien souls fTh boy gives the answer that tub of butter appoared :f the frorn fathor. Thon the teacher takos markcet in England, and was piaced the scalos and wighs an equal quan- on sale and the lîd lifted, there was tity of the twa soils. and finds that the greasy undesirable tub oif butter, the sandy soul is much heavier. and the praduct of Denmark was dis-' **1 counted, and the merchants and the'Te tyarfadwihacn1 consumer said, "we dan't want that Tr they arefaed wpithavea n- kind of praduct." tradiction -A- A . -ad h p lshveai That stary was told at home in! IDerimark with the resuit thau .e the warking man and the ship hands were taught of their relation ta agri- culture, of their part in the shipping of the praducts, and as ta their in- terest and co-operatian ir placing1 those praducts an the market in the1 best possible farm. Ta-day they' have amang these ship hands, wharf workers, etc., the ca-aperatian where every man feois that ho has a per- sonal intorest in seeing that the pro- duct of bis country goos an the mar- icet in the very best possible condition in order that the roputation of Den- mark shahl be saved. If na othert thing has been taught by the great work carried of ini that country than that of co-aperatian on the part of ail peoples, it bas been worth while. Sa whef we corne ta Ontario we flnd that if agriculture is ta succeedj we noed fat only the efforts of the farmor- but we need the co-operation of other people as well. We need the co-aperation of the goverument, the transportation agoncios and of people everywhere. Agriculture caf- nat ho made a success by one man alane, but it will ho made a success by the ca-operation of ail of aur people, tbinking of the ultimate mar- kets ta which thase products go. and with the great feeling of every marn, wornan, boy and girl that they are in part responsibie for the need of Ontario products and Canadian pro- ducts, that they ho maintained and placed upon their highest level. And so aur scbools, the schools which you ,people represent, have a rnost im- portant part ta play li the success of agriculture in Ontario and un Canada.1 We bave a lot of people who belleve in teacbing reading. writlng and arlthmetlc in aur schools, but whon you talk ta tbem a! agriculture or homo economics they tblnk you are taling about somtbing apart f rom the scbool. "Lot mothor teacb the girl un the kitchon, and father willl give the boy ail the work ho noeds an the farm." fhat la just the trouble. fhe fathers are giving their lads ail the work, but wark alano wlll fat koep the boys on the farm. Wo must work untolgently, wo must work wltb unterest, and witb somo Idea of pro- prletorshlp. Wo must wark witb our braina as well as with aur bands. * *e Do you ever thunk what happons in aur rural schois whoro thoy toach natblng but the tbree R's? fis ia what happons: fhe boy wbo bas lived an the farm until ho s six yoars aid wltb the caws and colts and chicicens, ho has been round the stable wben the cows were rnilkod and wlth mathor wbon she f od the chicicons. Ho has beard the language of the farm. ho bas loarnod ta love the animais and the fiowors and the thlngs about homo. 0 0. Thon in Septembor when sehool opens, ho goos dawn ta the littie school bouse, and is given 0fne 0f theso hard seats. his foot do fat touch the floar and ho danglos tbema about and looks at the picturos. Ho takes bis scribbier and 'tcribblos for a whlle until ho becames tirod. and thon ah at once ho put bis hand out, and the teachers says. "what is t'>" "I want ta tell you about a nice little colt we have at home." fhe teacher says, "that s ail right but we do fot talk about thoso things in school. Yau are bore to iearn reading, writ- ing, and arithmetic and you talk about the other things at home." Right thore us where the spiit begins between home and school. 0 .C A few years later, this lad and other Young people becomo members o! social groups. They have their organizations and their garnes and thon the boys and girls are gathered round the table at home sorne even- ing having late supper, and anc of the boys starts ta tel of a problem the teachei put up, and thon bow thoy choeked the teacher and piayed a trick an ber and had fun. An- ather tells about Rugby, etc., and the open mina ana are reaay La receive some information. fhe point I arn trying ta make is that the boy is thinking in terrms of agriculture. He finds out that dlay soil wth its don- sity and stickiness beomes glued ta- gether and requiros a large amaunt of manure ta maintain its pliability. On theoather hand, ho learns that yau add manure ta sandy soul, fat ta get rid of the water, but ta hold the water that the crops may graw. Suppose the boys and girls are asked ta draw plans of thoir farms. This should fat bo a very difhlcuit task. Father and mother shauld be able ta help them, and they will iearn why this tract of land is fat cultivated. and why the hause is la- cated bore and the woll samewhore else. I know of a f armn where a woman lived thlrty