PAGE EIGET TH~ CANA.DIAN STATESMAN, BOWMANVILLE, THURSDAY, SEPT. 23rd., 1926. The Newc'aEet1qe Iie TLIURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 23î'd., 1926 Under the will of John Arnear1 NEWCASTLE Polkinghorn. a former resident of Cobourg, who died on Ju]y 19, a be-1 Mr. L. W. Thomas was home fromi ouezt of $10.000 was made te Co-, Rochester over the weekerrd. bourg General Hospital. The will. Mr. H. W. Dudley is picking hi. in addition disposes of an estate of 330 bbl. crop of Duchess ipples. $45.000 and gives $5000 to the Sal- Mrs. John Pool, Toronto, is guest vation Army of Canada and other of 'Mrs. Cunningham, "Spion Copje". amounts to various institutions. Mr. Perey O'Neil, now of Trenton, spent the weekned with hi- parents. IMiss Betty McKenzio, Toronto, is Desirable Country Property visiting her sister, Mrs. H. S. Brit- For Sale By Auction ton. 1 Rev. E. R. James is novv taking LOTS 23.24, CON. 2, CLARKE the second instalimen: of his holi- days. The owners w ill offer for sale on the; 'Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Ragea, Tor- Pr emieýs by public -fiction on lns day the 29th day of September. 19.26, ati onto, spent Sunday at Mr. John haîf paRSt one o'clock in th', aftern0oon; Douglas' thre farn comprlsing south iialt of Loti 24 and tihe -soutb wvest iuartýr Of tLot 131 Mis s Ada Barker and friend, Tor-J In thec Second Concession of t le Town-' onto. spent Sunday at Mr. J. R. shil' of Clark, in the founty- cf Durharn, Fisher's. Ontarlo, containing 13t acres more or less on which is saidI te bc erectel an Mrs. J. H. Thom, Toronto, lis VIS- excellent brick dwelling andvI t-orfstrMr--. c barn roomn and good otbuildings .aid ting ihlesstrMs. .Mc orchards and well wateredl by a slnddLauighlin.. running stream, situare on tlic Toronto Ms rc rg vn oTrn te Kingston Provincial I-ighwa,,y oneltMiGaeBggwn oTr- mile east of the Village of Newcstle to n Monday to begin hier Normal and the Ralroad and six mihs troni Scbool Course. Bowmanvill,, and 48 miles epst of ror- anto: near Public and High School. This Our High School has an atterd- property bas great natural beauty aind is ance of 45 students and the public a sllendld chance for a f..rmer or for school about 120. anyone wbo would like an attractive country borne Miss N. Dis1bane and brother Joe The property will be soId sibiect te a of Oshawa, were weekend guests cf reserved bld and conditions of sale For furtber Particulars app:y te Ti9ýph Coul- their aunt, Mrs. O'Neil. son, Newcastle and te W. G. Thurston The Misses Madeline and Ethel & Co. Solictors for tire owflers, 23 Toc- onto Street, Toronto. 3-- Breen, Toronto, are visiting the Misses Breen, "Pierview Cottage". Mr. Robert Reid has rented the MEDICAL Henry Gordon f armn near Oitaca and will take possession in the spring. J. A. BUTLER, M. D., C. M. Mr. George Lunisden has purchas- Honor graduate ai Trinity Univer- ed the Mitchell Zealaad farma on sity, Fellow of Trinity Medical Col- the Town Line and will move tlhere lege, Licentialte ai the State Univer- sb ort ly. sity af New York, Matriculate of the Mrs. Percy Ranson and son, Nor- Post Graduate Medical Sehoal and man, have returned to Belleville af- Hospital of New York and Fellowl ter a pleasant visit with hier mother, oi the Toronto Academy oaiedi-Mr.,:.Hunter. cine. OfiRce-Mms. McNaughton's Res MsAyHne acmaidb Idence, Newcastle. Hourz-8 ta 10 risAyHne acmaidb a.m.1ta 3 p. m. and by appoint.- 1tbree lady frieads, nîotored froan a. m.Toronto to spend the weekend with ment. her xo:her, Mrs. William Hunter. Mr. and Mrs. Win. Kenefick, Nor- mandale, and Mr. Edgar Kenefick, ~17uISask., are spending a few days vis- Let all aper iting frieniL, in the old home town. Mr. and Mrs. Birtie and daughter Ma e mail Evelyn and Mrs. Rachel Treleaven, Toronto, were weekend guests of Rooms Large! Miss E. Teevn Willowdale Reat Home is in re- ceipt of a number of additional dons- tion.s which wîll be ackno>wledged in In every berne, in your home, a future issue. The list of visitors there's a room that should have at the Home during the summer bas been larger. You can't increase grown to large proiportians. Callers its area, but you can make it look from a great marty points in Can- larger if you use the right kind ada and the U. S. have dropped in of wall paper. to see this widely famed Rest Home and aIl have recei'ved a most cheery We have 4nade a study of thîs welcome from Miss Rowland. Need- problem and have selected .a îess to say the numerous visita)rs number of very fine papers in were greatly interested in aIl tbey light, airy patterns that wil l ot saw ,the building