NIGHT COUGHS (ai BRONCHITIS \ ADVERTISE IN THE BANNER ‘ ae Like | : Baked Phone 146 We will Pay the Highest Cash Price for Live and Dressed Poultry Bring your supply to us the first four days of k each wee Wright & Gibson Listowel palatability. Grandma — ES, Grandma's bread was good. There was no doubt : about it. You enjoyed eating it! But we know that you'll like ZURBRIGG’S MILK MADE BREAD maybe better. “You'll like the delightfully crisp. brown ° crust and snowy white centre — the Bread which to-day and to-morrow is of the same consistent wholesomeness and ZURBRIGG BROS. equally well— — NEW CITIES T ict catty tock: oe S32 t Seat bel he reads the future nevertheless and he sees new cities yet unbuilt. He is important in the tele- phone business. 4 He judges the future from the facts of the resent and it is his job to judge with accuracy. He must judge with accuracy because, in a telephone system, plans must be made for years ahead and millions of dollars are.involved. With a railway there must be tracks and sta- tions before trains can run. With a telephone system there must be conduits and central exchanges before telephones can go in. To wait until people are clamoring for tele- phones is too late. HE BUSINESS PROPHET does not wait. He comes to the management with his charts and graphs and figures and says: “In 1930 the demand in Ontario will be 80,000. new telephones, They will be wanted here and here and here.” Or he says: “Within the next five years the Province of Quebec will need at least forty per cent more exchange capacity.” And the management does not wait either. They know it is up to them to prepare now. lf they don't they will be falling down on their job; they will not be keeping pace with the country, Be THE BUSINESS PROPHET spoke in time and the management acted promptly there are 139,000 telephones being installed in Ontario and Quebec this year, Without them there would be inconvenience and confusion now in thousands of new homes and offices, Next year the business outlook calls fo. .pend- ing over twenty-seven million dollars to exte: 1 and renew the system and plans have been made to do so. For the next five years the telephone expan- Sion (cfinitely known to be needed in the two provinces means over one hundred million ollars, PrXDiNe THE MONEY is a problem. It is as great a problem as the complications of engineering and organization. Every year as the country grows there must be new money ready so that the telephone system may keep pace, Every year thus far the money has been ready because the policy of the telephone system has been fortunate in attracting the support of conservative and reliable investors who have. not been subject to the influence of market fluctuations; exe IS HOW the business proplirt and his graphs have been made ive. And that is why the telephone man-. » agement has always met Cana- dian progress with confidence and enthusiasm, | will of God—as though the will of a Like a lightning flash it had burat had deliberately worked against the will of God—of good, of Cec!l's and her own happiness—that they wore parted. That was the reason for all her suffering. And, indeed, she sup- posed that that wae where all the suffering in the world came from—- than the true God, obeyed cther The foll early, to find that no trace of las- situde reinained.. She felt, indeed; Tadiantly well: Whither all those nerves and aches and pains had gone. she could not tell, nor did she care, One thing was ae, be lived, and life was a glorious the. garden, and here she strove to| communicate to him som i Mose | att ea es : Ser Love’s Stowaway (Continued From Page 6) might soon be wellagaln. And then he had talked gloomily about the desirability of being resigned to the God would be something evil! And, ing out of the window over the bay, she told herself with conviction that God never willed evil to befall his child. That would be unthinkable! The old priest was a dear, ut, surely ‘his doctrine—that God will evil, sent it, permitted it—was the doctrine of despair. Surely, if God God, where did it originate? To take her own case, why was it that such tterrfble shipwreck had ‘been made of her love? Eagerly she turned back to the béginning of. it all. In the first place, could she blame God for having separated her from Cecil? not her own rash act, her pride, that had caused her to leave her uncle's house? Why should she not have waited? In her heart of hearts she had been fully convinced that Cecil was not mer- cenary. Why then had she been tn- fluenced ‘by her poor foolish uncle's pride and ambition? No, it was certainly not God who had sent her of, had caused her to stumble on to the “Beryl” with the resultant bewildering experiences with George on the Island, Without question, it had been herlown deliberate act that had Srought ‘all these {ls upon her. Then again, in the present in- stance, when Cecil and she were at last united once more, when she hed ‘been convinced of his loyalty and de- votion, had It not been her own act that had thrust them apart again? If, when at Belden, she had Teally trusted her God, would she haye al- Iswed Stella Cleave to influence her in the least? After all, of at worth were these standards, and conventions, and ideals, of Lady Bel- den and her kind? Lord Belden must not marry a girl whose repu- tation had been ruined, forsooth' Why must he net marry such a girl? After all, surely, In God's eves, it was good character, not merely a sood reputation that counted? what would it have mattered though the whole world should point a fin- ger of scorn at them, providing they two