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The Brussels Post, 1916-8-10, Page 3e' -"e The Joy of a Vacation may be turned to the sor- row that comes from indi- gestion. The battle with hotel menus is a losing one for the ,Fran with a weak stomach. Happy is the man who listens to the call of the wild—who goes fishing, hunting and canoeing :who tikes with him Triscuit, the Shredded Whole Wheat wafer. Triscuit is made of the whole wheat, steam- cooked, shredded and baked. A tasty Summer snack, supplying the greatest amount of nutriment in smallest bulk. Delicious with butter, soft cheese or marmalades. Made in Canada ALSATIANS LEARN FRENCH. Children Acquire Language in Elf- -- teen Months. H. Warner Allen, the representative of. the British Press with the French army, describes in the following dis- patch the rapid progress the Alsatian children have made in the study of French since the welcome invasion of the French: "After 45 years French is once again taught in the schools of Alsace. When the French marched victorious- ly into Alsace they marched from the frontier toward the Rhine beneath a rain of flowers which moved the Ger- mans to send a message to the rebel- lious Alscatians: 'You have received the French with roses, but we shall return with forget-me-note—and no- thing could be more surprising than the eettraordinary progress made by the children in learning French in the interval since then. "French has become for them a fam- iliar tongue. I have heard children teaching one another French in the street, and every child makes a point of .saying "Bon jour!" to the French officer who passes. One little girl was saying good -by to a relation, appar- ently an aunt. 'Auf wiedersehon!' said the aunt. 'No,' said the child in- dignantly, 'we are French now! Au revoir'! The authorities have found that 15 months' schooling is sufficient to give an Alsatian boy or girl a thor- ough grounding in the language and literature which were -once forbidden. "One of the pupils of one of the schools Which I' visited is a girl of 12. She was chosen to present a bouquet of flowers to a certain high personage who was visiting the district. `I knew,' said the administrator, 'that she would say something apt and to the point.' The high personage, as he accepted the flowers, asked the child whether she was fond of France. To his hor- ror she replied, in French, of course, 'No, sir; I am not fond of France.' There was an awkward pause, which the child obviously enjoyed, and then, with a wicked twinkle in 'her eye, she finished her sentence, 'I adore France.' This pupil gave me a message for the English people, which I am happy to transmit. "'Please, monsieur,' she said, 'tell the English to hurry up and win.' " Legislation was once threatened to prevent Toronto holding an Exhibition except in years specified by the On- tario Government. Fortunately, the matter never reached the House. Auntie—"Are you getting marks at school, Freddie?" Freddie—"Yes, auntie—only I can't show 'em to you." Tea and Coffee For Children? These beverages contain drug elements that hinder development of both body and mind, especially in children. Nowadays, for their chil- dren, wise parents choose POSTUhi • This delicious table bev- erage, made of cereals, has a wonderfully satisfying flavor and is entirely free from caffeine, the drug in both tea and coffee. Pos- tllnl Is a true, pure food - drink that has helped thousands to forget the tea or coffee habit. . "There's. a Reason" Grocers everywhere sell POSTUM Car:ndh4;t Poston! Cereal Co., Ltd,. 4dd,. Windsor, Oat, EARL OF CRAWFORD IS A DEMOCRAT NEW MEMBER OF THE COALI- TION CABINET IN BRITAIN. In Army Medical Corps When War Broke Out, and Rose to Rank of Corporal. The inclusion of the 'Earl of Craw- ford in the British Cabinet as succes- sor to Lord Selborne, as President of the Board of Agriculture, is an ap- pointment that is certain to be popu- lar with members of all parties, It will be very popular with members of the House of Commons, in which chamber the earl sat for fifteen suc- cessive years as member for the Chor- fey division of Lancashire, prior to his accession to the peerage on his father's death three years ago. For Lord Balcarres (pronounced "Bal- carrez" with the accent on the second syllable) as he was in his House of Commons days, was immensely popu- lar personally with political friends and opponents alike. In fact, it used to be said of him that he was one of