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Village Squire, 1976-02, Page 34The Americans can have old Alex Bell and his ding-dong phone too. People keep asking me how I like living in the country. They say it with a kind of chuckle these days that says eloquently "I told you so". , They ask it and their minds eye wanders to our long, long lane and the heaps of snow that keep drifting down monotonously day after day. It has, let's face it, been a hell of a winter in the snowbelt this year. Hardly a day goes by that isn't storming. It's the kind of winter that makes greenhorns run back to the city. I'm a native snowbelter, though, and ,grew up on a farm with a laqe just about as long that I walked every day. As' a youngster (oh the hardship) I walked more than a mile every morning and night to catch a bus'to school. I also lived in a city for a while where walking six or seven blocks was a lot less bother than trying to catch a bus or streetcar. So my permantly snowfilled lane, about the length of a city block isn't that much of a hardship There's one thing I've come to dislike about my country home, however, and it doesn't matter whether its summer or winter, spring or fall. It's that ding dong telephone. Party line telephones have been the•brunt of many a joke over the years: you can never get the phone when you want to use it; people are always listening in on conversation, it. the best grapevine in the country etc. etc et( Well we have exceptional people on our party line. Seldom have I wanted to use the phone that I couldn't get it first try. Seldom have I called home that I've heard a busy signal. No, you couldn't find a much better party line than ours. • It's just that the darned telephone keeps ringing all the time. That may not seem like much, but when you come home from work tense after a hard day, that simple ringing can be enoLgh to put you through the roof. At the office, everytime the telephone rings it means business, and about the half the time it means trouble. You almost hate to hear the phone ring at all. But then you come home to your peaceful abode, and the phone rings about every 10 minutes. Kapow. A while back Canada and the U.S. were arguing over whether Alexander Graham Bell was in Canada or the U.S. when he invented the telephone. Sometimes in my nationalistic phases, I fight for him to be in Canada. Sometimes I'd rather he'd been in the U.S....it would be one more bad thing we could blame the Americans for 32, VILLAGE SQUIRE/FEBRUARY 1976 I read where in Montreal Bell Canada is wiring houses with plug -ins that allow you to plug your telephone in anywhere around the house. It will allow you to install your own telephone when you move in and save the company having to send out an installer. It will also allow you to unplug your telephone when you want some privacy. Sounds great until you really think about it. I mean besides phoning out, you also keep a phone around in case someone has to reach you in case of emergency, like if your uncle Harold passes suddenly and leaves you S100,000 in his will, or you win the Irish Sweepstakes or your wife smashes up the car and wants to know which wrecker she should • call. On second thought Shore GIFTS & JEWELLERY We believe that we have the best and largest selection for your requirements 56 THE SQUARE GODERICH, ONTARIO N7A 1M5 WE HAVE SEARCHED AND SEARCHED FOR FINE FURNITURE - WE NOW HAVE WHAT WE THINK THE ULTIMATE IN PINE FURNITURE BY "LAMPADE". { OUR LOW PRICES ARE OUR ADVERTISING -- BE ONE OF THE FIRST TO PROVE IT! ZILLIAX HARDWARE & FURNITURE ListowelPhone 291-1210