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. 1346 •
4;2014R P. BELL B.A.
Barrister Stilicitor
Office Of inter. Hohneted, K.C.
(Next -A.. D. Sutherland)
Monday, ,Thureday- and Fridays.
Over -Keating's' Ilmg Store. •
1236
, VETERINARY,
' JOHN GRIEVE,- VS:
• Honor graduate of Ontario Veterin-
v ary College. Ali diseases of domestic
animals treated. Calls promptly at-
tended to and,eharges moderate. Vet-
etinary DentietrY a specialty. Office
and residence on Goderich Street, one,
door -met, of, l)r. Jarrett's office, Sea -
forth.'
12-36
A. R. CAMPBELL, V.S.
•
Graduate „of Ontario Veterinary
Colleges University of Toronto. All
• diseasesof domestic animals treated
. by the most modern principles.
Charges reasonable. Day or night
calla promptly attended to. Office on.
Main Street, Ilensall, oPPosite Town
Ain. Phone 116, Breeder of Scot-
tish Terriers, Inverness Kennels,
Hensell. •
12-36'
MEDICAL
DR. GILBERT C:%IARROTT
Graduate of Faculty of Medidine,
University of Western Ontario. Mem-
bet of College of Physicians and
Surgeons of Ontario. Office, 43 Gode-
rich Street, West. Phone 37.
Successor to Dr. Charles Mackay:
12-36
DR. W. C. SPROAT
Physician -• Surgeon
Phone tfeW. Office John St., Seaforth.
12-86
• DR. F. J. BURROWS
Office and residence, Goderioh St.,
east of the United Church, Seaforth.
Rhone 46. Coroner for the County of
Huron.
12-86
(Contlneed from lautiVeok)
Chapter sow
THE' GYPS'(rill'
If some of her Oen left. lere-bel'
wonder feerSaisedinanY f /aid. She shot
Peter straight 'en, 4a.iud the getal horse •
werkedat top apeed with hie OOP
flagging back, 41;4 great' wee his etr
fort.
Yet, blinking threugh . the ' wind
wbleh,.that g1Jiop raised, the saw
Caotain• .swing back again into.
view, copping 'past on her right; then
a moment later, he walk -ed ui on. her
ieftentl •s•he underatood. He was
uaing that:, matehiess Speed pf
his-
ltterally to run' Mahler; around Peter,
She drew up the ,gelding and walts
ed. It was only a pause of ,.a few
.secends:" Then the Captain came flye
lag out of the night Withelits mane
combed back' and his Mit" drawn
straight ont by the arrowy speed, of
his coining.
He shot at poor Peter with gaping
mouth and eyes, which, it •seemed to
Joan, were devilishly bright. •Peter
whirled. away, and the great Stallion
'went -by, missing them narrowly. Jaen
dropped to, the ground as Peter, map-
tered, by terror, • darted away with. a
flying pair of .bridle reins. He was
net pursued. . • .
s'The .Captain, ager ,catapulting past;
swept around ifl a short- circle, sent
after the flying Peter a triumphant
neigh, and then bratight • up before
Joan, He had an advantage of ground
which addedato leis lefty .stature so
that. he blocked.away the stars, and
like.stars were bia great eyes, half
shadowed, under a brush of forelock.
Jean, looking' up at the giant an-
imal, laughed. joyously. It was more
'beautiful than a dream to her.- He
had followed, her throiigh the. night
asa dogmight have followed, and
now he let her take him by the mane
and•lead him • after panicky peter.
For, yonder 'stood Peter on .a sevale
of Sava .neig,hice; his, dread which
drew ,him, cite way and his love of
his mistress which urged him' in the
oepos•ite, direction. So shehaltect the
ItOtt-Sit
4 a, kka; e
atrin "Ig4 T 17rT
sowfurtherL PrOSelit1Y. he was 'hallo
tag. She strueit lii;a With the flat, Of
her hand on the flail, but at that he
came to a It, and tliating halthvai
retard,- ibee tUrn.led 'his- 'head toward
those. Western mountains which were
his goal. •
Here was a new eattire. To be
SUM. be Was docile as se lamb at
times; but that was only when+ she
(=hose a way which was his way also.
