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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1916-09-21, Page 5a a • "Z'hu.v day, September lot, 4916 ;.l X111 1 u cK,N .!}' , TIMEX Our §to-ok of Dress Goods in Serges and ..• .. ober.: nes is well Assorted Iiletck, .brown., grey,..reels ands navy shades are all good. Pd ict a' are nate h higher than last year and n',anufacti. rers alestill advancing prices- .Early buy - els will feet the best value as we bought early.. Millineey- Opeiiiiig Our Mil'inery Opening won Thursday ill be held Thda Friday, Sept. 21st and (lis anii 22n22n4. Miss Wil. ... 1. a on extends et • cordial invitation to the .ladiesto visit our showroom on these days and see. the Jeading styles in trimmed millinery. Special values in .Black Silks at i,00, 1.25 and $1.50- p:. r yd. Plaid Silks are, popular,; We have then at $1.65 a y�l; These are°all' a yard wide. 1N. CQNNELL • , FARM 1VIACHINERYI A :few leading machines we offer fQr sale at this season of the year. • , The Deering Corn Binder The Oliver Riding Plow The Wilkinson'Climax and the International Ensilage Cutters,. tt W. 0. Andrew LU: KNOW• What One tinds , Along British •Front • (Jail and Empire) According to an authoritative British Source, tapped by the Le tion correspon• • . dent of the New York;,Tiines, the British :'trenches along the',Sonnnie ere 'models'of skill, the -finest trenches that been • • 'dug since :the beginning .cf the war. The .men are' in What ha describe§, as' "neat; 'tracks" inythe earth With a sharp corner every few. yards.. The; old tr,enchos 'vi•ere apigg'V=shaped'ditehes, well Calculated ° to..collect the, ereiiy's ,tr-encii;inortars.' The present trenches ,are :mere slots, and the shell tliizt reaches.them- has: to drop down almost perpe idicularly. •. To have built these'trenches the m'en must `have'' dug as Skilfully and at uniwariedly as t they have fought,• and he says. that they. took almost es... lunch pride and. joy tie!, one occupation as in•tlie other. 'The English, remarks the correspondent, only. earn war in each, of their. wars by 'de- ;green, •but ' iiow. they have learned'• . There is no; .'more. for the -Ger'mans to teach thein, they may teach a few tricks to the Qermans , A NEWWEtt•E+VDI'N( ,Dl IIATL+`+`' ': .. Describing what,one :may now expect +to find' in the,British'frout-lies •trenches,' the writes: .. . ' One little knot of men off ditty,' are •bending over a conic.paper lit a '.corner. ' a'The wary oIa trench -dweller .al'ways .likes a. corner because he can jump round,' . it at the shortest notirceand:put a`. sclera ....angle -of earth between him and anything noxious',that drops in. On.' the,; other. :side: another, grouii cheerfully •, reopens i Mi ' that undytn,g• theme :of '.deli .te an , g -the British. soldiers -the uierits and"•acs' merits,of:the salient of'Ypres. "How longwas you'at Wipers2"-. ' "Four men•ths." "Well, I was: there." five ,iiaputliq;• so 'what right have yen' tospeak'1" . r• • A general laugh greets • thus, method sof proof and •disproof,' apo •som'e one 'else. . cats 'in.'•. 12' a .meet ofbccrs aux Qtis_ about ° otbing eico t ' o know 'what" tthere . is in. tlre last Eit'glish papers. S°ntries on duty 'with all the crowns there grass=green steel helmets dipped, otinningly down to .the piia o is level, i report thatnbthing,in • stirrr ng' .over•-'thn way: These. helmets used to he ugly and. . "not highly .Protective.'