| Seven E _ L ilies c ‘_‘ R FO, . Oct. 4.â€"Cattle buteher and on stores on the Toâ€" rantolive stock exchange." Heavy xzpo: were a shade lower at $7 5. .Good butchers brought $5.50 to $6.50, with common downâ€" ~’ to.$3.50. Good cows sold from ' to $5, with canners at $2.25 to % "Stockers ~and feeders were slow at $4 to $6 a hundred. The holdove}? was light. _ Calves were steady at $12 to $13.50 for choice; heavy calves sold from $5.75 to $8; common grassers ut $450 to $4.75. .. Hogs were stéady to 250 lower at $12.2%5 to $1250 for thick smooths, and at $13.43 to $13.71 for selects. Lambs 50c higher at $12 for seâ€" kï¬s; bucks, $9 per <wt.; sheep steady. + Cattle â€" Receipts, 4,799. Quota: tions : Heavy beet steers .......$7 00 to $7 75] Butcher steers, f _ good to choice ........ 6 00 _ 6 50 * ‘fair to good................ 5 00 6 00 â€" common to fair ... 3 75 5 00 Butcher heifgrs, kood to choice ........ 6 00 _ 6 50 tair to good............... 5 04 _ 6 00 ~>~ComMON ~.................. 3 75 4 50 Butcher cows, good to choice ......... 4 00 _ 5 00 fair to good ............. 3 00 _ 4 00 canners and cutters 2 25 _ 2 75 Butcher bulls, good .... 4 00 4 50 | Ocean d6.,â€" MelF ...ssiicess * do., bologna ... Feeding steers, good do., fAir=................. 5 00 5 50 Stockers, good ............ 5 00 _ 5 50 10., HBIF ~s.â€"s.cmssnces. 4 50 5 00 Calvesâ€"Receipts 594. Quotations: Cuoice ..:.â€"....._.=.....11 50. 12 50 Medium ........_._. 7 00 11 00 irassers ...................... 4 00 5 00 Milch cows, choice ......80 00 100 00 Springers, choice .........90 00 110 00 Milch cows, choice ......80 00 100 00 Springers, choice .........90 00 110 00 Hogsâ€"Receipts, 1,299. Quotations, off car basis: Belect bacon ...._....13 42 13 71 Thick smooths .......12 25 12 50 Lights o......uzlllllslllll1 250 11 50 Meavies ... 9 25 11 50 SOWB | .............l.lcl2.l.... 7 25 8 50 Cash grain: Wheatâ€"No. 1 northern, $1.40; No. %, $1.35%4; No. 3, $1.33; No. 4, $1.24; No. 5, $1.12; No. 6, 96¢;‘ feed, 81c; track, $1.38; screenings, $3. Daniel O‘Connell, wise judge of human kind, used to say: "A good speech is a good thing. But the verdict is the thing". The result is the scale in which value is weighed. It is in results that Wm. Suider Milling Co. The ideal general purâ€" pose flour for both » Bread or Pastry, s 50c Higher _ _ At Toronto Yard ALWAYS ORDER BY NAME . WINNIPEG GRAIN THE WISE JUDGE ALWAYS DEPENDABLE EFloury (Fancy Pastry) Elour Excels To 25e Down; 3 50 3 00 5 25 42 25 25 25 25 13 71 12 50 11 50 11 50 3 50 6 25 5 50 5 50 5 00 50 t b4%c; No.‘%, §3%4¢; rejected, 50¢; _ Barleyâ€"No.: 8 C. W., 64¢; No. 4 59%e; rejected, 57c; feed, §5%¢; track 646. â€" * C ~~MPlaxâ€"No. N. W. C., $1.95; No. % C. W., $1.91; No. 8,*%hTO; rejfected, $1.65; track, $1.96. %, Ryeâ€"No. 2 C.W., $8%e. quotations ~ Manitobs wheatâ€"No.‘ 1 northern, $1.47; No. 2, $1.43; No. 3, $141. Ontario oatsâ€" 42¢ to 44¢, £. 0. b., shipping points. Ontario good milling wheatâ€"$1.â€" 24 to $1.26, f. o. b., shipping points, according to freighlits. _ _ Barlgyâ€"â€"Maiting, 66¢ to 61c. _ Buckwhgatâ€"Nominal . > [ Ryeâ€"No. 2, 85¢ j Manitoba catsâ€"No. 2 C..W., nomâ€" inal; No.