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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1928-11-22, Page 4• HIS MAN is a business -prophet. He doesnot really 1061; into A creistall ball but he reacts the future nevertheless and he sees new cities yet unbuilt. He is important in the tele- • phone business, ' He judges the future from the facts of the, present and it it his job to judge -with accuracy. . He .must judge with, accuracy because, in , a telephone system, plans meet be made for years . ahead and MMions of dollars are involved..., With a railway • there must be tricks and sta- tionshefOre trainscan run. With a telephone --system there must be 'conduits • and,,central exchanges before telephone, can go in. To wait until people are clamoring foe tele-' hones is too lite • • •,.. 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 live years the • e_Province of Quebec Will need at least ',forty per cent more exchange capacity." • • .--A-hdTthe—tiriefige—Merit does not wait either. • They beim it is .up to them to prepare now. they don't they will be - failing down • tut their job; they will not be ,keeping pace with, the -country. 4 • , • , e • als ECAD8Z. tHE BUSINE:SS. 'spoke in tune and: the management 'acted promptly there .are 139,000 telephones being inebilled, in Ontario and Quebec this year. • Without them there *quid be inconvenience • and eonfusion now in thousands of new-lionies , and offices. ' Next year the business outlook calls for spende, over twenty-seven million:4611are to eeteed and renew the system and plans. have been . made to do so.' •- For the next five years the telephone expael.. sion definitely known to be -needed in the two • provinces means . over one hundred million ; lalINDING THE MONEY is a problem.' It is as great a probleni,as the coniplications of engineering and organization.. ' . . • Every Year as the country grows there meet be. new Morley ready so that the telephone system may keep pace. , • • 4 • Every year thus far the Money has been Iready because the policy of the telephone eketern has been fortunate. in 'attracting the seipert of conservative and reliable investors' who have ., . not 'been subject to the influence of market • . fluctuation*. THAT IS HOW the business prophet arid hs graphs have been made effective:: And that is why, the telephone niane " ageinent has always Met Cana-, • Alien .progress with; Confidence and enthusiatta., • L. tkri 11,e J2 Tdephoodt Comport, �f toiudto to tat vow soonettLiNt oboatttSf toLtpliosio. t.osameg to4 244 ,PO4P). 4* J. Tit* IMPILNOW SENTfe ' THURSDAY; NOVEMBER eend 1928 TIM latIO g LI 9W , Published every ThuredeY merning 1,ucknow, Onteriee • .A.p. MacKenzie, PrOprietoi .and Editor. - , TIILIKSPAY, NOVEMBER221WIXS •..*TEE A sPeetaeie. Pathetic to a degree, at first thought, was witneseed on the Streets of Leeloiew a couple of weeks ,ageele was the march of 22 old horl- .es ,frome their farm 'homes ,in the eau- eitry, to' the railway Stockyard where , . they Were loaded into a ear and ship-. :lied: away" to a fertilizer plant; ;there to have their bodies groupintu powder, to fertilize the very fields. perhaps; Which :they cultivated While they were _young had stiana-. Worked Until they were id and no longer able, then: shipped.off to the glue factory or fertilizer plant to be blotted out and foreva forgot- ten seems a hard and heartiess fate for aid Dobbin; but Perhaps its net as bad as it looks. The old harse has to die soon in any event. No power on earth pan save him. His teeili'are worn and done'; lais joints are