Sbe struck in again, with the fiat of
her and eg the silk of his flank This
tine :he. shuddered under the blow
and ills eere flattened. He was angry
now.. Another 'moment, for Mt she
op.uldl tell, and he would be pitching
as she had eien him -pitch in the
Purvis corral.
• So, with her 'heart' heap:tering .in
her .throat, she began, to consider
Abet ahe could do. She must leave
him where he was if sthe hoped' to get
back to the ranch before the morning
and if- she did not arrive there, poor
Buck Daniels would go half mad with
anxiety.
A tinkling dissonance began to tall
toward her from the pky. She raised
her. headeand looked up. There was
nothingto be seen; but how the try -
leg geew stronger and stronger as
some unseen wedge- of wild geese
• fowed north through the upper dark.
nes°.
The thought of Buck Daniels grew
ellim in her mind. Still Watching the
stars above her, she became aware
that the stallion was in motion again,
that he was turning, that the was head-
ing north agatn at a trot and the u at
a canter and then at the mile -devour-
ing gallop. But sthe had no power to
t
eslst.
Every moment 'her happiness was
increasing, and; sae had a feeling that
she had been cut away, at last, from
restraints which she bated, and that
She as being launched on the road
• ehich was truly her road because her
father 'had travelled it before her.
NVIlere it would lead her sbe could,
not guess) and hechuse she could pot
Ca.ptain, then ran on to. Peter. guess, it was a double delight.
When she had the reins of the geld- Conscience was not a small power
ing again, looking back with speech- in herbut when once one has tented
less anxiety, she saw that the Cap- oae's back on conscience the chase is
tain had not left the spot where she long before it overtakes one., So it
had stationed him. He was watching was with Joan. 'Although .she knew
her with a thigh head, and Joan knew that duty' led ther back toward Buck
now that she could never abandon Daniels there was something far
him. stronger than duty which carried her
With fingers trembling with her toward' th,e- mountains.
Hew after 'hour the desert owed
haste, she tore the saddle from Pet-
er and then his bridle. Then, with beneath them. They began to wind
a wave ,of the hand, she dent him on. among low foothills. At last a dim
his way.- He, at least, would not mis- scent of Pines began to blow toward
understand :that signal. He lw.ould herr from the upper reaches of the
DR. HUGH H. ROSS • • never stop rimming matil he was out- slopes and, as the dawn began to
esseaseestaalasaleslyMheateseheseaeahe !sate -the, -kate.A0 ,hi.e. earra,l, at :home grew ,gresy, they came to a pleasant
•
Faculty of Medicine, member of Coi-
.. lege of *Physicians and Surgeons of
Ontario; pass graduate course in
• chicagO Clinical School of Alcago ;
Royal Opthalwie Hospital, London.
• England; Univerility Hospital, Lon-
don, England.. Offiee--Back of Do-
minion Bank, Seaforth. Phone No. 5.
Night calls answered from residence,
Victoria Street, Seaforth.
1236
• DR. E. A. McMASTER
Graduate of the University of Toron-
to,' Faculty of Medicine
_Members of College of Physicians
and Surgeons of Ontario; graduate .or
NIA( York Post Graduate School and
Lying-in MosPital, NewYerk. of-
fice on, High Street, Seaforth. Phone
27. Office fully equipped fdr X-ray
diagnosis and ultra short wave elec-
tric treatment, Ultra Violet Sun Lamp
treatments, and Infra Red electric
treatments. Nurse le, attendance.
12-36
DR. F. J. R. FORSTER
Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat
, Graduate in. Medicine, University
of Toronto.
Late assistant New York Opthal-
mei and Aural' Institute, Moorefleld'a
Eye and Golden Square Throat Ilos-
Pfdals, London, Eng. At Commercial
Hotel, Seaforth, third Wednesday in
each month, from 1.30 p.m. t 04.30
• p.m. 58 Waterloo Street, South, Strat
ford. ,
° 12-86
t.
DR. DONALD G. STEER
Graduate of Facility of Medicine,
lijnitrersity of Western Ontario. Mem-
ber of College' of Physicians; and
Surgeons of Ontarke Full ecritip-
Metal including an ultra short 'wa've
stet. '
Office -King Street, Ilensall. Phone
Bensap 56. .
• ' 12-86
DENTAL
1 "
•and there he would wait until Buck ssot. Here a stream trickled, around
the shoulder of a, hill, dropped away
in a musical cascade, and formed be-
neath in a deep pool, still black with
night, although the upherpeaks were
besiening to growout into ,the day.