the four most popular men in the House, the other three being, Sir George Younger, Unionist Member for Ayr.; Mr. Ure, then Lbrd Advocate for Scotland in Mr. Asquith's Govern - Earl o1 Crawford., 1 CANADIAN I STORAGE BATTERY 00„ LIMITED 117-119 Simcoo 6t., Toronto. .Agents for Willard Storage Batteries. ment, and Sir Edward Carson. Which goes to show that the House of Com- mons is pretty catholic in its tastes as regards its favorites. For some years the then Lord Bal- carres was a junior Lord of the Treasury and one of the Unionist whips. In fact, his tact and genial- ity had not a little to do with keeping Mr. Balfour's Government, in the days when it was tottering to its fall, in office. When the war broke out the Earl, who is forty-fives years old, went to the front as an ambulance bearer, enlisting as a private and sub- sequently attaining the rank of "Cor- poral Crawford." The Tory Democrat. David Alexander Edward Lindsay is his full name, but he is known to his friends( and their number is legion) as "Hal." Though a Tory in politics, he is extremely democratic in tem- perament. He is an athlete, a fine boxer, a teetotaller, and possessed of a fund of humor which never degener- ates into bitterness. He owns about fifteen thousand acres, and a couple of fine country seats, Haigh Hall, Wigan, and Balcarres House in Fifeshire, for one division of which Scottish county Mr. Asquith is member. The Lindsays, of which family he is the head, are known in Scotland as "the Light Lindsays" because of the sandy hair which usually prevails in their family, though, as it happens, the present Earl's hair is dark. In the same way, all over Scotland the Camp- bells are known as "the Red Camp- bells," and the Douglasses as "the Black Douglasses." The present Lord Crawford has six children—two boys, of whom the elder, theheir to the earl- dom, is eixteen years old, and four girle. His wife is the younger daughter of the late Sir Henry Polly, Baronet. Her elder sister, as Miss Annie Pelly, was well known in Can- ada as lady-in-waiting to'H.R,H, the Duchess of Connaught, and married Capt, RiverseBulkeley, A.D,C. to the Thike, who was killed in action the year before last. Lord Crawford is an extremely good chess player. He is also an au- thority on Italian art, is a trustee of the National Portrait Gallery, and belongs to the Fine Arts Club. As a Parliamentary speaker he is bright and original, and, while he has no pretensions of eloquence, his speeches are 'full of sound common sense, Al- together, he is one of those aristo- crats of whom it cannot be said, as it can of many, that they are like potatoes because tho best part of them ie under the ground. His Famous Lineage. The Lindsays are one of the great- est hooses in Scotland. The Earl of Crawford is the twenty-seventh earl- the premier Earl of Scotland. The house has a very remote feudal, and even legendary, history, an early an- cestor being reputed to bo descended from "Thor," Who was reputed to be the son of. "Odin," The family is tom - pond to be related to William the Conqueror, and members of it Fre- quently,intermneried with the 'Royal Scottish home of Drupe and Stuar' I Repairs to all makes of, Batteries, Magnetos, Generators, Eto. Walter de Lindsay, an ancestor of Lord Crawford's, sat in the Scottish Parliament ae a lord, in virtue of his estates. The first earl, who was known as the ninth Lord of. Crawford, ob- tained his earldom from King Rich- ard II. in the year 1398 as a reward for his "prowess in a passage of arms with Lord Weyles upon London bridge before King Richard II. and his Queen," The sixth earl fell, with so many other Scottish nobles, in the battle of Flodden Field, and the six- teenth early fought on the Royalist side in the battle of Marston Moor. Some idea of the high esteem in which the family held itself, and was hold by others, may , be gathered from the fact that when King James IV of Scotland, in 1488, created the Earl of Crawford of that day, who was Lord High Admiral and Lord Justiciary of Scotland, Duke of Mont- rose, the earl didn't assume the title. He thought his dignity of such a de- gree that it was not in the power of any monarch to enhance it. His suc- cessors in the earldom took the same view, and a couple of hundred years later, the dukedom of Montrose was conferred upon the house of Graham, another 'ancient Scottish house, who hold it to -day. However, we live in other days. The Earl of Crawford in the fifteenth