.. The ::near make, •.Af helmet is more einc:mentail' and inpre • 'virtuous. -It !.covers more of the neck, theugl trot so. much: as the blue -steel. skullcaps of the French, *itb dim •turn=: e•d•down brims, end, its'lines are :artistic. • Wnrrn at the propet•angle,•it n;altes the coinely young.'sentry Took rather like - • 0 t♦ Donatello's° David, at Florence, 'With stooping heads, 'the sentries •ieport "no- thing doing." That means nothing vls- ible, nothing audible,' . 1. SCA:1(NING NO MAI+1,S LAND Peering over the parapet fora moment yon;see-eptly-tv-wilderiiesirot"hare .ear h, pitted thickly with conical .boles .frdin three to eight feet deep, Four'hundred 'yards away is the, skeleton- Of a deiad,vil.- . ;ago: No sign of life is to be•seen. there exoept.perhajs ODE of the l., air -sing cheerfully'tlirough• i'a riii at yu)tild;ni•eke. the pheasants'. i ay Sussex nervolas,-rlsc a`17iir• ly'quartering•ground and s he larks into a retirement iii modest tt of, German, airmen.' 'And yet w that *Age is •iuhabitod;: that ed only to raise your head a foot to bring a mullet dipping itself i et • flick intq.'the .loose earth'- b u; that if• you.crewledmit on yo ell• stria, peeped'over tbe•:edge' of it hole you reached you would c hist 1tb one' in Which •men in w ed , grey tunics with nar@ow red b d' 'their''caps were crouching; sof m `nursing their one good,i'riend,, e grin, some of thein digging•ha n,; •near hole'•with hole .tit! a row it-. bus dots vias tkirned into aline; of them resting tucked in,to.'litt es th •e rth Or: ne r scogped to . ie a a of a•hole .like sand -martens' ne the wall of `a-tjnarry, and'staririg n- aively up'at'bonib-lrtden•.13i•iti es wheeling about in.. the sky ' 'as the' farts,in;the grass..look. up k: IK:iNDNEsa' SC?'itPAISES ,cif inks• wlii nned`es that n : faraway liajvk slo sending t Lest as tli you' Ic:no you .,ne higher. vith a qui behind you iir:stoma each' she orine-at Wide -Skirted andsroun ne of the a machin rd to co of forte n0; some. le caviti the side ata. on t apprehe sh biplanes' overhead" at:. a has. >rtvas •. You, know '-all •this,' ;because on the Way:ktp.thie• morning yon -..talked wit'h n "r a tunberPr us tan and Saxon 'p rs - onersn one of'the Cages, the•litticuamp� Where the' latest captives rest for some, days safe oat of:range of. their 'friends' heavy'guns till the, can be 'Sent on by. train to the base of the E ghsh.. Three ;dteys ago they came dgwn':broken-nerved to the cage, their laces lined and. drawn with..•Meutal overstrain, some Of them, still,nieehamctlly inrnking. deprecatory gestures:of siirrenderand entreaty. '"As they marched 'to-day„tll the lines . were sinoothed'ont. They had been: fed and =had, slept for whole nights' and had to d that the rnurderers.described, Gunn them b their, own • ser cants t flkcted y, g, p •nothing: but offers of cigarettes. • . So they began to expand in:ithe unexpected sunshine of 'good :treatment and ,they told what'life.had been like m. the shell h:oles, its goodpoilmts stria its .bad. The' fc od hii4 been good, but :sonietittres• it :did''not cone- because'the •13ritislt gtiris would draw a kind -.of fence c.rf falling •• shrapnel across t ,piece of country, a„sort o shower-batb of ballots dropping along the line, sn nobody could -ores tine line without being Bort. Still the bread and meat and chocolates when they drd.ctinie, were geed and the water bwis sometimes mineral water in ,bottles. "el'he 'trouble was ghat the ritisl gunswould not Cease firing and th0 jritish aeroplanes would: not go away, ° nor the Gerl ap ones .cope out of their kberls. it6#AiAI`T~f�lei tG5tic4 di1WU i•l'OiL Alla$ Sometimes the men in,the nc��ll. hole would see British troops in the open Within Ole range,' but would: not dare Sheet' lest British . airmen should see where they were and send Word tb a 13rittsb gun afid bring down a high ex-- plosive on the • old shell hole to bury ihenp all alive by a.secoed:reitITVIgenaent• of the earth. You,perceive this appre- hension just because you tviiice Co -day have seen the end of a stiff black -booted leg protruding out of the wall cf an old slioli hole:. 