Around the little lake there 'wesa
small meadow rich with grass, and
the meadow wag bordered in turn
with shrubs and little*stunted ever-
greens. Here she stopped.: •
The Captain had no objection. When
the saddle was removed' lie• went
down, to the water and drank before
she could prevent hint But be leek
only a 'few swallows • and turned' a-
way to the grass.. Peter, she knew,
if he had been as, hot, would have
buried bighead to eyes and drunk
:enough te.--inake hdniself sick, but, the.
Captain needed no human wisdom to
hini• be*. besit tii care for, hiin-
self.
Tit the meantime ,must prepare
for het own .breakfast and • it was •a
simple matter. Buck Daniels himself
had taught her to tarry ,fishing tackle
always with -her when, she rode out,
as well as a Meagre real of a blanket
wrapped in the slicker behind • her
•
So she rigged a „hook and line on
a straight stick' Which she cut, and
sat -dbwit on a stone by the pool, to
try her luck. She had a bite almost
at onee,.and then another.
And in her excitement she quite
forgot that- she was fishing for food
and not for epet until a shadow fell
aoroas the water before her, .and -she
looked up to find that the -Captain
had left his grass and come, over to
watch the 'game. •
"! • . ,
" Chapter XXIII •
"YOU' AIN'T NO KILLER!"
•Daniele came out in the, marnine. , . •
Dragging the trappings with her,
she went back to the Captain. Un-
der his head she dropped there in a
pile and let him investigate. He was
not at all pleased, it was plaineto epee.
First he '.suiffea at the saddle and
bridle; rank 'with the sweat of Pet-
er. 'He .even pawed at them disdain
fully, tumbling them ,over and over
in the sand. Then .he went to Joan
and, swinging around behind her,' he
looked down over her shoulder at the
gear she had •brought.'
What .would, 'happen whea she aa
tempted. to put. that saddle on his
back? She was agreeably surprised.
He did net. stir when she lifted. it
Irigh-te swing it up th"blii."Withera.
Aid e although. he, Swam. head'
eround to watth the proceedings, he
()Whet object when she drew 'up the
cinches. They haddack be lengthened,.
of course, foie having been set for
the debrlike body of Peter,.they could
not encompass the ample girth of the
Captain. •-.,
. It was done,' at • last, and 'the
head strap of the bridle haying been,
lengthened, it was fitted to the head
of the staill•on. And so, finally,, her
foot was in, the stirrup and she drew
herself up to her plate..
It eyes, the crucial test. She bad
heard of maay a. horse which a child
could -meant barebacked, but whialt
turned into a fury whet; a saddle -was
Arse& But the Captain Made not the
slightest trouble about it. He only
twisted his head around until` he had
sniffed at her foot . in the stirrup.
Then, as she hewed the reins, he
straightehed away at a flying „gallop.
Peter was no common horse, but
how different was this from the
stride ot Peter. Between the beat of
the Ceetain's hoofs; he seemed.' to
float away on wings, a long and roll-
ieg; gait Which made her thing of the
lift and. the awing a waVes, In the:
deep ocean. And yet ft was all as
effo'rtlese as the ,motioni of the waves.
• She could Only tell • the speed at
which she was travelling ;by the rate
at which the ground shot iyaeit be-
neath her and the fanning of the ind
in her face. As. for the jerk of labor -
Ing Muecles, there was none of that.
• •Sire, made no attempt to guide Min.
But' when they Came to a stretch
where the "footing was firm, she sent
him away at full, speeds with a Cry.
-.Frill speed? ,She had not dreamed
whet sp'eeel could be. ' As 'bie stride
,lengthened 'he ,appeared to flatten to-
ward the earth. The long roll came
tatt of his gallop. It- was. like the
dart ,of water -down a long, smooth
flume Of rock. And it increased Etteed,
ily to such a point that she began to
wasp, for breath and th:en drew back
on the 'reins.
Instantly he returned to- his •foraner
pace, racking along as before with-
out effort, and, with no wheezing, dr
labouriog fest .hreath in spite of •011
bis work. But. Dere Weis enoUgli of
play and it was high time for her to
go home. She setting him about and
headed -him for the. ranch .