Stiff...he • wilnl 'suffer from cOid 'hi the winter and the young horses will kick and otherwise abuse hiin, and then -he -inuCtalie-ofecolliceoresoine-othee pain- ful disease. He is fortunate if put to. a painless, death. And as being con., vetted into fertilizer, that • is as easy and as honorableas being devoured by dogs or magas. The very, appearance of seine her. ses suggest something like aebility.of nature, ' and _every. farmer , can recall the long and faithful aervices of some, "Jack" or "Jim" or "Bill" Which ap- peared to have no thought but to d� his-:--maiters; - who lust .a hotse”. shrink from sending such an old servant to :the glue fact - pry, and would rather- aee hilia :mime to a • more natural end so that the Worn old body ;May he buric.ee or ere - mated. As one man who witnessed the _ _ proceasion-above -referred to, said he wouldn't pat tare to send his Ohi &dr rem' Imre or eattata • with Itki-41011.. Hilid001.40 to 100k at .. burro:ere calm. of looks...ideal for boogied,. tiara*, abeda,„ liroreboatoo, 'orhoolo, churches., Doak .:bialtlinga..G.trosimeofraoffor :Irooristworo* • ' ii:ST LIKE 'HOME' $TOCK 014 THE• MGHWAY§ . There are those who say that it is not fair that a farmer: whose Cat -i tle. horses; pigs or ;sheep get upon the highwayeend Wreck an automobile should' ,be held responsible for the daniage, , Those arguing along, that line have in mind cases when the enimals get epee the highway unknown to the Ty711, :111: Wt11.1:1147 gahr .gfeantece;mbalTveYnrtdelaCT; . left ePerft' . That is*, all very well, but what -ibout the Man whose car IS Wrecked ;andthe people", who ate: hurt—per- taps killed or mahnect• for life?. Often it is impossible for a driver to avoid hitting an aniinal at large On the road end it is easy for the owner to mike eXceses:for .its ,behig there; et is. impossibleto . sae ;Wrliat;:reeeonable are in such h ease is; and it is quite evident that if excuses are to, be accepted there will be no end of trou- ble, for there...Are those who will tarn their animals upon the highway to pisture, and then swear that they were there unknown to them, : When demage is done, someone must, stand the loss, and the party responsible should be that 'one.. The highway is a place to drive on; not for the grazing of horses, cattle Or sheep. That with reasenable eare, 'farin animals Can be kept off: the highways, is shown by the .fact that -neaelarge-towns-oteeitiesewhere tra- ffic is thick, there is no trouble' from this cause.' AL SMITH TURNED DOWN: • borie.aWaY 'like that: Fortuately 010 who does anethine is guilty of little 01.1PA fl_that Sort, 4ro avoid such trouhle as betel this man frinii Elora, it is wise to have ene"s permit in a poeket of the ma- chine tine drives rather than in e po- eket of one's clothes. But that may • not • alwar be convenient; and to meet the cases wbere one wowning a ;permit, but IPA being Able to produce it when called upon to de so by an officer, the law might he so amended that a fine may he remitted •011." the *Um Of the law, later prc;ducing his permit before the magistrate. • ,To avoid all • trouble one should have his permit along. Traffic officers must See to it that drivers Wire. Per- mits, .Otherwise, how martY would bother getting gee? • MORE ADVICE ABOUT • • 7--r--o-o-o-,,==. MARRIAGE Dobbin doesn't: know and doesn',1'... Tr•zise:110 tie exeeNiingly entints- i isstie over the eciriforf Ancl ePriveni, I Once of 'fro roorl sieeping tais Operated la;.Ca din Naiona1 - 1z2:31:11.14 'on both the 10 and 11 t o'ff cc trains from TOronca to, 1%,ior- f. "Its •;;.'nst