‘3, C. W., not quoted; No. 1 feed 61c; No. 2 feed, nomjnal; western grain quotations in o. § f. ports. Toronto, Oct. 4,â€"City wholesalers are paying, delivered, Toromto, as follows: Butter, solids, fresh pasâ€" teurized, 32c~to 33¢; firsts, 30¢ to 31c; seconds, 29%c to 30%e. _ Toronto, Oct. 4â€"Dealers are ‘Payâ€" ing country shippers, delivéred: Exâ€" tras, 45¢; firsts 38¢ to 40¢c; seconds, 30c to 33¢. â€"Prices to retailers ofâ€"fresh are: Extras, 49¢ to 52%¢; firsts, 42¢ to 45¢c; seconds, 35¢ to 36c. Storage extras, 42¢ to 44¢; firsts 39¢ to 40¢; seconds, 35¢ to 36c. ULTIMATE COST OF BELL TELEPONE CASE MAY BE $800,000 ‘The present Bell Telephone comâ€" pany application for increased rates bids fair to break all records for windage, as well as‘the cost. It has lasted through; more hearâ€" ings, has cost more than any other case ever before the Railway Bogrd of Canada. Its ultimate cost is exâ€" pected to exceed $800,000. The reâ€" cord of evidence to date, including cxhibits, totals around 3,000,000 words. MINING OUTLOOK IN CANADA SAID TO BE BEST IN WORLD "In no country in the world is there a better outlook in the minlng industry than in Canada, and we may expect the industry to expand and that rapidly." This was the statement based on thirty years‘ exâ€" perience, which\ Dr. Charles Camâ€" sell, deputy minister of mines, made at Winnipeg glast week before ‘a gathering of the business men of the city. Foronto, Oct. 4.â€"Board of Trade Have Dark Hair and Look Young Nobody can Tell when you Darken Gray, Faded Hair with Sage Tea. Grandmother kept her hair beauâ€" t‘fully darkened, glossy and attracâ€" tive with a brew of Sage Tea and Sulphur. Whenever her hair took on that dull, faded or streaked appearâ€" ance, this simple mixture was apâ€" plied with wonderful effect. By askâ€" ing at any drug store for "Wyeth‘s Sage and Sulphur Compound", you will get a large bottle of this oldâ€" time recipe, improved by the addiâ€" tion of other ingredients, all ready to use, at very little cost. This simâ€" ple mixture can be depended upon to restore natural color and beauty to the hair. Wellâ€"known druggists say everyâ€" dy_uses Wyeth‘s Sage and Sulâ€" Eur Compound now because it darâ€" kens so naturally and evenly that nobody can téll it has been applied â€"it‘s so easy to use, too. You simâ€" ply datmpen a comb or soft brush and draw it through your hair takâ€" ing one strand at a time. By mornâ€" ing the gray hair disappears; after another application or two, it is reâ€" stored to its natural color and looks glossy, soft and beautiful. TORONTO GRAIN *mpL 29 BUTTER EGGS 4/ k y 4. BEA puaig en o Sev / myAT MISERABiE pnrifé Cve / Pra of uoo-‘h‘ï¬l seven & alttiough we tonmfess wa ha chased it very hardâ€"implored time to turn backard, turn backward. Afd .so it goegs . _ | }«7 Theé other day we saw & verysiold -u.llonlnmuuoumi twentyâ€"five «id ‘thirty, < His mien was severely serious. . He . hadu‘t cracked a smile for heaven knows lead of responsibility zo great, that he had old Atlas looking like an unloaded crate. > . * And another day we say a young And another day we say a young mwan. who had just turned seventy. He could say "Hello" to" the sun: rise, had most of his teeth, wore a nifty tape. on his eyeglasses, and could see ‘em as far down the street as the next one. A May it please kind heaven that you never allow the hand of Time to play blindman‘s buffâ€" with you. May you never reach the day when your foot does not beat in :lllfll with a rippling tune, when scent of the reses wafted on the twilight breeze cupnot inspire you with the \qmbiâ€" tion to be up and doing, when you are not eager to read the four P.M. editions at noon. . _There are two‘ specialists in ‘youthâ€"Mind and Heart. They make you see each day as new as its sunâ€" rise and each night as fair as its stars. They help you look the calenâ€" dar in the face and realize that while you are only young oncé, "once" means all your life. But if you believe the sour drops who sigh that "you are only young once," you may as well check in then‘ and there. AUTOIST GETS 2YEAR SENTENCE FOR FATALLY INJURING GIRL Wellington D. Cronk, of Brantâ€" ford, found guilty last week by a Woodstock jury on a charge of manâ€" slaughter in connection with the tatal accident to Sarah Ridley, a sevenâ€"yearâ€"old girl, at Otterville on May 7 last was sentenced by Justice Logie to serve two years less one day in Burwash reformatory. A similar charge against Fred A. Miles of Norwich was dismissed. The judge, in passing sentence, severely censured Cronk, and said he was of the opinion that the acâ€" cused was under the influence of liquor to such an extent that he might not have known he struck the little girl. + HUSBAND DIVORCED Mrs. Aimee Semple McPherson, woman evangelist, who is now on trial in California, was divorced by ber husband, Harold B. McPherson of East Providence, in superior court at Providence, R.L., on April 1%, 1921, records in court disclose. At the time the divorce was granted Nrs. McPerson was conducting evangelistic meetings in a tent in East. Providence. Thï¬lvorce was uncontested and only three witneses were called. They were Mrs. McPherson, his moâ€" the’y an& Elizabeth Reid, a boarder at his ntother‘s house, who testified that . Mrs. McPherson was "a great actress, who could throw herself inâ€" to a fit at any time." On the eve of the Paris national automobile exposition, a sensation in automotive circles appeared in ?dvance in the form of big adverâ€" isements in the Paris press by the Bleriot Company( offering for sale a basolineless, wodd burning autoâ€" mobile which, it is claimed, has proved a success. Recently a fourâ€" teen seat auto bus of this type made a complete circuit ‘of France, 3,280 miles at a fuel cost of $15. wWOODBURNER is SENSATION IN AUTO WORLD The fuel is simply wood or charâ€" coal heated to a high temperature by a special apparatus attached to the left side of the car and transâ€" formed into gas, which, mixed with air, passes on to the motor and is oxploded in cylinders the same as the ordinary gas from liquid fuel. WOMAN EVANGELIST § WELL MAVE _ TO , > s{t“m OF TAT oor*! JUST LOOKâ€" HOW HE ChEWED uP MY RBEST , ""Aomed heml / \ti a tint WELL HAVE To valuable \This"is a good lof of furnitare.) Oct. 9th (Baturday)â€"At 1.15 p.m., mflnuflW“l 4 roomed brick house. at No. 12 Jefferson Ave. Rumball s /* ~« Oct. 9th, (Saturday)â€" At 1.80 p.m. valuable â€" household effects at 14 Rose St., city of Kitchener, for the late Henry Miller estate. Oct. 14 (Thursday)â€"Real Estate and household effects for Michael Bchats, ‘situated . in .the villageâ€" of Wallace,. 