'other questions about their. life at the front prrisunersi answered es freely had they, talked politics. Yes, there were any number of Social 17ptno- crats in the, array and every one thought changes would come when the4w,ar was over, but ' not now. Were there any desertioner No, Many men woul l b •glad : to be Prisoners, /hut would. not desert, Many more still would surren- der if the Oermaa officers 'were not so quick to shbot'rnem who -put up their• hands, and ><f all the German soldiers knew that the Allies'did not kill pris- oncl•s nor have them scalped by savages. I HURON COUNTY NIWS I Major McPhail, ?f the 1 G 1.st..Batt, alien has :resigned his ionunission and returned to, his home at Porter's Hill. Lieut. W. Proudfoot,' son of Mr. Wm. Proudfoot, M. P. P., who went oVerseas with the.'33rd; ' Battalion, is now with the 13th. Highlanders, and has been in the trenches since the 16th, of June.• ' Rev: D.. C. McDiarmid, of the' con- gregations of Stayner•and "Sunmedale, Liarrie Presbytery, has accepted th,.. call to Knox church; . Gnderich; and will be inducteli into the pastorate 'there, on Oct, 3rd. " . :Oapt. Alex:- and Mrs; Br;.wn, of Owen Sound, announce 'the ; engage; •inentof theirsecond daughter, Myrtle A 7a; 6 gr. John R. Parker", „of Bayfiplcl. -;The .rnarr•iage, will take place .tile third` week .in September: = -- .:J'ohn Jackson, an.old and esteemed' citizen of Seaforth, answered the •Iaet roll cali'oh Sent, 1.3th: He, was 88 years of age and had .been a resident of Seaforth''since l854,°", He . was a choomaker by trade, And engaged .ln. the shoe ,business until 1'8 ,j ears ago;. 'when be retired, leaving the business to his son. k '' Rev. W. F. Turner, wfio has; betC'n pastor of St. A;n,drew's•church, Myth). for• the past four years, has received .a call to Calvin church•inMontreal, and will likely.:accept, Calvin church, AIM:Ai•eal, is one,of the large Presb-v- terian churchesof. that city, with' a mennberslii 'o about 7 U and a stipend p � p , d • p . of $2,000: • A. story conies froth Wingham, of a fight between two cows which : ended fatally; for one of the bossier. The"cows belonged one to J.. 'Stewart and the other�to• Dr. J.• P. Kennedy. It• ap pear that the horns 6f Stewart's cow' slipped about the heck of l'iennedy's ivt%Itime as co a i in hors 'strangled the, letter. - ' One horn had to be cut off Stewert's: cow before . it-, could.. be, re-. leased.. Mrs. M. Y..' McLean, of Seaforth • •' 1 rocked are the three-bar.grates' slash up Easily ' ' clinkers easily and last longer because ,each grate is three- _gided. • has received•; a telegram from' Ottawa,' • informing her that her son, Lieut... Arthur. S. M cLean, bed °•been:ofli,cially reported wounded in the trenches on September 5.' . Lieut. McLean wag' forinerl a rnembar o the 33t . Ba y f d tta lion, having°come .all the way from. Grand Prairie, Treace Biller, th' enlist.. Ha was sulse1uently, drafted with th tho 1Sti Royal Highlanders of Montreal , and has been in the •trene es.sinco the 'begi'nning of Jude' He, is• a *brother of -'Lieut. it: Y: McLean,oi the Ii6lst. • if moria. , , {IIUHT' ' lionnas AT V•0 tt0 N T . biosis, T: i\fcMiishaol•SvSon, the well. ,known horsemen of 13ullot,, _M_ade a splendirliinowing