Iike "home ,..)o wheels" ii• the .ctrurrent Pt- a 'lrerent nito it is the„ideal to trAvel one,wishls h.r,Ave it; Mon-' 4, ;real' r4ti, tefroshecl 'tntl reiety for the •wistk. " Cie featiir of thf._ 'maw TOUR; rOOnt mrc pc;pr Rr minter ;;;Iiith any • vihrrtier that tends clistrfiv, sleep '110 been tlini‘ itateci 133:" tbe 7SPesial arrangement ef ramps bild beds mid the arcaption of ,,, • LOSS OF AN OCEAN LINER ..'Fortunntely the loss of an ocean- going.' passenger boat Of the first class'. is ,ettre. :Engineering skill hes mite the .great liners all bilt unsink- able, so that we have 'alneese Ceased to;think of these on the .seh as 'being in special danger... " But aiceam•goiag passenger • boat now carry tuch, a large 'mutt:ter of passengers and such a -large, "crew!: that when. through .iintisua' conditiori or: ,iinfortuate oversight Such a -vessel (foes go down in mid; ocean, the loss of life is :cure to et appalling. On the other hand. the shock/ and. sorrow ,of ,t e disaster gem; The great arid exciting presidential 'ilection in the United -States - has ?assed into history. and most of the newspapers have had their say about .In tespe-ct-of-• theenentbefeef- Vetee- etast (sole 37 million) it was the ireatest election ever held • in * the World; and in respect' of -the decii- venessof theotitchine' there has been lathing: to surpass it in United States. ..,istory. The .fearauf-those--Who- tho- ght that •Governor Sinitrotthe -"Wet" andidate of ,TWammany Hall— the gh light of everythingthets rotten polities—inight *in over the em- inentlrefficient and:respectable Noe: appears to have been atm to the iortor of such an everitaality rather .han to the Actual Conditiop of the ,eublic ;mind. Of course there wa.s no say of ascertaining thatk4but by tak- ing a vote. When we feei. that there is Much at stake We want assurance made doehly sure; and are bound to tear that the Worst may happen. • A. clever democratic commentator has put it this way:. "Alfred E. Sinith ‚uight.have won if ,he hadn't been. a Democrat in a Republican ,country; wet in a dry country, and/ a Catholic in ri:PrOtestant countrY." That was ibont it. On party lines the United States. is Republican, the liquor ques.- tion a' trerneridolis factor :1'nethe:elec- •tion; and in spite4uf all ;the hushing . . That philesophical friend of puz- zled 'lovers 'anddistracted married folks, Dorothy Dix,' to a girl cortes;:. pondent whom ./we believe entirely, nctitiqus, and who ,asks regarding,the advisabilityof an educated girl 'mar- rYing an uneducated and unambitious young man, lands out the 'following sage advice - Answer—No. I ,think: you would 'both be'miserable. A anar- riage May be happy and sixeceisful in whieliNthe husband ie superior to the wife, but never if the wife is, sup- erior le the husband: ' Very often an .•edecate.1 and aniT bitten's young man will marry an ig- nore -et and inert women, and seem- ingly be content with her. Apparent- ly he wil1. not even notice her lapses in grammer, or that she sitk up ent and tongue-tied whea. aher pee-. aile discuss topics of the day or things that they have read.in books 'or mag- azines.. PAGE FTj, • , 'IN‘iir4-2PMJ AIL AU"..1....#11111r 4 077* .,..„*.111114 4/11 ik8t '411 , But it sears a 'woman's very seUl 'with. shama-lf-ler- husband is not , . able to hold his own with other men and shows himself ignorant and stun-. id.., To her his, blunders iare Worse than "crimes; and ,she "..could forgive him rore•areatily for a misdeed" than misspelled' -word.