3% miles southeast of Gowanstown, Perth County. l \ Oct. 16 (Saturday)â€"At 1.30 pm. valuable household effects belonging to Charles ‘Muelier, situated. at $8 Queen St. South, in the 'l:ï¬n of Waterloo. .. Octo. 16 (Saturday) â€" vuut:r household effects for/S. A. PlateBâ€" ford, on the Kitchener market. ~ . Oct. 12 (Saturday)â€"At 1.30 p.m., valuable household effects â€"belonging to Wm. Foerster, situated in the village of ‘Wellesley,. (at‘ Schaub‘s Hotel.) â€" 1. . TOMAN, Auctioncer. ‘ .. Nov, 24 (Wednesday)â€"At 9 a.m., entire sale of farm stock, impleâ€" ments, produce, and household efâ€" situated 1 mile east of Centreville fects . belonging .to Henryâ€"Bauer, on the highway, better known as the Louis Farm. No reserve. JLunch at noon. O. 8. Kolb, clerk:» % GEO. C. CLAS6, Auctioneer, Oct. 12thâ€"Real Estate, consisting of a good 150 acre farm with good buildings, andâ€"a 100 acre grass farm and also horse, vehicles, harness, etc., of the 8. J. Wismer Estate at Linwood. j Oct. 30thâ€"*Dwelling house and l’urï¬(un, tools, etc., of Joseph R. Reist, at Elmira. _ Nov. 30â€"(If not previously sold), Real Estate consisting of a choice 100 acre farm with good improveâ€" ments, good soil, ideal location; also farm stock and implements beâ€" longing to the Anson Brubacher Est., 4 mile west of St. Jacobs. I also have several good farms for \private sale, among them one* priced at $7,200. See this one if inâ€" terested. Terms arranged. | M. R. ROTH, ‘Auctloneer ~Oct. 12, (Tuesday)â€"Clearing aucâ€" tion sale of farm stock, implements and feed at Lot 9, concession 4, Ellice, 4 miles northâ€"west of Stratâ€" ford, for W. B. Metcalfe. Oct. 14, (Thursday) â€" Clearing auction of 108 acres and reg. dual purpose Shorthorn cattle, farm stock, implements and feed at Lot 7 concession 4 S. E. H., 4 miles east of Tavistock. This is a grand offerâ€" iug of Shorthorns, for H. J. Mansz. Sale starts 10 a.m. sharp. Lunch at noon. = â€" C. M. CRAWL!V.' Auctioneer Oct. 12th (Tuesday)â€"Farm stock, implements, hay, grain and houseâ€" hold déffects of the late Cathkarte Kal, 4 miles south of Guelph, oppoâ€" site Vimy Ridge. Oct. 26 (Tuesday)â€"Farm stock, implements and household effects ‘belonging to Joseph Yeman, 5 miles northeast of Hespeler. Oct. 15th (Friday)â€"Auction sale of dairy cows at the Arlinkton Hotel Yard, Tavistock, for Wm. Attâ€" Oct. 23 (Saturday)â€"Auction~ sale of farm stock, implements and feed at the village of Shakespeare for James Patterson. Nov. 17 (Wednesday) â€" Auction sale of 80 acre farm, stock, impleâ€" ments and feed at Lot 33, con. 19, East Zorra, 6 miles southeast of Tavistock, for Simon Helmuth. Oct. 19, (Tuesday)â€"Clearing aucâ€" tion sale of 50 acre farm with good buildings, farm stock, implements and feed at Lot 4, concession 14, Blandford, 3 miles north of Ratho, for S. & C. Klinkmans. Oct. 15th (Friday)â€"Farm stock, implements, hay, grain and house effecs, of Edward Goetz, 4 miles north of Guelph, ldjoingi: Marden, 38% miles east of New Germany. x+ ntn. wen I for it‘ M at 2 pm. sharp. x -mh‘ tAE Y . ‘The westérly part of Lot Number Hight in the Elgventh # . Eastern Section, of the Township of m:.-ummM u’ One hundred. and twenty acres ‘of the farm are under cultivation, the balance being bush and pasture land. On‘the farm is a brick house, with frame kitchen ‘and woodshed adâ€" joining; large bank barn with good stabling < underneath;~ and . straw shed, pig pen, driving shed and garâ€" age,> all in good state of â€"repair. There are also on the farm a good well with windmill > it~ connection and @~eement water tank at the barn, supplied directly from the well; and a good ~cistern at the ‘house. The farm is well fenced and in a good state of