century would accept no title .from his king. The Earl of Crawford of to -day has wooed the suffrages of the electors,_ and very successfully, too, for he came triumphantly through seven elections in his House of Com- mons days. And as member of the present Cabinet is more simple and unaffected, and less "stuck on him- self" than he is. ROLL OF HONOR. Several thousand officers and em- ployees of the Canadian Pacific Rail- way Company enlisted for active mili- tary duty with the Canadian Expedi- tionary Forces, and the majority of them are now in Europe, bravely bat- tling for Canada and the Empire. As particulars of Army Reservists are not available, these lists of those who have given up their lives for their country or been wounded in action are necessarily incomplete, and do not therefore indicate fully the extent to which the Company's officers and em- ployees have participated in the great struggle. Addison, Herbert, carpenter, Winni- peg, wounded; Anderson, John M., clerk, Calgary, wounded; Arlke, Harry, tariff compiler, Winnipeg, wounded; Atkinson, Arthur, cook, Montreal, wounded; Boushear, Henry, engineer, Fort William, wounded; Burritt, Edgar M., clerk, North Bay, killed in action; Chapman, Edward, machinist, Angus, killed in action; Diver, John W. car repairer, Toronto, killed in action; Ellis, Thomas G. G., record clerk, Montreal, died of wounds; Foster, James B., car repair- er, Fort William, wounded; Gilchrist, Thomas R., draftsman, Ogden shops, suffering from shock; Hamilton, Ed- ward, deliveryman, Winnipeg,, wound- ed; Haswell, John, boilermaker's help- er, Moose Jaw, wounded; Hilliard, Samuel J., porter, Edmonton, wound- ed; Hogg, James, clerk, Montreal, killed in action; Hunt, Thomas, fit- ter's helper, West Toronto, suffering from shock; Kinahan, Ernest, switch- man, Brit. Colum. Div., wounded; Kir- wan, George L, brakeman, MacLeod, wounded; McCourt, Samuel, laborer, Strathcona, killed in action; MacLau- rin, Douglas C., student fireman, Sor- tin, died of wounds; Maslin, Walter, wood machine hand, West Toronto, wounded (2nd time); Morrison Har- vey, asst. agent, Pilot Mound, wound- ed; Moss, Albert, car inspector, Saska- toon, killed in action; Parkes, Herbert W., clerk, Montreal, wounded; Price, John, loco. fireman, Montreal, wound- ed; Roes, Lorne, fitter's helper, Lon- don, killed in action; Scammell, Ed- ward J., clerk, Bull River, wounded; Sheen, Wilfred J., clerk, Winnipeg, suffering from shock; Sweetman, L. H., ass't agent, Strathcona, died of wounds. Would bo Unkind. He—I wish you'd 'drop the "Mis- ter" and call me plain George. She—Oh, but it would be very un- kind to twit you about your looks. Bachelors were taxed in England in the seventeenth century. for Playful chi' NOTIVIa O ETTFOR SLIMMER W EA FI .7MS4f=..d "fk+rlet2nfoiaa "',u ......•, Worry y Envy Member of the Furs! , OUTNUMBERED BY WOMEN. German Men in Government Service Now in Minority. As a result of the men having been called to the colors, the number of women employed in Government bureaus and offices in Germany has gradually increased until now the female employes are in a decided majority, says the North Garman Ga- zette. The rate of increase in the em- ploynient of women in office work during 1915 is shown by the figures during each three-month period. Of these new employes the women formed 40 per cent. in the first quarter of the year, 43 in the second, 48 in the third and 62 in the last. Another feature brought out by the report of the State Insurance Fund is the rapid increase in the num- ber of young persons taking office jobs. While in the first few months following the outbreak of the war the number of new employes under 18 years old was smaller than that of those over 18, a sharp change in the average age of the applicants was noted in December, 1914, and the data for 1915 shows that the number of em- ployes under 18 hired during that year was. 134,461, against 83,813 who had passed that age. He Knew. "Now," said the professor of chem- istry, "under what combination is gold most quickly released?" The student pondered a moment. "I know sir," he answered. "Mar- riage." Mimed'. ;chimes' used by Physicians. A Masterpiece. First Trooper Imperial Yeomanry (discussing a new officer)—Swears a bit, don' e', sometimes? Second Trooper—'E's a masterpiece, 'e is; just opens 'is mouth and lets it say wot it likes. SoreGranulated Eyelids. Ey-s. inflamed by expo sure to Sun. Midland WIgd E` yes SysRiy relieved by