- There is the ,great fundarriental cliff- e.renci• between a Man and I .Woman. A. mart likes:to look down. Oa the wo7 lien be love 32 H, would always pre- fer his wife, to ,be smaller arid weik- er--in 'body than he is, and to know less, 50thathe inay be an oracle to her; and that is Whye intelligent nien with tnbleparrYi. Ing"..ns:.3nd.:1've haP7.1Y ceased among the persene, entitled But the vromeri must lack up to the thereto; •havitg regard only ..te the naleaciii' a°.'clme ileec;vehinSi I;leanndul.st thisrespheee 1:421111.‘ linadin. :otlfeerhanieCII ttlhia.et37.:hirl.:aitdheeixelicau7: ileVer do if she .knows more 41a.ii he ots will ript be liable eir the plid is 'does and has. to be Continually. tr- sets; er,,any part; thereof to any per.. ,ing to correct him'. . son of whose claim the shall not It is worse still when the :wife ii thee haee receieed riotice. ... the. aniIiitioll '01,1e; when he the Thie. notice : is giver piirsuant tO dr,iving* one, i“th strength and ea- the statute in that behalf. ' ergy, , who Wants to get along,: and of Navernber A. D. 1928. ' ' . , Dated at Laeknow this ,sixth day the husband . is lazy ' and "Shiftless. - and .purPoselest, content to live atlY old way so. long tie . it ...does:: net cell - for his making an eipecial effort:. , That sort of a husband drives .an _ i energetic Woman: frantic, because she is:forever trying to iie the. thing that . can't be. done, to put, her own begins into hie head, her own oep into his peples.s sal, figi own; backbone into his spineless. jellyfish bedv.. And be- cause: he .is weak and flabby .While ehe ie strong and vital, be:suse the gree Mare ie the -better horse, she erally is relieved by the heroie efforts) there was about it Al Smiths, relig- at reacue, and the . noble selfforget- etilness and shcrifice slinwri by the strong to help their, leas fortunate comaanions. • ..The recent 1os' on, the' Atlantic. of. the steamer "Vestres," on its way. fieM New ' York to :'-'8outh'•',Americe appears to :have been attended'' by incidents which detract from the fine traditioni of the .see and will make sailors feel' ashamed of their fellows., There , was on the Vestresa crew of 198, and there. were 128 passengers. Among thesaVed are 155 meinhOta of the crew and ,only 60' passeagers.. :SS = ONT. ttotal. "Skadtoito. LtaLiosot• ..; two tan love i4nallyt and .the .. who loves. -mere lets• The "r4ee 5 latest type et box spring • inst., euetete. • ' Reeervateete ii the indenduel tette sleeping ears 6cdia..b. Made v;eli abteui of t,ime with Cenedials Nation., 41 *pat. ;on told heavily against him. Other things • being equal, , that Would . de- feat him. people do not like it to be known that in their politics', they are actuated by considerations of. -relig- ion, but .they are influerii.ed by such conaicierationa. neverthelesS. The Democratic Party. in the "United in he had ferether dishearten- ing time of Since ';the;; Civil War. which came to an end in 1864, there have been only two Democratic prea- idents--Grover CleaVeland and Wood- . row WiTson,-lirnd .curioasly-. enough each wag twice elected to the office. Twenty" eevee women end VI children •Now the party. is defeated worse than (all the Childrefl. on board) , were lost It looks very much: as thmigh the ere* had acted, npoir the aloft° "Ev- err Mari for timself.". Ali through t ever befere. The recent •camPaiim eost. the party. aomething like four - and -.a -half, million dollars. Another campaign will cost as imich or more. thoge least able to, help teemselves I meat of this, no doubt, was put. till MOCOIrtniekeDeering V4giete$ STAND THE STRAIN, 'OF HEAVY HAULS ON •THE FARM, ' OR GRAVEL HAULS AND EVERY WHERE eliAT.CAPACITY LOADS TEST THE FIBRE OF CON STRUCTION OF . WAGON. ' . GEARS'. WE WILL: BE ,PLEASED TO EX,PLAW THE, .SUP- .!ERIORITY OF THE PATENTED CHATHAM:BUMPER SKE, IN, ,ThE DOST -PROOF SKEIN BOX; THE EXTRA. *STRONG IRON REINFORCEMENT OF THE GEAP, HUBS OF SELECTr'. • ED BIRCH, RIMS OF WHITE OAK AD spolUlp 00' ErgsT 4 GRADE HICKORY. SPECIAL; ('ARE Ig :GIVEN TO EVERY • r;IECE OF.MATERIAL.. 