cultivation. Farm ‘No. 2 The west half of Lot Number Fight in tke Ninth Concession, westâ€" ern séction, of the Township of Wellesley, ~containing â€" about one hundred and four acres, all being good pasture land. There is upon this property a drilled well one hunâ€" dred and sixtyâ€"five feet in depth, with windmill connected,â€"andâ€"aâ€"ceâ€" ment water tank and cement trough. The farms will be offered for sale subject to a reserve bid. Chattelsâ€"Ford touring car, 1923, in good running order; 1 driving horse 10 years old; buggy, cutter, single harness, robe, blankets, 2,000â€" . scale, grain bags, and other numâ€" erous articles. Termsâ€"For the chattels, ‘tash; for the farms, ten per cent. of the purchase price on the day of sale, and the balance in thirty days thereâ€" after. & POLITICIAN 18 AWARDED: $40,000 LIBEL DAMAGE A special jury in the assize court at Nanaimo, B.C., awarded Hon. William Sloan, minister of mines for Britishâ€"Columbia, plaintiff in a libel action against Major â€"General A. D. McRae, $40,000 damages. Hon. Mr. Sloan souzht $50,000 on the ground that he had been libelled in anâ€"~ article in "Searchlight," an election patuphlet published during the provincial election campaign, January, 1924. In effect the article stated that in 1915 and 1916 when the affairs of the Pacific Great Eastâ€" ern Railway company had become seriously involved, the sum of $50,â€" 000 was paid by the company to the plaintiff for protection and favorâ€" able treatment from the Liberal party. The menace of wolves on Maniâ€" toulin Istand has reached a stage when protective measures should be speedily taken, say residents of the Island, whoâ€"are enlisting the aid of the Sault Wolf Hunt Club to rid the place of the pests, which are destroying sheep and young stock. PLAN WOEF HUNT ON MANITOULIN ISLAND Humphrey P. May of Little Curâ€" rent, the spokesman for the Island farmers, says: "A survey of the Island jn recent weeks has conâ€" vinced me that the only solution is a wellâ€"planned wolf hunt. A Poor Excuse The young man at a Chevy Chase dance and his fair companion were standing on the darkened veranda between dances,. She waited and waited. + "Love is blind," finally quoted the young man, rapturously. ~‘‘Well, my goodness," exclaimed phe girl, "can‘t you tell whersf am by feeling?" *% IRVIN WISMER, â€" MRS. 8. J. WISMER, IDA, WISMER, "af Executors. GEO.â€"G. CLAS§,~Auctioneer. 38â€"3t Rs AZ .. % ? z* igt. h . ) x t ".:l JA ts ,l/teï¬â€˜Â£ a t f qtï¬ V NA f \G [ 90â€" & 4R / 1 l !‘ x » [ I Keep Minard‘s Liniment in the ( ::&»'L\:SB’!.‘ * |'% Bstiiu C OmrAm Ee HAVE 1O :;% 4 \"___ _ mem} 4A _ <MWE ie stamar t it of the 1 NOTICE Is HERREBY GIVEN, pursuant to the: Statutes of Ontario, that mll creditors and others having claims again the Estate of Magds lena Sararas,.late of the Village of New Dundee, in the county of Watâ€" In the on .;mnnmtmdm lm...‘mrmuuuhnd prepaid, or deliver to Sam Schwass, R:â€"R. No; 1, New Dundee, or, Aâ€" Gimbel, Preston R. R. No. 1, Ontario, Executors of the estate of the said: deceased, their names in full, with their addresses, and descriptions and full particulars of theif claims, and statements of the security, it any, held by them, on or before the First. day of November, 1926. The luld Executors will proceed to disâ€" tribute the assets of the said deâ€" l 1 large double Emery Stand with stones, new. ‘ stones, new. ' 1 small double Emer» stand with 1 Corn Sheller, hand or power. | 6 h.p. Canuck gasoline and keroâ€" sene: engine. ! ! 