years ini the house, went across the yard, up two stops and dawn twa stops, thon down a hill ta, a little spring, and in the thirty years she bad been there, she had walked 3200 miles for water. A srnall hydraulic engine was purchas- ed with the result that the water was pumped into the house, and the wo- mon were saved ail that toil and hardship. Dr. Christie told of a farmer who had eight sons, and as each boy carne a! age of twelvo yoars, he was takon inta partnersbip wlth bis fathor an the farm. As each boy became o! age. a neighbourlng f arrn was bought and today tbey are ail on farms o! thoir own. If you want ta drive your boys off the farm. just keep the busi- ness side of It ta yourself. Some farmers seem ta say ta their boys-"ýYou are mlgbty iucky ta ho rny boy and ta have the privilege a! worklng an the f arm f rom early mornlng ta late at nlgbt." If boys and girls are to stay an the farm they must bo a party ta the manage- ment of that farmn and they must have a part in the enterpruse. If the parents are not big enougb to give their boys a share in the enter- prise, t is just as well for the young people ta get off the f arrn. Tboy wiUl have littie training ta deai wlth the probloms of the f arm wben they corne ta take responsîblhty. Nathing bas don e me mare good than ta see the Junior Farmors' Or- ganization and learn bow those young mon and wamen are prepar- lng, wlth the ca-operation o! the Departrnent of Agriculture, ta go for- ward wlth the great wark an the farms and in the homos. Wneed more o! that spirit of optirnlsm and understand.ing un rural Ontario. e6 What we need un aId Ontario is more young mon an d wornen wba ap- preclato and understand rural life. Yau cannat tell me that a boy braugbt up un an apartment bouse, wha nover had cald foot or any choros ta do. bas the samo chanceofa maklng a success un 111e on the farm as the boys an d girls wbo have had experlence of country 11f o. The country boy wbo had ta got out of bed eariy In the rnornlng and go barefooted for the cows and kick the caws ta stand up until ho cauld warm bis foot where thoy were lying knaws samethlng about the exper- lences of rural life. * *. fhe time has came when the rural school should ho toiling about the great mon and women of the farm and the part thoy played in the mak- ing oif Canada. There us inspiration in the livos of thoso "Makors of Can- ada" who cloared the fields, tillod the soul, built the homos, the schois, the c'hurches and the roads. We neod 10 tramn chidron for agriculture, whether they stay in the country or not, that they may have that know- ledge. sympathy and spirit oif ca-ap- eration. that this groat industry of oiir Province and Dominion mayi stand first and go forward in a great way. The Statesman 25c for balance a! 1930.1 GIVNGmillions to a museum. By those who do flot know the facts it was 1 A man met his iawyer, anld said: 1hailed as a princely gift. It was no ."One of these days I shall want you, gift. Having trained every faculty 1to revise my will." to get, get, get, hie simply could flot The lawyer nodded encouragingly. give. He merely dodged the issue 'When you drew it," the man con- by writing in the name of a museum tinued, "I hadn't accumuiated rnuch. which he had hardly even seen. ,Naturally, I lef t everything toMy You say, "What has this to do with ifarnily. Now 1 arn better fixed. me? I ar n ot a millionaire." tI'd like to provide for relatives, give The fact is that you, an average to the men who have helped me person, have more money today than make my money, and contribute to1 you used to think you'd ever have. charities. There's no hurry about Are you giving any? it, of course. In another ten years, The muscles of the soul are like I ought to be considerably richer. the muscles of the body. If you say, The amounts I can give now are "Sorne day in the future ll take srnall in comparison with what I ex- physical exercise," you find, when the pect to do then." time cornes. that you can't. The The iawyer advised him to have muscles have atrophied. the wiil rewritten that very day. If you say, "Sorne day when 1 have "If you live ton years and prosper more I will begin to give," you will you can revise the figures upward." nover give. The habit recguires cul- he said. "But suppose something tivation. should happen to you tornorrow You We are about to have new stand- would die leavlng a selflsh 1«wll. ards in this country. Our day of Two very rich men died in recent worshipping weaith is past. Money years, leaving very selflsh wills. The no longer conf ers distinction; a mil- great business of one of thern is ai- lionaire is no more uncommon than ready dwindling. The men who an automobile, and flot nearly 50 un- manage it were given no share in it; common as a horse. their hearts are flot in their work.