4GENT ANDREW LU KNOW • NOTICE TO CREDITORKI. • ; •In the Matter :of the :Estate of John .Graham, late of 'tho ToWnshit) of' Kinloss - in the County: of Bruce, Yeoman, deCeased. • • NOTICE is her#by. given that all , ,persons having •elalin or deniaods against the late John .Graharn, who. diedbn eit•abeiit -ddy of Aiiitist AI D. 1928 at ToWnship• of Kinloss .in the Couny' of •Bruce::. :ere required to Send', by post :prepaid ,or delieet to the ,midersigned; exe , ecutiat under, the will_ tlf" the said -4ohn .Graharn, 'their earees and "ad - :dresses and full partieulaes in :write mg of: their claims ,and•statements.of their accounts and the nature of the "seCurities, if any, held' by them duly, :veiified by affidavit.'" And .take notice. ;that..,, after' the First 44s,, of Decor bei A...D. 1928 the ,said executors' will proceed to distribute the assets of ;he said de. -suffered Most:It-la even related that br these who jexpetted te,iiiike" it up. lifeboat crews refaaed ta take Men ',should the at anufactuting and sale ef anti Women out of the water though iritoititating hqlior.ageiii become le - they had tooth for a dozen; Thee eat, They will not do that again were taking no,.. eliances On being for thee case is hopeless. *he then overloaded.•• • , . wili nance the • Democratic Perty. The crew'. it pixy. be eseerned „sere in it tOpeless conte.St and .no big pro - neither British hoe American., but 0...§ in sight? me?sttr• rioneleecript sort 'Of .roix- . Ielends and in South AnieAcin peltsTHEBE slICIKLD BE- : comes to despise' A, REMEDY Peat TIIIS The Captain ..of the Vesti-ee sie4ears lo have beer; a stiipid end irraelute, od breed picked up in the Weat Indian felon2. ard him nine •.feirly be A 'sloe" , time age an Elora Man. • thtarg'edr. the whole dieter wife its dr°va nit° iiOnelldi and *est' was italc. of 111. At laSt he epee -ere 1.)A, traffic ,otteer for his deleet's • ha?""eeellzed - ter he eertnit, The man had- :permit gee. eet in thane -int his :Clothes had ot'"'z'ilitittfiietift -of- the'Pamily:lieraiI and io.nkett p;Lneettitig. the ais- wt,okty State :Nioetreal, ari, eeee. rent 'into 'ilia sea 'Without a life pre. (.*Prier aimd wklit 'ilown with his ship The: reeeel it :teems wae in trotbic 'for' ttvelce:-/i-ot;r4:--tron'Ae inetele'e" eee-eilied-ati sea—before- the espt4irr---otife: • ,:t e 8 G Se call Whieb •i•ja.11$- hr.iirh resene ships tee late and right. have been there (liadt. they krieerni in tire to save ever:tee:le. • Every branch LI faxin week; fatie reachietry, "stock. eft. his; at etpeet writer it the Feeeily 1erid nd Weck'r Staro 00:". recegliieed first writtnt In catai,414, V him and .to have on- ly a pitying, ,contempthus o'affection for him that is far and away from the sort- of love a -woman wants to feel for hUsbend. • And no man • loege loves, the • he iS geed in hie side, who hi to the work he hates, wife e- • nails ., • who pushes `him on le make the effort that • he loathes, making. More- over: a..man's .vanity demands' that his -wife shall admire hire, and when he finds out that be bas gotten a crit- ic., instead of a Oscine.; he almost. in- eaf.iablv forsakeee her for