Listowel Banner, 15 Nov 1928, p. 9

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bis pie FAMILY SIZE 75¢ TRIAL SIZE 35¢ PER BOTTLE We will Pay the Highest Cash Price for Live and Dressed Poultry Bring your supply to us the first four devs f each week Wright & Gibson Phone 146 Listowel BRONCHITIS _ | Wenors ited ASTH MA = im way far “the wire that is to come. At night HTS MAN is putting up telephone poles. Early in the morning he is out making a when the gang gets back to camp he is tired. But he likes it. There is zest in the work he is doing, for he is in new country. There have “fever been telephones here before. He is blazing the trial. After him will come families and homes and stores and factories to Hake another city. Over the wires on the poles he plants there will be voices and laaghter, ‘business will him, all the worlds will draw closer. He works with magic. The wire transforms time and distance. Today you can lift the telephone at your elbow and within seven min- utes hear the voice of your friend in England say: “Are you there?” HIS MAGIC in the telephone has not come in a day. It has come with year after year of experiment and improvement, The telephone of today is no more like the first telephone than a machine gun is like a bow-and-arrow. And the telephone of tomorrow will surpass the telephone of today. Tomorrow perhaps, this telephone at your elbow will bring you the face of the person you talk with, will hold new magic we now do not dream of. HIS IS the urge to improve—to seek and to find something alway’, better—which has been the definite policy of the telephone business since the first crude instrument re- produced the voice of its inventor Sip-add years ago. By no other policy could the telephone have kept pace with this country or contributed to its progress as it has donein reducing Canada's wide distances and differences of geography. » And by no other policy can the telephon€ taf oaks the aia of serving Cana uture. ANADA’S FUTURE is at least twenty years of unprecedented growth and pros- perity. All the signs and barometers of: busi- ness point to it. All the shrewdest prophets of business predict it. The signs and the prophets are so sure, and the future is so unmistakable, that within the next five years more money will be needed for , extension of the telephone system in Ontario and Quebec than was spent by the business in all its first forty years. . HE MAN pushing poles new country and the fo: is planning over one hundred » new plant.to meet the needs of the a five “= years come from. the ‘same _ policy and the same purposé— "to give Canadians facilities of £ communication worthy of their # ~*@ountry and its future, Ka and wire into Sea § BUILDS STRENGTH SCOTT’S EMULSION Love’s Stowaway (Continued From Page 6) “up just becau must ge Lady Cleave. “The fact Is, I have already had a word with poor Molly. Molly sees naaite Praag that it would hardly be fair ask Cecil to marry her, when she “has 60 un- fortunately ruined her eputation. She Is a dear girl; she will ane him se she loved him so much. Rather a nice temperament— convenient for you!’’ she added with a curl of the Hp. Briant clenched and unclenched his hands in fury at his helplessness. “Now why shouldn't you have a wtivate talk with your niece?" n SteHa, “You need never let her aes a word about those papers. Tell her you will take her back to America—or égay, the Continent— wherever’ you wish. Advise her to leave behind her a letter for Lord Belden, saying she had never realized rt just how utterly her reputation would suffer, unless she . Knapp. It is quite an understandable outlook, I can assure you, with any self-respecting girl.” Briant sored at this. apparently easy way 0 “T thin ig — idea Is not at all a bad one,” he said, “and you can rely on my getting her away at the first possible opportunity.” “It must not be later than tomor- row foreumaer insisted Lady Cleave. “I shall arrange for Lord Belden to take ae mother out In the car at eleve wouldn't advise you to mare | tl much after that,” she add- ed meaningly. And she left him as gerne as she had pounced wpon m Ten minutes later Mr. Briant summoned: up his courage a knocked on his niece's ‘bedroom door, “Is that you, Lady Belden,” she asked. “No, sald Briant, {t's me, love," I've just called ‘to see how you are, " he sald. “I suppose I am rather better, I feel stronger,” said Molly listlessly, “But come and sit down. something I want to say.” T 0 pause she sald, “Uncle, I've been thinking and I've decided that I want to go away.’ . i Briant felt tremendously re- ay “But what about Cecil?" he ask- ed, “I'm not going to have anything more to do with Cecil,” she sald bravely. “I've been thinking it over and it's not fair to expect him to marry me. You see, I'm not quite the same as when met, he and I first _ all those weeks aEO mean,’ said Briant, “that name's been linked wp with p You see, uncle, x couldn't bear “thet Cecil should arry me and then perhaps regret it all his life. rible scandal, want to go away—well, what do you say to the Riviera, or somewhere like that? “I don't care where it is so° long as it’s right away,” eald Molly. “But he’s sure to want to follow us," Briaut warned her. She nodded slowly. “T must prevent that,"" she said firmly. “I couldn't bear 1 It mut a ended for good and all."’ u don’t want to say good bye ,to ty then? Pérhaps that is best.” '“No uncle, I couldn't bear that,” she said, choking a sob. “But how ati” we get away unknown to them a “I’ve got it! “He's taking his exclaimed Briant. mother out for a drive at eleven , tomorrow. We can slip away then “Yes, that “will be best,” cried Molly. “The sooner the better." There was a bright; feverish look like to see. His conscience pricked him. And yet, he told himself, he conld not help it. He was not his own m “vit come ita Uttle Jater to see how yon are getting on,” he “Very well, uncle,"’ “she replied, sone be sure you don’t let a soul * ABOU the journey,”. he consider- ed. “Why shouldn't owe go by ras London? That's the aad “rn ring up ® - garage urgh. You. will be certain to he ee and ready. by eleven. to- » my ideal: Bidint went! rj {n her face that her uncle did’ not |. ia I ball mad. “Es not forget,” she e i t right @ away.” ; window, ch the tentie: court. ‘| Stella sitting talking on a garfen seat, she told herself that she could} not possibly go away. That sight tempted her to tear up the letter, and to stand oe oe et 6 But. she eary sigh and Capen hack to ved. Oh, if only she could have gone to sleep never to wake ub again! To Be Continued ‘Watch your dite are you watch- ing the date on your Banner? Why send your money away for Christmas ca ments when you can get better values at The erst now and get the selection of our ear The Palmerston Chamber of Com- merce is arranging for a visit from Santa Claus in December and also for a ‘Poultry Show early in the same month. If the old adage: ‘Save se be op mon- ey for a rainy day” had been foilow- in this section of Ontario this dsl the money wonld have been spent as fast as it was made, Over 11,000 s80° tourists visited Ontario duri ring and spent a- round $100,000, 000 according to es si week. This is an increase of over 20 per cent over the record made in 1927. The Statistics Branch of the On- tarlo Dept. of Agriculture says that 4,892 acres of potatoes were grown in Dufferin in 1927. The averag yield per acre was 128. 1 bushels and the value of the crop $405,976. ecured at Queen's Park this| e ' New one cent stamps in the same | design of the two-cent stamps which. recently appeared Perth— A judging team _composed of Alex st. M e Spence, Granton; ame Riddell, Newton and ‘anton rep- at the made the rounds of the er./farma of the county, Champion Cow— “Canary Korndyke Alcartra,"* rien d-o ompson, : has been declared the world cham- pion butter fat producer, Mr. ompson received a telegram from the Live Stock Commissioner at se tawa, notifying his had won the world’s thinebaiganin. an enormous margin to spare. The record of Canary Korndyke nag any previous record holder. $05 day period the cow produced 26,396 pounds of milk with an av- rage test of 4.04 butter fat. Running The Town— ‘An Exchange says: ‘There are always a few, people in every village or city who complain that a certa‘n of men want to “run the town.” But those who kick most are usually. hose o nothing to assist in the civic work of their communities. y who never attended a public meeting, nor even take the trouble deceased was in the Like Grandma Baked ES, Grandma’s bread was sii : good. There was no doubt about it. You enjoyed eating it! 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