itself, furnîture, only increase the apparent sîze equipment, sick room. accessories and of youc rooxas, but will give them 1 conveniences net forget.tir.g the a brighter ,cheerier atmosphere. splendid vegetable garden, with May we not show themn to yo abundance of fresh vezetables sec- .... +..,+.. A(.,.. ' ond to none in the village. There is no obligation on yaur part; and if you sh.old wish to purchase you will find our prices verv attractive. W. T. Allen "Big 20 Bookstore" Bowmanville luwmm - zzz'ftw MONUMENTAL ART WORKS ESTABLISHED 1857 Importer direct of SCOTCH AND SWEDE GRANITES and only the boat grades off VERMONT BLUE MARBLE I employ no cemetery carotakers as agents preferring to seil my own goadi thus savlng the purchaser the agent's commission. A caîl solicited. F. H. BOUNSALL Praprietor Bowmanvslle Phone 326W Box 94 NEWCASTLE LEAGUE RALLY The faîl opening oi the Young People's L.eague of the United Church which bas been claýsel for tbe summer wvas signalized by an înapiring service in the church an Sunday evening fçollawed by an ia- teresting and enlivening social gath- ering in the S. S. rooms on Monday evening. Tbe Sunday service of divine worsbîp and the Monday even- ing pragram were bath under the direction oi the Newcastle Suxamer School group wbich spent sucb a helpful, educational and ioyous out- ing at Bobcaygen last July. The members of the local group who on Sunday and Monday bcought in a verv realistie way the spirit, atmcs- phere and thought of the Summer School te their home village were Mca. (Rev.) E. B CDoke, Mcs. Ho- ward Cooke and daugbter Reta, Misses Grace Bragg, Marion Basker- ville, Ruth Hancock, Tucker Couc'h, Eileen Cooke and Dorotbv' Rickard. It was really wonderfual what a ceaI, living picture cf the school these young ladies and girls hrougbt back home, and with what ease, fiuency and expression, Misses Ruth Han- cock, Marion Basi(ervil'e aud Grace Bragg told of the camp studie.s andI cecreatiors at the Sunday evening service at whicb Mc,. (Rev.) E. B. Cooke gave a fine intcoductory ad- dress, visualizing ta the audience the general appearance and splendid re- igious spirit of the camp se ably and enthusiastically directed hy Rev. Roy H. Rickiard. 1B. A, At this servîce Miss Der3tby Rickanîl read the scripture lessoîî and Mi.:,s Elleen Cooke asked the divine bes:ing up- on the offeing. The Young Peop- le's League Choir of 24 voices led in the singing of favorite Summer School hymns and sang two rousiag antbems. Four ysýung mnen, Dr. W. J. LeMay, Mr. Eric Pearc-c, Mr. Eric Wicks and Mr. Ray Brown collected the offering. When You Need GROCERIES-BREAD-BUNS-CAKES- PASTRY-CHOCOLATES-ICE CREAM -SOFT DRINKS-ETC. Bring or send your order to this store where it mill receive prompt attention and you will get good valut. H. S. BRITTON, Blaker & Grocer Newcastl. pie ridc e ri t NEWCASTLE Principal Roszell spent Sunday. with friends in Peterboro.1 Mr. and Mns. P. F. LeGresley and Mr. R. LeGresley with Mr. and Mrs.1 Grubbe, Toronto, motored this weekj to visit Hanmilton, Niagara and e- land.1 if you would se a big crop of good apples, have a look at Mr. Walt- er Couch's orehard with its 1500 bar- rels at least on not mûore tl'an seveni acres of trees.1 Mr. and Mrs. R. Walton, Mrs. J.' Abar and Miss .anie Singer motcr- ed out to Hastings )n Sunday. Mrs. Walton remained o.er for a week to visir friends in that district. Master Jim Cambridge, Toronto, was a weekend guest at Mr. W. C. Lake's. Ah bhis young friends and j older ones, too, were pleased to see him in Newcastle once more. Misses Florence and Alice Werryl and Misses Alma and Greta Pollard ~Bownianville, motored to Newcastle duingthe weekend and * alled' on Miss Emma Roeland at Willowdale Resi Home. Among the week's visitors witb the Misses Breen at Pierview were their brother, Mr. Jerry Breen ,bis twa ýons-in-law. Mr. Ed. Quinlan and Mr Geo. Wise, Mr. Quinlan's aunt, "r5: Jones and Mr. Woods, al1 of Toronto. Misses Florence and Dorotby Carr Belleville, spent the weekend withi tbeir grandmother, Mrs. Wm. Hunt-' er with whom Mr. and Mrs. Robt. W. Holmes, Bowmanville, were also Sunda.v guests. Mrs. Wm. Hunt2r's home wvas the scene of a happy event wbea ber grandson, Norman Hunter Ranson, was cbristened by Rev. E. B. Cooke Saturday eveaing. SeveiýaI mem-i bers of tbe family and other friends were present. The elections have cleared the air and the fine weatber of this weeki has enabled farmers to get alongi with their long delayed barvest. Wei now seem ta have rtable gaver"'lent and stable weatber as evecyone bas' boped for. Owing ta the death and burial of Dr. Walton-Ball's father, Mr. Alhert1 