1% h.p. Staâ€"Rite gasoline engine. _ Will deliver any Cream Separator on â€" trial. | | Apply M. C. HOWLING, I New Dundee, Ont. 37â€"4t ceased among the parties utluodli thereto, havingâ€" regard only toj; claims of which they shall then have : received notice, and will not liable for the assets to any mm of whose claim they shall not then 1 have. received notice. Dated the 27th day of September, 1926. SAM SCHWASS, R. R. No. 1, New Dundee, Ont. A. GIMBEL, N R. R. No. 1, Preston, Ont., | Executors of Magdalena Sararas Estate. + 39â€"3t.‘ 1 Standard cream separator, 350 Ibs. capacity. 1 Renfrew crteam separator, 800 lbs. cap., almost new, owner bought electric machine. 21 64 SL. 1 Renfrew cream separator, 650 lbs. cap., almost new, owner bought larger size. April White Leghorn cockerels, Delamere strain, well developed, fine birds for breeding. Come and pick your bird. $2.00 if bought now. Also pedigreed, Persian kittens, blacks and solid reds. Pets a specialty. $5 and $10 and up accordâ€" ing to age and quality; fine disposiâ€" tion and houseâ€"broken. C. 8. BEAN, Kitchener highway, one mile from Preston Springs Hotel. Phone 604r22 Preston. 37â€"4t TO RENT Farm near Bridgeport, excellent dairy and general farm. Brook run« ning through. In good cultivation, Good buildings. Apply at once. W. H. Breithaupt, 86 King St. W., Kitchener. 40â€"1t. GIRL WANTED â€" An experienced girl for general housework. good wages, state exâ€" perience and reference if possible. Apply Mrs. P. R. Hilborn, Concesâ€" sion Road, Preston, Ont. 39â€"3t. The undersigned has for sale sevâ€" cral Yorkshire sows which their grand dam and sire are imported, improved, to be in pig; the right type. Price right. Apply Simon Huber, R. R. No. 1, Bamberg. 384. FOR SALE FOR SALE FOR SALE ' < Bingle edge â€" $3¢ each or 25¢. por dozon. Double edge 40. â€"Gil lett blades per doszen, 85¢. ~A,. R. Anderson, Druggist. ~ / §0â€"6t. One 38 acres with good buildings, running â€"water, in town, suitable for market gardening, ~dairying, â€" or chicken farming." ° >~>~ One it4t acrfes in good ‘locality, good land and A1 buildings, a never convenient. x * 90 _ The prices on these farms are very reasonable. For further parti culars apply to E. B, Reist, Preston. ; 40â€"1t Wap td w in on en e e ipoe ce lt 0 006 0ariag 4 «teninetnc Bd d B n0 ) Cider Mill Operated every Wednesday and Thursday throughout the seaâ€" We will from now on buy all surplus apples (rom our cusâ€" tomers giving us their work. New‘ oak barreis, apple butter and cider for sale in any quanâ€" tity at lowest prices. Market garden on Waterlooâ€" Eimira highway; frame house, barn, good land, all kinds of A. K. CRESSMAN 3% miles from Waterloo, with splendid brick house, small barn lnti chicken stable. A snap on easy payments. | Real Estate Large select list of homes in Kitchener and Waterloo to sell. _ â€" A number of choice farms for sale at attractive prices. Money to Lean at Lowest Interest Rates. TWO FARMS FOR SALE 10 Acres Real Estate and Austioneer 59 Fredâ€"rick 8t., along side of the Market Building. K ITCH ENE AR 3 Acres COOD BUYS‘ E. J. SHANTZ See me before buying. cropper with good markets Kitchener E. A. STAHL pouninpong olb uienss 0004 in 766 r 2 & 901 "isd k'{. 7R o