There was an blatant Change in the
manner of the stallion.. . He 'fellaat
once to, a jerky, highetreaded trot, and
DR. J. A. McTAGGART
duate Royal College of Dental
geons, TOronto. Office at Hensall,
-old.. Phone 106. •
12-86
•
AUCTIONEERS
HAROLD DALE
Licensed Auctioneer
SpeCialist In farm and household
slated'. 'Prices rent:maple. For dates
and intorination, write or phone Har-
oid Dater Phone. 149; Seaforth, or
• Apply at The Expositor Office.
•. 12-86
: W AHRENS
Licensed- auctioneer for Perth and
.Thiron Oculatica. Sales solicited.
tertne apPlieation. Pam Stock,
diattela and Pent Estate PronertY.
144. 4mitait4i,„ ,Phon 684, r 6..
*DOW at Ofttee.
• ^ 1.
414 „
4.4
12-36
1 4
AV #Lti.
taterifr SOMA!:
000, -beat horses
literaith swarmed -Liathisyethe, Seere.
There Was •Iihtrail etae ebsoure toe
theieeaitiee. They Colnitedt the noolca
and atunniles.,k, •
And yet Glostea abohlt tt.'W• off. Ile
Massaged it by a chow a:Memo, „al-
flieugh he alto not at alleeensidei it
-as wise measure when -he took It.
He lied to see -Joan,- agaitt-t no matter
at what rish, ands eo ha doubled*
straight hack into the region of his
jail' break!
4944)10.•,i?tfe''04an
e i/14)
440010.
tht WaSS.Pested.'
eh' v:14 leaoa4oBar it
RcOt, 40. Paotninq.'.'
*0:40 X4,104 to ftfteOSOPUennik,
ehnt get rthsteyossa ,
„PAta
He felt that was liketautting his
head into the Limes Mingle And ev-
eryone else seemed to. feel that such
a march would. be , tho Some thing.
They anted with increasing fury, but
they hunted in a growing cirele,,the
activitY being, on 'the rim, while the
centre of the circle wag- the town of
Sim }targe oe and the jail break. That
centre was quiet, and near it, toward
the "ranch of Buck Daniels, came the
oiitlaw
The town itself was humming this
morning with a new eicitement of
• which Gloater could knew nothing.
For, at dawn, it was found that the
big black stallion had been turned
out of his •corralshtbse gate had been
deliberately unharred, and it was the
opinion: of alt,.thatsome member of,
the- Haines gang had come down to
claim the great horse.
That so much should have been
ventured' was considered a double in-
sult—to Sim Hargess and to the
prowess of every gun -bearing man in
the whole town. There were angry.
little 'conclaves at the hotel and the
general merchandise store. There
war gritting of teeth and a looking to
weapons.
None of this was known to Gloster
himself, for he came shortly after
the dawn in sight of the little ranch -
house, nstalled his horse near the
cpttonwoods, and stalked the house It-
self. He had hardly' taken covert in
a shed when Buck Daniels appeared,
ant' uttered n shout of surprise at
tee sight of a trim -built gelding stand-
ing near the, gate of the ,eorrial and
touching hoses With the horses with-
in.
After that the ratchet acted like a
Man possessed' with fear. •,. In another
moment he had thrown a: -saddle 'aiiid
tridle on. a horse and was riding
north ad east, leaning far from the
awhile =el -studying a bail. He dip-
ped into a 'swale, and as soon as -re
had disappeared Gloster came from
his 'hiding and' ran to examine the
marks in the sand; •
. It, was at once apparent that Dan-
iels was following 'the hack trail of
a horse, and it was not hard to put
two and two together. Yon;der was
the gelding with the saddle mark
tile showing .on hie back; and ,Dap-
iels had left with such ,Sieeteathat iae
had not even turned the beautiful an-
imal into the corral.
And „Gloster remembered the outline •of the horse MO& he had seen
Jean riding the night of • the jail
break: He could not recognize it, of
course, having only seen it by star-
light but there was enough • slimilar7
ity to make him feel reasonably 'sere
Juan's' horse had comae back to ;Alp
ianch without saddle or bridle, and
now' the rancher was following tee
back tjail• to find 'what had become of
his.. girl. •
So Gloster returned to the cotton-
woods and took- up the pursuit. • It
was not easy work. All day he lay
in the rear trying to keep Daniels in
Tsiglif -Without being seen himself, and
eithough in:, the beginning there .was
&ems shelter behind which he could
ride from- point to, point, yet- it was
always difficult to remain unseen.