loved one another. What a mad fool she had been And then she had left behind her that misipading, wounding letter. Could she drag God Into that hid- esus action? Could she blame Him for Its consequences? What right had she to write such Hes to Cec!l? She had ‘made herself believe that ehe did it out of love. And_- yet, could such a lying act express love? How could It be love to sever what he believed to be a God-ordalned union, simply because of whaf the evil tongue of scandal m’ght fling at ecil! i As Molly reasoned things out on these new lines she became more and more excited. She was almost in a transport. It was, in a sense, as though she had been granted a revelation, had ® a discovery. in wpon her that it was because she because people set up other gods laws, conventions, rules, instead of 1 t law ofp. ate Zins gists cad a@d my best to work on you). if-you remember?” following morning, she rose fo was to omething . ts had come to her dur- that night, as Molly lay in bed look- dub‘ously, “By the way, and what's going to happen to me?” he con- sidered then. at all, uncle,” she said “Then I'll ‘tefl you. ‘I'm ‘come into this pretty seriously, The well as you Fever made you anywhere but Inta Molly's. ayes, “The tr’ cried M he pleaded be a hundredth part of the sin and suffering there now is in the world?” Briant nodded his head thought- fully. Her idea had struck home at last. rf) “I don’t mind confessing that there’s one or two little things In my past that I'd like to have un- done,” he admitted. “We business men often take a particular line ‘of action because it seems to be sound policy. But, one dan spend a long time in regretting an action,” “It's the same with everyone, éhe insisted. ‘We all act more or less from policy rather than prin- ciple. Take Lady den as an in- Stance; she did all she could to urge Cecil not to marry me. Indeed, it was what she said to him that lead to my running off. And yet, she would really have been happier ta have let him marry me. The scan- dal would. have quickly died down, in any case, and she would have had the hourly satisfaction or knowing that Cecil was happy.” “She's an old cat, is Lady Belden!" rapped out Hriant. “Still, I won't blame her,” said Molly. “She was Prompted by a mother’s natural anxiety for her son. In any case that was no ex- cuse for my doing wrong. It was I who wrote that letter which meant that Cecil could never approach me again," John D. Briant sighed. “You're beginning to make me think that I've played somé dirty tricks In my forty years’ dusiness | Career,"’ he gaid. Molly was stil} working out her dea. nele, I'm going to do a ‘plucky thing,” she said. “My pride tells me I mustn't, but I’m going to put my pride behind me. I think pride is the very devil,” “Well, wnat are you going to do now?" asked. Briant with some alarm. “I'm going to cable to Cecil,’ she told him. “I'm going to ask him to come out here,” “Never! gasped Briant. r “Oh, but I am!" declared Molly, her eyes flashing. “I’m going to take back that letter, tell him it was all Hes, all poliey, all. pride and folly. And, I shall tell him that I'm willing to marry. him.” “But I don't think I would,” ob- jected MBriant. “Better let me tackle him, on the quiet iike. Don't you think it would be rather humi- Mating for you, supposing he should have changed his mind and perhaps no longer wants to marry you, my dear?” Molly laughed heartily at that. “Oh, but there can be no question of that,” she cried. “If my Jove for- Cecil and his for me are something ordained of God—and I'm certain of it—then everything must come right, Briant shook his head. “SUN, it's a good, rule to leave it to the man to make the advance," he advised, we “Policy again!" orted Molly, “No uncle, {t's | who did wrong, and it's who must undo the wrong. Hav- Ing taken back that letter I shall have done what I ought to do right, step. by step, Hfe would g¢) so easily! I'm certain of ft, uncle,” “Hum! I-wonder!" sald Briant “I don't iknow where you come in ‘Oh, don’t you?” said Mr. Briant. fraid. I fact is, Lady Cleave tackled me as “Never!” cried Molly. “Yes, and I must confess. that 1! “Unclet" cried Molly, | “wWhat- r do that?" Briant looked out: over > the bay, Tact is, my ‘dear, that crafty “Unele!-¥ou don’t really mean Are you ashamed of me, Molly?” nu hear less in action in some friend’s home. more sold than all other electric sets combined! And their regret is unmistakable. “wer. Get yours now "The Rogers “Four-Bighty” Table Ha gdp trap es has exactly the same radio equip- 5 Ld o plete (except Loud Speaher), J. i McIntyre & Co. Inkerman St. Nothing more te buy The Quoted Price Includes Freight and Complete Equipment HEN the Nash salesman quotes “400” value. Come in and see it. Take you the price on a Nash “400,” you will find that it includes not only the car, but the freight, bumpers, hy- draulic shock absorbers, everything! There's nothing more to buy. Nash puts on the extras at the factory, in- stead of you or the dealer putting them The money never bought so fine a mo- tor car before—big—handsome—pow- ered by a new, high-compression, 7-bearing motor—longer wheelbase— new double drop frame—all exposed metalware chrome plated—and a host of other vital improvements. Read The “400” Standard Six Salon Body ’ 4-door Sedan, illustrated above, will give you an excellent idea of Nash And then remember that the price in- cludes everything—nothing more to buy! Sex “dl. Cabriolets, Victorias from: $1234 -to BL504 Delivered ow = H 4 @ QO the Worla in Wotor Car Value _ TANT “4007 FEATURES—.VO OTHER CAR HAS THEM ALL CHAS. OSIER & SONS —