Ruled tiv EyiResteliy,NoSmarting, Just 1$ye ,Comfort. At Your Druegi.e • SOc per;Bottle. MarisaEye $eleelaTu' ;2c pbrsseltolihepEEyearee lik Druggist. orMadaeEyeRemedyC..,Cbicape One Chance Left.' Husband—"Take dancing lessionsl Not maohl There are too many other ways by which I can make a fool of myself." Wife—"Yes, dear; but you have tried all those." The Toronto Board of Trade urged the C.N.E. directors to run the Fair for three months as far back as. 1885, but the management thought two weeks quite long enough. Proving the Proverb. "'Distance lends enchantment to the view,' some poet says." "That's right! At any rate it's easier to admire a girl when she's well off:' Seep Miaard'p Liniment In the horse She Knew a Windfall. "Why, these apples are dirty," com- plained the young housekeeper. "Well, yes, they are," admitted the farmer. "You see they are windfalls, and that is why I can sell them so cheap." "You mean they've fallen from the trees on to the grounid, but they are otherwise all right?" the customer in- quired; then, proud of her ready un- derstanding, she bought them. Several days later she called the farmer's wife on the telephone. "I ordered the best cucumbers for pickling," she said sharply, "and you've sent me windfalls!" "Sent what?" gasped the farmer's wife. "Windfall cucumbers! I can tell; you needn't think I. can't. There's dirt on them!" Measuring the Wind. The speed of the wind is measured by means of an ingenious instrument called the aneometer. It is like, a weather vane, with cups instead of letters at the ends of its arms. The cups, catching the wind, whiz round, and thus turn the central shaft, This passes down into a box in which aro' several trials. The indicators of they dials are connected with the' shaft, and move according to its revolutions. Thus the number of revolutions of the cup in a certain time gives the exact Speed in miles per hom', The first successful Atlantic cable was laid in 1866. BATS IN TRENCHES. WINDFALLS THAT Jellied by EhiRodents Ou w French WERE WONDERFUL Clean Rodents Out, Numerous have been the methods emp oy by the soldiers in the French trenches to kill the rate which constitute a veritable plague in the western war zone; but perhaps none has been so interesting' -and so effee- tivo-as the electric method. A trough is excavated along a rat -run adjoin- ing the trenches, and over this are placed three wires running parallel to each other. A constant supply of cur- rent is maintained in the wires, which. are spaced only a few inches apart. The rats, in crossing the trough, come in contact with the wires, resulting in immediate death. It is reported that hundreds of rats are killed each week by this method. KEEP CHILDREN WELL DURING HOT WEATHER. Every mother knows how fatal the hot summermonths are to small chil- dren. Cholera infantum, diarrhoea, dysentery and stomach troubles are rife at this time and often a precious little life is lost after only a few hours illness. The mother who keeps Baby's Own Tablets in the house feels safe. The occasional use of the Tab- lets prevents stomach and bowel troubles, or if trouble comes suddenly as it generally does—the Tablets will bring the baby safely through- They are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., . Brockville, Ont. He Also Ran. A young man was stopped at the door of a fashionable church by the sexton with the inquiry: "Are you related to the bride or bridegroom?" "No," was the answer, "Then," the sexton said, "you will pardon me for asking what interest you have in a ceremony that is to be of the quietest character?" "I am," the young man announced, sadly, "I am the defeated candidate." I bought a horse with a supposedly incurable ringbone for $30.00. Cured him with $1.00 worth of MINARD'S LINIMENT and sold him for $85.00. Profit on Liniment, $54. MOISE DEROSCE. Hotel Keeper, St. Philippe, Que. Differentiation. "How did Smith make all his money?" "By judicious speculation." "And how did Jones lose his for- tune?" "Dabbling in stocks." A Chance for the Boys. The Prize List of the Seventh An- nual Toronto Fat Stock Show is now out and contains many new classes with attractive prizes. Among these is the Boys' Steer Feeding Competi- tion, open to the boys entered in the inter -county Baby Beef Competition conducted by the Department of Ag- riculture. The management aro of- fering a good prize and this class should be a popular one. Miners Liniment Lnmberman's Friend Elephanfs Not