ir;t the recent 1eghto Industrial Exitliitibri, when the : r lr tured the;following prizes;• hirst 6wo,year•oldroadster; secorsdand four th-fiii-tiged draft stallion; gei:ondin the` Clydesdale. Association. prize,. fourth for imported draft stallion; second for•% yearling:4'raft,filly fourth foil two•year• olcl heavy: draft .filly; and second for two•.year Old heavy.: draft; stt llion. _The record is ali the mote eteditable when it is considered. that they' Were in com. potion 'with the be_ et breeders in Can. tida. - Ga vaoTtai Prim ' •C,, T. Goderich Signal says "On Tuesday of -this week•Claro,Swarts,-of•the:hrit-. ell "exchange Ilvtelr;,was convictedof having liquor in his possession con trail, to the provisions of the Canada Temperannce. Act; Constable hollow searched dicker. roam, sovet'al days ago and foil?itl a bel;t11e in a small clapboard lander the bar, wliicli. w witnessfor the :defence .at thio ,triad. ,swore; had 1,4en "plated," there by the eenstabla,'bim self during a eliort interval when the witness was no waLehiug. The do, fence raised the port that A9 the statute gogerning such eases bead been changed since the last .eonvictttoii Yves. re, ister<.ed' against the accused, :this case should', be 5viewed as a first .offence. Because of this contention Magistrate !reify reserved his d�eisiou:„ Por the second offence in such cases the penalty hr a j dl sentence tiet exceeding four months. . s , CANADIANS ADVANCED• AND HELD ALL GAINS MARKET QUOTATIONS , f a OPTEl1ZB*R 8t11,. •.o Toronto Cattle Market Steers, choler". weighty, .,8.40to 49.0o 7.50 7.90 Butchers' choice handy. 7.76 8.25 do. good . , , ...... , 6.90 1.40 do, medium c,. YG.10 ...6,.60 ale. neon , ..75..00 5,50 '"Biltclteia' cows, choler", '6.$0 4:80 AO.. ' good . , , ...;.... 6.60 6.2Q do. medium 4.50 5.00 Butchers' bulls, choice., 7.00 7; 50y do. g0o46.40:. 6.75 ..,,, do. .medium ..;,..,. 6.00 .6,20 do. bologna 4.85 5.60 Feeders, 900 to, i,Qdb lbs6.40 6.60 ck islore es, 800 to 900 lbs. 6.00 6.50 do. med., 700 to 80.Q 5.40 5.80 do. °common, light 4.60 6.00. cutters ," . 4.25 4.50- Canners .50Canners ., . 8.50 4.00 Milkers, good to cholce.75,00..90.00. do. common to. med50:00 70,.00• Springers' 55.00 95.00 .-- Calves, veal, choice ' 11.50 12,90 Censored .'Despatch' Tells of Gallant Action in Which Losses Pros. ably Were Heavy Infortnatfon has- reached London. that there was nothing for the 'Can.- adian infantry to do but walk forward. The position which faced them was strongly fortified' both above •and un- der ground. •Even when the artillery ceased and the infantry went forward. it was certain there -were many of the enemy still living and waiting with machine guns to give the Canadian assailants a, fierce reception. How- ever, our infantry went forward stea,d- i1y. 3: may perhaps -be allowed to state that included among them were: cer- tain battalions who suffered pretty • severely in heavy encounters: They were all right in their movements this time, tl ough, advancing 'steadily and Maintaining their:: driving force even when the casualties began to look large. , Germans were found hiding with machine guns in pretty well in- destructible emplacements, but.gradu- ally they were killed'or taken prisoner. There were ' prisoners, indeed, by the score. Many of them surrenderedin batches, while the trenches 'captured were filled with German dead. The Canadians secured roughly an advance of fifteen: hundred • yards, and • main- tained all the gains. A large quantity of the 'enemy stores, especially ma- chine guns, were also secured. 