- The givers will be the heroes of the The other rich man, a bachelor, future. And the tirne wili corne who paid small salaries but prornised when those who merely get wili ho his younger associates that they held Up to scorn. And their child- would be "'taken care of," lef t his ren wiii hang their heads. HYGIENE 0F THE NOSE certain size, it obstructs nasal breathing and should be removed. Heaith Service of the Canadian In addition to obstructing breathing. Medical Association it wiil very iikeiy resuit in partial loss of hearing if flot removed.j The nase has more thanonim When we catch cold, the secretions portant function. By warmi'ng'or of the nose are aitered in a way with cooiing the air we breathe. it adjusts which we are ail familiar. The coid it to the temperature of the body. lis serious because it makes us miser-~ At the sarne time, it moistens and fil- able and interferes with out work.[ ters the air. The nose is the organ It is very serious when the germs re-' into which drain the sinuses or bony sponsible for the cold spread to other cavities which lie adjacent to the parts. If they spread into the sin- nose. A large part of Our sense of uses connected with the nose. a yel- taste really is the sense of srneî as lowish secretion f rom the nose, after perceived through the nose. recovery f rom the coid, is a sign that one or other of the sinuses is affected. A healthy nose filters, warmns and Infocted sinuses are serious even moistens the air before it reaches the though they are draining f reely and lungs. If we broathe through Our not causing any pain. Any collect- mouths, this control of the air is ion of pus in the body is a focus iost. and the air arrives inside of the which rnay undermine the general body without the preparation it health and be responsibie for disease should have, and which it would have in other parts of the body. Such a received had it been breathed in1 focus of infection should be treated through a healthy nose. promptly. The healthy nose does not neod to Obstructed breathing should be be washed out. Indeed, there is corrected, because it is necessary for some danger in the use of washes. the promotion of heaith to breathe The way to dlean the nose is to blow freely through the nose. Children it gentiy. one nostril at a time. If who are mouth-breathers shouid be the nose is not heaithy, thon the use0 exarnined for adenoids, and these of sprays or drops is recornmended should be removed if they are ob- by the physician to relieve the con- structing the nasal passage. Colds dition and to restore the nose to a shouid be cared for in order to pre- heaithy state in which it is best able vent the spread of infection through- to do its work and to cleanse itself out the body, and if the infection without interference. doos spread into the sinuses, treat- Tetwo symptoms which rnost ment shouId be secured soon evon if rnmoniy occur and which indicate there are no acute syrnptorns at the that there is sornething wrong with trne. the nose are obstruction to breathing and excessive secretion f romn the nose. A CEASELESS MESSENGER When a child cannot breathe freely through the nose, he becornes a 0Ovýer 5.000,000 times a day resi- rnouth-breather. This usuaily means dents of Ontario and Quebec turn to that there are adenoids obstructing the telephone. More than 70,000 the nasal passage. Every child is i daily cahis are for out-of -town born with sorne adenold tissue at the g f riends. These people have learned upper and back part of the nose. the wisdorn of lettlng their telephone If the adenold tissue grows beyond a "go there and back" for them. They lock together to form a ONE-PIECE roof going to w that Plan"t ,q~.FO 1 ~ P~RWE A NYONE who lives from hand to mouth is at the mercy of the future. Sickness, business depres- sion or loss of position would speli disaster. $1,000 in the Bank means freedom from worry which the man who spends ail can neyer know. THE INSTALMENT PLAN MAKES SAVING EASY The fRoyal Banik 3M of Canada Bowmanvile Branch - L G. Hefkey, Manage 1'44 f AUTOMOBILE GREASINGI New Colours-"Cornwall" or "Dar. set" - attractive, haninonious co!our-blends that coost no mort'. Or So:i(I Colours: iRed, Green, or Mue. Black. Brantford Roofing Co. Limited; Head Office and Factory: Brantford, Ont. Branches and War.houses nt: Toronto. Windsor, Winnipe, Montreai. Halifax, Saint John. N.B. and St. John'&, IMId. 170 "&BUY NORMALLY" AND TIIEE WILL BE NO UNEMPLOY.MENT!1 For Sale by RI 10E«&cCX3. AN EXPERT SERVICE FOR MOTORISTS When it cornes ta lubrication, we're experts at savlD.g yau maney. Nat only on the cost of a blgh grade greasing job, but on the cost of keeping your car in first rate mechanical shape. Avail yourself of aur modern greasing facilities. Drive li and lot us greaso your car with the rigbt lubricant for autuinn drivlng. Speedy service whlle you wait. CLIEMENS' West End CARAGEl' 4 IEu ba yi WIER is "'rounal the corner!l". If a new roof is needed.-something cisc is needed too-that is-AUFON ! If your barn needs reroofing do it NOW-with Braiftord OL t=o-e 2 - ýý 1 PAGE TWO THE CANADIAN STAIT-SMAN, BOWMANVMLE, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 16th, 1930 King St W«t Bowlnanvme