Cowards. The fear an elephant has for a rat has often been spoken of as an ex- ample of colossal cowardice. But it is nothing of the kind. The elephant, when captive and in chains, has every reason to regard with terror the little rodent, which, to the still watches of the night, gnaws the toe- nails of the helpless pachyderm. Not much of this sort of thing is required to make the huge creature lame. Asia is the largest continent. ARE CU AN NO STICKINESS ALL DEALERS G.C.Briggs & Sons HAMILTON GET MIS CATALOGUE The Best Ever issued: Guns, Rifles, Ammunition, Fishing, Tackle Baseball, Gollff, Tennis, Lacrosse Camping Outfits, all Summer and Winter Sports, We want Every Man who Hume, 1~`rsbeg, or plays any Outdoor Game to get our large free Catalogue. Prices right, satisfaction guaranteed. Immense Stock, prompt shipmeut You savelnoney bygetting Catalogue to•dday. T.W. Xloyd a Gott, 37 ria trc name St. W wt, Mourns! LEGACIES FROM PEOPLE THEY HAD NEVER SEEN. Romances of Largo and Unexpected Fortunes; Suddenly Aequired. There are few of the stories of au& denly-acquired riches more fascinat-, ing, and also more tantalising, than those which tell of men and women raised from poverty to affluence by un- expected legacies from testators whom, in many cases, they have never even set eyes on, says London An- swers. A month seldom passes in which the newspapers do not tell us of some such story as that of the San Francis- co tram -conductor, named Gopvie, who returned from his day's work to find a letter awaiting him with the !news that a distant cousin, whom he had never seen, had left him $1,000,- 000; of Adelaide Wright, a telegraph- ist of St. Louis, who became a mil- lionaire in a day through the death of a great-aunt; or of Mdlle, Burch, a poor Swiss girl, who was made rich by a legacy of $250,000 from a weal- thy Englishman whorn she, had years, before, tended when he fell in a faint in a London street, He Was Well Rewarded. It is not long since the papers were full of the romantic story of Michael M'Donald, caretaker of a Lancashire club, who awoke one morning to learn that he and his brother were sole heirs to a millionaire uncle who had died in California; and of the good fortune of Miss Alulie Scott, daughter of a weiglunan ab Idle Station, near Bradford, who came into a fortune of $500,000, the gratifying fruits of her friendship -with Miss Alice Page, a wealthy young lady of Manchester. Still more remarkable was the story of Mr. J. R. Conway, a Sheffield man, who in his younger days in London had played bhe "Good Samaritan" to two ladies reduced almost to starva- tion. Years passed. Mr. Conway had long left London, and his good services to the distressed gentlewo- man were but a faint memory, when one day he received a solicitor's let- ter informing him that the survivor of the two objects of his charity had died a rich woman, and had left him a legacy of $150,000 in recognition of his kindness. Too Old to Enjoy it. "It is a pity it did nat come to me earlier in life," was the comment of Edward Corcoran, a Dublin saddler nearing seventy, when he learned that he was heir to $500,000, left him by a friend of his boyhood, John Sullivan, who had sought fortune across the Atlantic. Fortune was in her most caprici- ous mood when, a few years ago, she revealed Richard Roberts, a Dur- ham sandwich -man, who was living in an old tenement at a rental of three shillings a week, as next-of-kin to a millionaire relative, of whose exis- tence he scarcely was aware; and al- so when four brothers, Bristol artis- ans, found themselves heirs tothe es- tate of a kinsman, a Brooklyn mer- chant, valued! at a milion and a quar- ter dollars. Among other favorites of Fortune in recent years were Miss Molly De- laine, a pretty and popular actress, who thought riches as remote as the stars, when one clay the astc•mding news came to her that a relative, of whom she had seen very little, had left her the comfortable fortune of $200,000; and Miss Agnes Jennebte Russell, of Dunfermline, who unex- pectedly inherited $485,000 on the death of a brother, in whose sordid room in Brooklyn wore found two trunks containing securities worth $400,000 and a bank -book showing deposits of $85,000. Duty First. But perhaps the most remarkable of all these stories of lucky windfalls is that told of young William Warren Morrison, who was employed in a Boston printing office. "The boy, who is seventeen years old," says a Boston paper, "has