'The foregoing despatch, from • the cot respondent of the Canadian °.Also- ciat ;d Press, evidently'.has. been cut by thai.. censor: ,The reference to "cer= tain baitaltops who suffered ' pretty severely 1n,'•heavy encounters" prob- ably concerns the first division, which "was recently reported to have been moved from Ypres to the Somme. No doubt they took • part in the .13.rffisli advance between Combles and. the Fozieres-Bapaume road. PUNISHMENT FOR BULGARS .Smitten Hip and Thigh by Serbian, British and French. Armies • ' The Serbian• tgoops. 'have 'won 'a brilliant success'' on. the left wring. of, the 'allied front in Macedonia.. While • the British' and French. forces were 'advancing steadily. northward on both sides of the Vardar Fliver,-King'Peter's soldiers ssyung: forward in .an opera - • don. that .swept the Bulgars back More • than; nine' miles, reclaimed 'four vil- lages and : inflicted 1• enormous losses on the enemy, the, booty including twenty-five., eannofi: ' Kastoria, Mal- ..kanidze; Cornizevo and Milan, 'all .im- portant points ' in - the Bulgars'. first line of defence, .were carried by• storm. •Following the'co-ordinated •artillery. and infantry .operation . .the Serbian cavalry .dashed forward into the'open • field and brushes the enemy's disor- •genized forces back along a. wide Vela: Solid masses of Buigar troops were. surrounded: while .the • field of battle was strewn : with guns, light arms, and • supplies' abandoned inthe wild flight •to escape from 'the onr'ush- ing.: horsemen, • At the same time Franco-Russian force'sin a swift movement completely „cleared the entire region south of Lake Ostrovo for distance' of more thin, forty. miles. Thus the • Bulgars have been driven from virtually the ',whole' of the Lake Os'trovo region and the Prench and .Serbian forces are now fnee.'to continue their thrusts to the nortliward into, Serbia • without danger of hank attacks. The' advance of the' British -troops on the. east bank of,;the Vardar . has carried. them • a consider;- -able dista 'ce ' u • north t oX MakukoVo, which'wa$$ captured by assault. • 'Here ' they : Barre.. established themselves. „solidly, resisting all attempts of the ',enemy to regain lost' ground. Ilc pnORS FOR OANADIANS• cned .th Pildc.. knew his Roby . ' r • • . The,aa an tivha. designed �a• know t - t and, that is why it carries my guarantee as 1iv'e11 „ alters'. • mo old by 1VieLeod'8/ d'o rit • President of the Bank of •Montreal Becomes a Baronet . 'The following boners to Canadians are announced'in connection with• the. -approaching.. 'departure, of . his ' Royal Highness., the Duke of CoiTnauglit.. Mr. Ii: Vincent Meredith.,; President of the Bank of 'Montreal, .Baronet. Col. A. P. Sherwood, C.M-G.,' Chief Conimissioner'•'of' Doininion . °Police, Ifni lit• • om an C m der of St. Michael. and. d St: George. • Lieut. -Col E. A.• Stanton,Military Secretary •to his Royal Highness, Com- mander of St. Michael'and.St. George.. Lord Richard Neyill, C.M:G.; Comp- troller' to , his • Royal Ilighnes9 ;and'. Ar- thur P. 'Sfe.den,. 'Private . Secretary, Coi inander •of' the Victorian. Order.:. ,las: F. Crowity, Chief Clerk of the • Governor -Generals . ofhee, . mentber of tiie Victorian. Order.. • - Henr:ry Vincent, MeredIth,• brother of Sir. Ralph !Meredith, was born .Londeni,•Ont. lie entered the w'r'ier"' of the Hank of ' Montreal in Hamilton in •1867, .in 1889 became Manager of the 'Montreal branch, then became, General Manager, :iiSti• n i913-beea President, • do medium '.0150mm ....,:. 60 7., do. grass. . 