In two•hours of the slew' joimneys
the saw Daniels change his direction
to- north and 'west, and start riding
aith increased vigotir. „ He himself
soon eame to the. spot; although he
was not an • expert trailsman, yet it
was, easy' enough to read the sign
bero.. Yonder the marks of the geld-
ing's -hoofs crossed. the sign of a
much larger horse, as was shown; by
the site of the ,prints and the depths
to which they had sunk. Here, too,
was a place where the sand was rak-
ed. As if the saddle had beeu brushed
across it.
• What had happened; Gloster could
•
not dreamt, unless at: this Witt Joan
had caught a fresh horse which might
have -been wandering loose. Yet what
horse could it have been for velech
she would give up the ,fine gelding he
l'iad seem at the ranch?
• He went on, pondering these things
and finding bis trailing problem more
and more difficult. Daniels was shove
ing.' the way. • But now they were
-climbing intro the foothills,' glAritig the
rancher a chance .to look back and
down •arttl discover his pursuer. How-
ever, the roughness of the country
was .an tied ester,' and by keeping
a sharp look out before 'him, he felt
reasonably secure. .The afternoon
wore on. The sun was westering rap:
idly thee the blow Ohne.
Hie ' had rounded a little pyramid
of jai:aged rocks as large an cabin
when a dry, unhuhried voiee said =be-
hind .,him: "Title Is iity turn to say
'tag,' Gloster. Just shove lip' your
battler will you?"
And over his shoulder heislaW the
deep -lined, Belem] lace' of Buok Dan-
iels appearing over a boulder with a
,rifle levelled steadily Upon him., He
hesitated. To be taken prisoner Meant
death just as surely as; it meant d•eith
if he trifled With the steady -hands
which had now drawn a bead 'upon
him. .And Yet, if he surrendered: now,
thereanight be a Possibility of taking
Daniels unawares later eu
laanitits,"•he said, turrattg his
horse with' a twist °Lido kileas so
that he totild, face hie cantor, and
pushing his -big, bends alicife his head,
looks . like yotere ahotit tea thou-
Satal dollars lichee right nere'than.
yote were five minutes ago." ''' •
The rancher rose 0104- *leer and
•
Three times the pursuers came a-
gain upon the trail of Harry Gloster.
And then they lost it, huh not until
the sheriffs- of four counties,' with
their pusses, had taken their fling it
him, singly and united.
For one thing, it- would have been
a feather in 'any man's cap to have
taken him. His record included a
double killing; the, suggestion, 'which
was believed far and wide, that he
was a member of the old, Haines
gang, and a jail break at ehe expense
of so fatn0110 a. custodian ',of the law
as Sim Hargeis. But fame was not
all that tieuld he gained by his eme-
tare.
. 'His career had) -oaught the public
'eye. Ile had been near • to destruc-,
tion se many dines that men began
to feel that. he enjoyed a Charmed
life. And, all In the space of a com-
paratively few ,heurs, the reward
Which Was' offered' for hiS. apprehen-
sion ,dead or alive grew by leaps ,and
by bounds. ^ •
Any rancher who numbered.his tat-
tle by the thousand oould afforde to
bring his name to .attentiort by edd-
• Mg a fete hundredis to the reward. It
passed tea thousand elollsers. The en-
tire section of desert and Mountains,
Vent' wild with the Manhunt fever.
A slug Of lead whielt east' a feet
cents would make some •lucky Man
the possessor Of a mum fortune, to
ssay nothing ef a reputation which
might wildly lead him' into office a*
OPMt".-tlialteittlitMPIlheeh, , •
Gloster Caul*. Ses, s pliou0,..and-fOr
▪ gent :that derie •eeithing *et mairder.
calliple: of h,arn4eaa,014 aeuedottgbe,
that fahilelehtegot a giro eut.Of leather
under. five Minutes of, work. ° Ten
th04S1343a lii.Drt that? What's the Coma
try coating .to?" • ' . •
"It is" getting eort, orlovei° :Gloster
rodded.
In naY dayr W•Ott on Daniels; "they
c'ddn'tput that repeat on the bead of
e Man: that wohld of turne,dand shot
the rifle out , of my hands before I
could Of Milled the trigger On him!"