re- ceived news that he is heir to $20,- 000,000 left to him by his great-uncle, a Californian Croesus. Ile knewt about it, but was at his work to -day, clothed and in his right mind. He trotted around with proofs, answered the telephone, ran errands, and performed the various duties of the 'printer's devil.' as zeal, - lonely as if his life depended on keep- ing his job at three dollars a week." Doubtful Recovery. The lusty -lunged itinerant auction- eer was holding forth in the market place. Taking up a bolt of cigars he shouted at the top of his voice. "You can't get better, gentlemen! I don't caro where you go, you can't get better!" "Nil," came a oytdeal voice from the back of the crowd,"you can't I smoked one last week, and I'm not hotter yet," It takes twelve seconds for the pro- sectile "of a 12 -in. naval gun to reach its point of impaet when firing at n range of five miles. Shells for 12-1n. guns cost 3500 apiece. GI L GLEANS-PI5INIrOTS4g`,r Making Himself at Rome, The Diner --Say! Of all the vile, nauseous messes ever set before a man to eat— The Waiter—She You seem to think we're your wife. Luk for Miaard'a and tate no othea Some Satisfaction. Miss Green—Of course you can't believe everything you hear, • Miss Gadleigh—Oh no; but you can repeat it. The attendance the first year of the Canadian National Exhibition was 101,000. It ran three weeks. Last year there was a daily average attendance of 72,000 for 12 days, a total of 864,000, SEED POTATOES Ci EED POTATOES, IRISH COU. A7 biers, Delaware, Carman. Order at once. Supply limited, Write for nun- tatione. H. W. Dawson, Brampton. Pon SALE FOE SALE. Good 100 -ACRE FAitM, Huron County, Morris Township, must sell. Por particulars write F. S. SCOTT, Brussels, Ont. TEAMSTERS WANTED TEAMSTERS WANTED, STEADY came 1•mont to competent men. ADply HENDR.IE & COMPANY, Ltd., Hamilton, Ontario. NEWSPAPERS POR SALE 1PROFIT-MAHING NEWS AND SOB. Offices for sale in good Ontario towns. The most useful and interesting of all businesses. Fun information on application to Wilson Publishing Com- pany, 78 West Adelaide Street, Toronto. MISCELLANEOUS ANCER, TUMORS, LUMPS, ETC., r1J internaland external, cured with- out pain by our home treatment Writs us before too late. Dr. T_ollrnan Medical. Co., Ltmlted• Collingwood• Ont. MECHANICS WANT) We want a few good mechanics. Have steady work and good wages for lathe hands, titters, handy men, also a fevr wood -working machinists and handy; men for wood shop wanted. ADDlY i)y person only, Dodge Manufacturing Co. West Toronto. Become e Registered Nurse and receive -pay while learning The SYork It, Poced, Hospital590 HOW Acme:M ed by theCity Neer York Stete•l suestloa Dept, Offerer p tero• uel-ose-bet rear ammo li, tratelna ef, roues oath dlowepoe,l d maintenance. Appllaaete ague tps,. one roar D ii, sebool lnaapetloe or (ie' LAI( equhalent .�r per • t lirs'eAArees Reap Iereet Eo,pitM, Qd Jeflen,00 et., New T'gb America's Pioneer Dog Remedies BOOK ON DOG DISEASES And How to Feed Mailed free to say address by the Author H. CLAY GLOVER CO., Inc. 118 West 31st Street, New York For Freezing Ice Cream you got beet resulte with CRUSHED ROCK SALT A more even freezee.. 9moether Ioe Cream, Takes one-third less telt and keeps Cream hard twine as long. Write T0130NTO SALT worms, 8o -se Servls St., Toronto, Oat. Boy and 10 Hogs Made 4350 at Our 1915 Show. The same chance for a bright boy at .the Seventh Annual Toronto Pat Stook Show, Union Stook Pardo, Toronto. pecamber 8th and 8th, 1836, Premium Lists with many new classes now ready. C. F. TOPPING, Secretary, Union Stook Yards, Toronto. t A Gold Mine On Your Farm You can double your profits by storing up good green feed in a BISSELL SILO "Sommer Peed all Winter Long" Scientifically built to peep silage fresh, sweet and good to the last. Built of select- ed timber treated with wood preservatives that prevent decay. The BISSELL SILO. has strong, rigid. walls, air -tight doors, hoops of heavy steel. Sold by dealers or address us direct, Get free folder, Write T. E. Bissell Co., Ltd. . Dept, L! Elora, Ontario, Manilla" F ol, Sale 'Wheelock Engine, 150 H.F., 18 x42, with double main driving belt 24 ins. wlcte, and Dynamo 301C., W. belt driven. All in first class condition, Would be sold together or scp:irate- ly ; also a lot of shafting at a very great bargain as room is required ired immodi. ately. S. Frank Wilson & Sons 73 Adt:'lalde Street West, "i n1o1?ptl. DII. 7. ISSI1 11 32 --'Ill,