Ball of Revelstoke Manor, Hope, the1 Doctor, witb meinbers of bis family andi friends froxa Toronto kept Har- ris Lodge open aIl last week, return- ing to the city again on Mosxday. A group of the Newcastle Lad- ies 'Aid are giving the play "Tbe Path Across the Hills" put on by Salem Dramatic Club assisted by other talent in Newcastle United Cburch Sunday School Hall on Fni- day, October lat. Tickets: Adults 30c; cildren under 12 20c. United Chiurch Sunday Schaol will J hold its annual Rally Day service in tbe church auditorium at il a. m. next Sunday, September 26th. The school will use the official Rally Day prograxas and Mr. W. W. Staples of Lindsay, will deliver the addressL Music by young pebople's choir. Everyone Welco.me. Miss Nora Coleman of the Toronto Public School teasing staff is bere convalescing from ber recent serious ciperation. She is stayiîîg in her old home with Mn. and Mrs. John Sctt. Hec numerou.s friends wîsb for ber a complete restoration of health enabling ber to resume ber professional duties ia Tocante. Mr. W. R. Douglas. New York, who is supervisor ai Branches for the United States Rubber Ca., spent the weekend with bis motfier and father bere. Walter is on a tour of tbe different branches of the com paay wbich will take bixa as far' west as Seattle and San Francisco. He expects ta, be absent about three months. Walter is another New- castle boy wiho is successfully hold- ing down a big job. Sametime druing Saturday night some persan forced the back door ta Mr. Pilswartb's store, and also broke open the dDor between bis store and Mr. Scot: s shoe store, but as the iran gate was ýsecurely fast- eaed they were unable to gain an entrance to the sboe store wbhich ap- parently was their objective, as al that Mc. Pillswortbh missed from bis shop was aboyut.$1 in coppers in thel tilI and a few packages af goods. William Henry Scott, Registrar of Deeds foc East Duîrham, died sud- denly at bis home in Port Hope on Sunday morniag, in bis sixty-nintb year. Besides bis widow be is sur- vived by one son, Victor W. Scott, Montreal, and tbree daugbters, Mrs. H. Miller, Toronto, Mcs. J. Wane, Toronto and Violet A. at home. Di9banding of the Anglo-Canadian, TALK WITH PARENTS Aunt Susana Advice About Whatl Girls May or May Not Read.' Now that evenings are long againi and young girls find indoors warxnj and inviting, they should spend mucb time in mind-inmprovenient.1 Yes, not enly read for pleasure but for profit as well. It Ls not always wise ta make a bard and fast cule as te wlsat a young girl sbouId or sbould net read. To foxrbid certain bocks and per- iodicals citen excites a curiasity and interegst wbicb may not have existesi bei are. To commnand thexa te nead' a cer- tain claasa ai literature whicb may appeal particularly ta you, or which, perhaps you bave been tolsi is good for the young will at once give them a distaste for it. As reading ia a very personal and p>rivate mnatter ln most caaes andi an individual recreation we cannei plan O~NE thousand Radio Dealers, when asked what the public wanted in radio this year, answered: '.)(1) Elimination of batteries; (2) Simplicity of installation and operation, and (3) Tone quality and volume. The new 1927' Rogers Batteryless Radio is the only Radio that embodies all of these features. They combine total elimination of batteries With extreme .implicity, ex- quisite tone quality and volume that can be regulated f rom a whisper to a roar. There are fourteen distinctive points in the 1927 Rogers, many of which can be found in a few high-priced radios, a few of which can be found in many radios, but alI of which can be found in no other radio in the world. Yet the prices are very modest. To buy any radio without first seeing and hearing the new Rogers is but to cheat yourself and purchase regrets. N o The Rogers operates direct f rom any ligbt socket on any alternating N o current. No chemicals; no charger; no attachments. You "Just Plug Batte ies In"Ten Tune In." The Rogers uses the raw current through its super-power unit that automatically regulates ail voltages for A, B and C Circuits and takes care of ail variations of line voltage after once installed. Not the slightest hum nor power noise can pass into the speaker. It costs about 4c a week to operate daily, and you get uniform, everlasting power from the day you plug in--forever more. No Aerial In most homes the Rogers will function without any aerial whatever, either outside or buit in loop--and with less disturbance than when an aerial is used. Except for occasional houses so constructed that an aerial is needed (as with ordinary