5",00 • 7.60 Sheep, • ewer", light 7.50 8.00 do. heavy and bucks .5.00' $,.50 do. culls 3,00 ,.4.00 Hoge,• weighed . of[• cv rs1L.75 12.86 do. fed and atered12:50 2.60 w �. "do. -, 11,66 0.00 Butter and,. Cheese Markets Kingston-215white and 535 color- ed were boarded, 19%c being bid, but there were no sales. • Brockville--Cfferings - were ' 1,997 colored and 1,847 white, iligheet :bid, 20%c. 'No sales. Listowel=Twelve factories boarded 2,161 cheese, 795 white and 1.367 col- ored. Highest bid, 19%c. No sales. Kemptville-155 boxes of colored sold at 19%c. . Napanee-Cheese boarded.'420 box, es of white, 1,040 boxes of colored. All sold at .19 13-16c. • Picton-18 factories boarded 1,446 all colored. All sold at 20c. Alexandria -774 boxes of white of- fered, All sold at 20o. Mont Jolt, Que.-80 boxes of cheese were offered and, sold at 19%c. ' Iroquois -750 boxes were offered, 700 colored and X50 white. Price bid on board 19%. ' No sales. All sold on curb at 20c. • • Cornwall -Offerings were, 2,059 colored and 35 white; 20c was paid for colored and 19%c for the white. St. Hyacinthe, Que.•-900 'boxes. of- fered; all sold at 19e; 100 packages of butter sold at 35%c. Cowansvtlle, Que--10 .factories of- fered 670 packages of butter; 9 fac tories sold at 36%c.; 1 factory unsold. London -9 -9 ' factories offered 790 boxes. No sales. Bidding, 19c to 19%c... Toronto, Grain Markets • • Manitoba.. wheat.-Traok, bay ports, NQ. 1 northern, $1(,65¢; No 2, north- ern, :$1.63%; No. 3 northern,; $1.59;• No. 4 'Wheat, $1.54; (old crop wheat •2.cents higher). Manitoba 'oats -Track, bay. • ports., No. 2: C.W:, 56%c; ,No. 3 C.W., 65%c;. extra. No. .1 feed; 55%4; • No..1 feed, American corn -No. 2 yellow, •.940, •track, .Toronto. . • ' Ontario wheat .-New wheat, No. . 2,, ° $1:33 to' $1.36; No.. 1'.cofnmerciat, per .'car lot, according to freight outside, $1.26 to $1.28; :No. 2 "commercial, $1.21 'to $1.24; • No. 3 dommercial, $1.17 to • Ontario oats -According to freights outside: •No. 2 white, new, 510 : to 54; "No..3 white, new, 50c to .52c. `Rye -No. 2 new .$1.13 to $1.15. Peas- No: 2,' $2 to ' $2.10. Barley -=Malting, 84c to 87c; feed 'barley, 80e to 82e, • ; • . Buckwheat -80c to. •82c. Manitoba flour -First patents; in jute bags, $8.60; seconds, in jute'bags, $$.10; strong. bakers',.' in jute, $7:90, Toronto, ' '• .. Ontario flour -Winter, track, Toren - to," prompt.. shipment.. according to • sample, $6:p5, 4n jute' bags; built: sea- board, $6.25.: ' Millfeed-Car lots; per ,ton, deliver. ed, Montreal:• Shorts,. $29;' bran, $26; good feed flour, Per bag, $2:16; Mid, dlfn�gs,' $80. ' . ' Flay -Baled; Iso.- 1; track. Toronto, new, 310 to $12; car lots; No. -2, $9 to. $9.50; straw, 37' to $8. Wholesale. Produce Toronto wholesale prices to the trade: , ' , Eggs"-, Special candled (cart's).$";38 to $;•'•40 Candled x-dartons) .34 .35 Butter- Creamery, prints .. :36 ,3.7• Creamery, solids `. . :.34 • .35 Choice dairy prints..:.,..29• .-31• Ordinary dairy prints. ,' .:27 28 Bakers' .25 .27 •Cheese -New, large,. 21%c • to 22e; twins, 21%'e to 22%,c; triplets, 22c to 22%c; June and September,. Targe; 220; • •old, 22%,c; triplets, 223 ,... : 22c; old, 221/4c; triplets, 225c.:. Poultry . Live Dressed Spring broilers 190 20e 26c 284' Old fowl, ib, • : , 15o 160. -18c . • 20e Duckling12c 00 gs .... 13c 18c 2 • Beans -Hand-picked, 5 6. 0 primes, $b \ • :I ALIANS' ALSO WINNING Huge New Guns Blasting Way Toward `rriest • A despatch from Ronne . says: A feature of ''the ;new offensive .Started on then. Isonzo' front with Triest Its :objective is the; efteetiveness of the new Italian artillery. 