"Was there 'ever a man as fast and
sure as that?"
'."There was, Sen. There Was, Just
a Islip off that hoes, and without let-
ting your hands come -downs-Thanks!"
The last word was. as he drew the
revolver from" Glostee's holster, pat-
ted hisn'for other weapons, and step-
ped btck. -
"You can put your hands down •'I
suppose that the gent that bringe you
in -Wilt be made a hero out, of." •
"Sure, you'll be faMeell by night,
Daniels."
"Bah!" snorted the other in the
moat • profound disgust. "A Faller -
livered skunk like you leant make no-
body famoas;, ain't Worth eothing but
to fee'd to tile buzzards!" '
• "I kind of, wish," said Gloster slow-
ly, "that I'd taken a chance on that
gun of yours"
"A murdering hound like 'you don't
take no chances at all," siddl Daniels.
"He wants a sure thing like the
idil-
ing of two old, stiff -handed, miners.
But the next thing. I want to know is
why you been trailing me all day?"
dee?" echoed Gloater.
"Sure. 1 seen you coin -CO -ifs morn-
ing. But I didn't figure that you'd
stay after me MI through the trail.
Now, what's in your head?"
"The same thieg, take it by and
large, that's in your beads •
"What d'ye mean by that? And;
mind you, Gloster, I want to hear you
talk Short and sweet. I'd; mind sink-
ing a chunk of lead into no more'n
I'd rabid sinking it into a fence post.
You ain't a Man. You got the heart
of a dog wrapped up in asman's akin."
There was no doubt tbat he' meant
What he said. Honest and ferce scorn
glared out *if his eyes at Gloster.
(Continued Next Week)
•
HEALTH ... yes beause
.. Canadian Fish and She
are Hat' in proteins, ir4en41167
minstrels and iodine, But health *
is net all. ,Ttlere is tastiness,
the varied flavour of over sixty,
different lints of fish foods. There
iS economy. . the sound thrift
• of a food that gives you full value
• in healthful' nourishment for every,
cent you spend. .
Make "Any Day a Day".
Whether fresh water fish or sea-
food . . fresh, frozen, canned,
• smoked, pickled or dried. . . you
can be confident of the prime
quality and flavour that have
made Canadian fish famous
throughout the world.
- DEPARTMENT of FISHERIES
Try This Appetising Recipe
• BAKED CREAM SALMON
1' %-lb. can .Canadian salmon
1 pint milk
Salt and 'pepper 2tbaps. butter
2 tbsps. flour Gratedonion
Free the salmon.from bones and separate
into bits. Cook the flour and butter to-
gether without browning, and add one
pint of milk, salt and pepper and enough
grated onion to flavour delic.ately. Place
a layer of sauce in a baking dish, then a
layer of fish and so on, having sauce on
top. Bake to a golden brown and serve
very hot.
SARDINES LYONNAISE
• Chop' together cold boiled potatoes, one
small onion, the contenp of one tin of
Canadian sardines (drained); fry with
• butter or beef fat until browned and
serve with parsley.
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'FOR FREE'
BOoKLET •
• ODettapawrtareent of Fisheries
Please send .me your free 52 -page
booklet, "Any Day a Fish Day", I
containing 100 delightful and econ-
omical Fish Recipes.
132
•
Name
- Address
ANY DAY
A FISH DAY
ateway to the Watlet
M. J. HABKIRK,
Manager
There is magic in the telephone:* in every 'item of the
vast assemblage of plant and equipment that stands „
behind it to make modern telephone service possible.
Take the simple plug on the switchboard.' A piece of
metal on the end of a cord; yet it bridges -unheard-of
distances. The Worldis literally at its gleaming tip. It:
you winging across the continent or take yOU overseas.
can connect you with the office on the next. or, send
It annihilates time.
This is but one aspect Of the perfectly coordinated army
of miracle workers that fin grown" from Alexander
Graham Bell's initial experiments at Brantford.
Canada, the birthplace of the telephone, is today its
greatest user, leading the World' ,with more calls per
capita than in any koiher country. It is telephcine-minded*
not because of sentiment but because Of the scope; effi-
ciency and low cost Of service as pioneered and developed
through the years ,by the Bell Telephone COMpanyv
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