some ;wee ;man Who will tell hirn hoer great and iotderful he iS, instead el how far\ he falls shortof whet he should be. So I think that e,weman wh'e is each a'hustler 'ae You', should ,inerry a teat who is a go-getter. Lea; -e 'out unambitioes, friend to find a wife who knows no more than be does and Who ,will 1e content tc. stay in .the ephere of life :in which it ha pleasidellea. ven to tall her. ' • • 'Evere editor an eXpert l'be carded clothes to these be wan iwear on the•Itr:p %to -Guelph. leeWeeetee filet no proris-ion for a tqL*t"`"-Icf-iIii-i711.1%.';':andere*.*Thi -ihatV1 delyee shai mere his tr rm.t with him The outeeree was tliat the Mat fiern tlere te Appal' Severe et reag4e1 trete atel that funteletery. stitking to the letter of the law. erdered him to toty * Ant and crests einouttitg to 1 „ Pretty tough. wasn't it for failing . te ,ershaftr "ii*: little Ord f rah .6ne peke. te *bather-. Anyonl right bt Spipht in thnt 1444' foienvstibodY ed by men of practical experience: Red '11.04,911insidt:lailfteettiaree,_*.hy.-irt; "Ar4 in neblie esteeneeerepe:a. Yeat'Ter-three years for . $2.• •,-.10t:tenelet Enough A heed nd beggerd 'hutbOtd iteked the1)nte1iert "What leina' of intst lave,..,rott. thin, inorninglti • '80.4e steak AS „ten4ot o tni laertit.ft: Said ,the lietcher.. '4141 take attesage,", ta.la tht tut. tornor with.* "William E. eleleinald" "Joseeh ' Agnew". LacknOw, Ont.. . Executors of ,the said .f1state. *.• 'And Hre It Is the greatest Throat, Cougl and Tan:- sil remedy knOWni It worl:s wonders and it is guaranteedatind results or money tricktry, it. Mee Shill's Spahr's Tonsilitia. • B. McKim 04114111•110MMIMft and—yet so n.earl. ,iimet Call John by *tong ' Distance.' and .let him :know • I gote here. all right.: :Thin . tieither. of -,:us 'will be 'Worry:. ing 'It's • wenderful • to;.be . able. to visit you lite this, • ,;. and. yet keep as close. 'retch • with home is if I Wel.e there. Whet must it heee.been . - in the old nays, before Long • , Distnece Made it possible" . place the, call for yon ing • ".Off "That will he' -fine.. Just ask , tom. our nuniber, 124, se get the , Cheaper Station -to- : Station rale.. In' a couple of , days I'll in the . sd• 1,can hrlie a few ,wcads With the chrldren, tem The EVening-Rate after 8.4ZO - is eeally ,very. levee • • "Every Bell Telephone " ' Long 1)10 -mice Station." Mareatig ••••=;101.1.1....11m111•1•1•111.0••••••00......aVie. !Phone No. 10 ;s at Your Service We Sell tor Cash -We , Sell Cheaper than The Credit Store CHEER STOVES The GOOD • :CHEER 'Omen • Heater is in a• ' Class kly.ltself • trria,Or COSIES FIRST IN ANY 110,VSE110,1:1): THEN RELIABILITY, LONG SElieleE AND REAL; eY; ;ALE THESE QUALITIES ARE SU SlelEe cle THE .'GOOD" CHEHSEIt'IREBOX IS' E. T001i.Y ANDBUILT RIGHT. TN THREE • MINUTES .YOU CAN RAISE THE.COAI: GRATES, TO MAKE THE FIREPOT SHALLOWER 1.:01t BURNING'i:Oh."E oR, AL- 213.'TiltitEAOCe'rNt;;IS 20 IN. 10,1.1), WILI;. 'GIVE -1290M POR EIGHT PIE ,PLATES -;FOUR ON Ilk.' uo'rt9m, 4k..!1) VtiIc ON IIIE RACE ' kB1F°\l'E• OL'. WISH TO ,sere Tee ei*,;81., • • AT A REASONABLE , • • PRICE, WE INVITE 'YOU TO rAlLi: DON'T FAII. TO SEE THE '0001/: ('HEER(IllicleLATOR" A WoNotRFUL STOVE FOR WA). WE HAVE RANGE OF :voh; OK Wool). tot:R-0*w ••'ktAlcy, OF STOVE 1'14*e. elAille,FRONI PLATE—ALWAYS ON HANG; • ' ,COLEelAN eLA0g;;;e:COLEtif..Ate :4:-.A-N7I-F.1fi,114e1S`b LAN - OIL brt SEE THE SPECIAL -Prtlifffli .1q,Ail1IGHT AT el GUAKx- A,NIEED, • fl - : 141“11C; ' Vlister •Cetridnt tSash..Primed and Glazed • Mittdie & Ston. nootim.tittutiblosi and E1ecttli Wiring