radio sets), the Rogers can be installed and tuned in in 2 minutes 21 seconds. Single Dial Control Combined with simplicity of installation is ease of opera- t'on. A single tunîng dial, vernier control, with wave Iengths indicated on the face of the dial, enables you to tune in station after sta- tion easily and quickly or locate any desired station at will. On August 26, 1926, in a Parkdale home in Toronto, 31 stations were tuned in and logged With one turning of the dial (4ever turning backwards) and without touching any ot/ter con trol on the set. Exqulslte Ton. QUallty By the addition of an A/C Power Tube the pos- sible volume has been greatly increased and the Lxceptlonal Volume quality of tone infinrtely improved. The volume can be adjusted from a whisper to a roar by a turn of one knob, without cutting out or in any of the tubes. When you once hear the new Rogers you will marr'eI at its fidelity of tone reproduction on aIl instruments and voices. Free Demonstration Added ta, the above are a dozen other points of advantage that combine ta make the Rogers the one set that cao give you ail you hoped for in a Radio. If you are prepared te purchase a Rogers, providing it meets your expectations in every respect, we will instal one in your home free o; charge. You will be the judge. If it is ail we say-and you are entirely satisfied-payment can be mad-e in cash or spread avec three to twelve months for a slighit charge. The single-dial, battervicss sets are $275-00 for table model comnplete except for Ioud speaker (loud speakers $25 to $40). $D95-00 for Queen Anne Console Cabinet with built-in Ioud speaker. Other Rogers A and B Bitteryîess Sets:. Three tube table niodels $140-00 and $ii5o.00. (2-dial contraI). Five tube table nîodels *zi0O.00 and $220.00. (3-dial control). Agent-H. C. BONATHAN, Newcastle ThspÇàgoqi e*#4Infr reisigP and supervise other peaples books or any Teading matter. Most schaols have good libraries and the best way la which a mother can foster goes reading la ber girls la te encourage it and always allow the cbiîd ta get eufficient time ta, read la ber own home. Sa many mothers bavffig little time ta read themnseîves on les in- clination ta, do so than la their young day, f orget thoir love for it and bo- grudge it ta their young daughters. If tbe girl brings home a good bock ask ber ta read passages ta you, comment upon theafn and explair. what you know if you know what she knows. 'luis y ou ewAken a keener inter- est la what le worth reading and do yourself a great aMueunt Oi good as well. Do nat abject if she does know mare about things than yau; educa- tian bas made immense stridea since you and I were young. The young are far ahead cf what we knew at their ages and je must respect their koowîedge. itl sfati al ta snub, criticise, or condenin ad. vanced learning. You will only raise a barrier he- tween your mind and your daugh- tor's. Even if you are not intereoted la the books she in, amume you are; such delicate and unselfish hypo- crlay la goodi1 Thon you can ignore such books that lean taward rottennesa and im- mord ày; theme are thouanide such ruUolh publshed la these day.. It is aU a money making schesne f nom the author, the puhlsher and the seller. By showing your lack ai interest in caniparisen ta what you 4sbowed in the better bocks, ah. will nùtice the diffeireace, and ta enjay your coritinued camradesbip she will nat- urally ch case books you approve ai. Many boaks that are absurdly rid- iculous in aur ecperienrced eye and wisdom will be read without under- standing by tbe average young girl. Of course she will easi rubbish if there la nathing else ta ead, and if dà.ent books and good books are kept befS*r ber la ber young days hem taete wlll gmow, in that direction. Ifi thon she roada traéy stuff she recognizo. that it la troal, and may read to, kil ie and th!row It asîde a 1~ and forget it. The magazines that are on the market now contain mucb that la 4e- plarable and vulgar and it is a Pit we cannot keep thein aut ai t'l' banda of the yaung. But womust hope thata gil1 trainod te distinguish between exag- gecato'd vulgariani and truth *wIl!j judge for bei-self and avoid wbat 1W loworing for hon mmnd, and 6u2Jh cheap rubbisb that make ofIl1lfe only 0aIlles, temptatians and lies. Your loving Aunt Sus»n. Thuraday, Septombor 23rd--Cred- it aliction sale aif orty heofaifi-euh milk cows and apringers, the proper- ty ai Oliver Deniny, lot 24, con. 4 Whitby T&. This la a choloco lot o cOM w Se bills. Sale at 1:80 sharp. Wm. lLaw, Auctionoor. 87-1 1 THk CANADIAN STATESMAN, DOW-MANVILLE, THURSDAY, SEPT. 23rd., 1926. PAGE EIGHT il