'One hundred new 805 -millimetre guns are tieing ern- ployed, the atm of wbiclt..is deadly, .date to an ,invention .for ,long distance range finding, by which observation is possible despite rain. The nie0 offenstvd, which 'hes beer' •.going on for four days from (lorltz to the Adriatic, is .still in its first stages, With the Austrian$ re -entrenching and blocking the way to Tricot along the line of I3ernrada-Z01oe-Nelova, The ttaiians"have already taken over 2,000 pridoners. {.. 1.. 00.4.4.00,411.104. • wro. • • Chicago Live Stock -Cattle_Receipts, . 6,000; market stead •• beeves,6.6 to 1.25; est-•. 0 w ern steers, $6 to $9,40; -stockers and feeders; $4.60: to $7.65; cows and heifers, $8.50 to $9.35; calves, $8.50 to 413: Hogs --Receipts; 9,000; market Weak at 5 to 10' cents advance; light, $10.35 to $11:50; mixed, ' $10.10 to $11.50;. heavy, $11.05 to 311.45; rough,. $1b05 •to '$10.25; pigs, $7 ,to $10;10;. hulk of sales,' $10.6 to $11.40. Sheep -Receipts, 4,000; market weak; -.lambs, -native, East 'Biiffalo' Cattle -Cattle-Receipts, 600; slow .and steady. • . Veale -Receipt's, 800; active;. ,;$4.50 o ,, Hogs-$1350Receipts, 6,000; active; heavy and mixed; $11.5V1. • yorkers,' $11.25 to $11.60; light. York- ers, $9.75 tet '$10.50; pigs, $9.50 to. '39.75; :retie -lis, "$9 60 to „$9:75; ,'stags, _ 7 -to $7.25. •, Sheep and lambs-Recelpts, 3004 ' lambs, $6.60 to $11.75; others un., ',banged.- - E Busy : MAKE OUR STORE YOUR. HEADQUARTERS PHONE 66 FOR PROMPT DELIVERY 0.0GG` [Ds& MFGM OVEN TO TO bake Without stooping. That is the joy of using a Lighter Lay High Oven Range. .Everything is in plain sight at standing height. ' The glass doorshows• the cooking dishes plainly ' as if they were. on t'he table. These stoves'ar+e now :on display and we invite your in, -spection. Don't fail to see our line' of heating stoves beforebuyin gg elsewhere. , ° We have a number of Second Hand Stoves which we offer at reasonable prices. Boys and. Girls! We were v fortunate ��, ' in buying the last pf ,a large stock of Pocket Knives and we offer these to y6u. for 15c each. This week we will give 3 plain cedar lead pencils, with each knife. Just the right kind of knife for school use, Portland Cement and Coil Spring .Wire always oft hand. • cLEOD: • - • . The. Store Where Ynur Money (roes Farthest • TO FARMERS., The Bank pf .Hamilton offers every facility and Convenience to both. depositors • and -borrowers among the farmers. Special at- tention to Cattle 'Business and • • LUCKN:OW- BRANCH'.. Capital,Authorized $5,000,090 J. A." GLEN NIE'; Manager. Capital Paid-up - 43,000.000" r' Heav °o � Shoes Y. The• time of is' at hand vvheni gond,. siren-- sturd yearo , g ., y waterproof Work' Shoes•.for.men and boys are needed:'. 'We have just, :the• -.right kind that will `stand the,wear and turn.h e d' •: rn t o a m n p e ss fro• 3..00 to-105aQ0 pair. OurLadies' Hine 'Shoes are Fitters •ACKERT •.-& ' . -ATHW' E• "A •GOOD • SHO.t STORE . FOR ALL THE FAMILY'.' 004,801 /w W+rI .?fi6od4lMea!Vw Y ..Your Newspaper HE :SENTINEL. „takes Subscriptions and Re-- P itewal*f. ,a bsori titans toall . Daily ''afld Weekly • City Newspapers. • Walkerton • -Saturday, Sept. 16. The number of parcels arriving by eltpress and freight•during the last few days is conclusive :evidence that the people of this locality have laid in a supply of. liquor .for' the dry season. There was never so much liquor here. '0.11.(1 the most of it is hard ntiirite; h�1+•+•� �*11t' ? f«Mi; �V:�wrii{�G w•, „. , , pa• • We can save yo:i tint;•' war' lax :stamps and postage, -. p stationery b y looking after - your orders. LEAVE! YOUR -- ORDER WITH HE SLN:Ti _LUCKIVOW . V. «w.;••;+. • a •