YARNS OF A CANADIAN SEAMAN TORONTO SAILOR RECOUNTS AD- VENTUREH WITH SUBS. "One Hundred and Eighty Miles From Land and Our Boat Was Leaking." "I shall never forget my first ex- perience with a U-boat," says John Nugent, able seaman frum Toronto. â- 'I had shipped out of Liverpool on a ihree-masted schooner calli d the Grena'ia, a vessel of some 1,200 tons. We had no cargo and were under seal- ed orders. â- 'We w.:'re tacking along in the Bris- tol channel when suddenly the lookout spied a periscope, and five minujes later a U-boat of a large type came to the surface. The submai-ine attacked us savagely, dropping shell after shell on our decks. It was cruel the way that shrapnel ripped up that wooden ship. The masts were virtually torn up by the roots and bundled over the side into the sea. The decks were blown into kindling wood, and the starboard side of the ship was bloWTi full of holes. The submarine fired fif- teen shells in all. "The crew lost no time in scram- bling over the port side of the ship into small boats. We were ten miles from land, and wc pulled shoreward as if the very devil was after us. Right .here I want to say that I don't care to take chances again with submarines in wooden boats. The steel variety are good enough for me. "I got my next experience with a sub when I shipped on the Maure- tania, formerly in the service of the Cunard Line. Just outside of Malta a sub popped above the surface of the ocean and gave us a merry chase, firing shell after shell. But we were too speedy for the Hun, and nually the U-boat got sick of the job and sub- mevged. A Tlirilling .Vdventure. "The last time I met wilh a sub was when I was firing on the steamship Platuria. September 15 we left Gibral- tar bound for an Italian port with a big cargo of gasoline, and benzine aboard, .\bout 3.1.T in the afternoon I was having a peaceful pipe in the engine room, when suddenly there was a terrific explosion "midships. I went sprawling to the metal flooring of the place, and my pipe flew ten feet away. I knew what had happened; we had been torpedoed, and I lost no time in scrambling to the deck. As I reached the open a shell landed on the steam- ship and exploded, a fragment strik- ing my hand and inflicting a painful wound. "The initial explosion caused liy the torpedo had resulted in the killing of ten men. 1 "I found everything in confusion on the deck; the crew was attempting to , lower the I'feboats. of which there were two. Captain John Leslie, of ^ New South Wales, stood on the bridge of the Platuria and refused to leave his position. One of the lifeboats was .aunched, but the one I was in capsiz- id, throwing abput twenty of the crew ; ;nto the water. Just then the Plat- jria sank stem downward, and Jim Whittaker. an oiler, of Minnesota, was ; ;iragged to his death by the suction. ' Captain Leslie went down with his ' ship. "Those of us in the water clambered on top of the overturned lifeboat; the man clinging to the boat on my' right was a fellow by the name of Mills, from Georgia, who had been torpeiloed four times; the experience was really: nothing new to him. U-boat With a Conscience. ".\t this juncture it seemed that the submarine commander must have been' stricken with a twinge of conscience, .'or the U-boat ro.se to the surface and , -•ame toward us. He allowed us to -â- ome aboard the submarine while som? .if his men righted our boat. He gave .Js a dram of rum arounil and cigar- ettes. This submarine commander seemed to possess a sense of humor, for after we had gotten the rum into ! our systems and had lit our cigarettes, j he informed us with a grin that he had stolen the rum and tobacco from: an English ship. But right at that moment we were not at all particular where the rum or the tobacco came from; the liquor warmed up our ach- ing bodies and the cigarettes calmed our nerves. } "It developed that . the Hun com- \ mandcr was a very curious person. 1 He inquired concerning our nationali- : tics, and asked a number of question"* about the war. It seemed that he h.-.d been travelling underneath for a con- siderable time «nd was out of touch j with world-ev«nts. He asked qvies- i tlons concerning the name, cargo and crew of the Platuria and wanted to i know what had become of the captain. W'e told him that the captain was dead and that information seemed to give him satisfaction. Right here 1 thought ; it was time for the Hun to play the role of the questionetl. and I asked] him to give us th^ iiunil'cr of his I'-! boat. That made him angry. j ""Look her.e. yoiuig man." he growl- ed, 'don't get impertinent; you are; lucky to be alive." Story of Kight Survivors. 'â- .After that we were bundled into} our boat without ceremony. We were 180 miles from land, and our boat was Tralcfiig. VVe took turns at rowing and! bailing. We were a miserable feeling lot: some of us were suffering from Injuries, and nearly all were sick from swallowing salt water. The next morn- ing we were picked up by thi Italian steamship Andrea, from Spezia. "The .\ndrea laniled us in the Ma- Jeira Islands, where we ramained for a month before we got a ship. "While waiting to ship we heard many first-hand stories of German submarine savagery on the high seas. One of the wor.st cases was cited by eight survivors of an Italian ship. "When the ship was torpedoed, the crew, numbering forty-nine men, took to the small boats. The submarine shelled the small boats, killing twenty- ftve men. But this did not satisfy the Huns. They attacked two of the life- boats with axes, stpving holes in their sides so that they sank, drowni;ig the men in them. Only eight of the crew of forty-nine escaped to tell the story. Surely, Germany cannot expect the world to ever forget her barbarities on the seas." A Fasliionable W liter Dress The FoBy Of Taidng [estive ^\' ,THE CAUSE OF BACKACHE Every muscle in the body needs constantly a supply of rich, red blocd in proportion to the work it does. The muscles of the back are under a heavy strain and have but little rest. When the bleed is thin they lack nourishment, and the result is a sen- sation of pain in those muscles. Some people think pain in the back means kidney trouble, but the best 'iiedtcal authorities agree that backache sel- dom or never has anything to do with ibe kidneys. Organic kidney disease may have progressed to a critical point without developing a paiu in the back. This being the case pain in the back should always lead the sufferer to look to the condition of his blood. , It wU! be found in most cases that the I use of Dr Williams' Pink Pills to build up the blood will :;top the sen- sation of pain in the ill-nourished muscles of the back. How nuich bet- ler^t is to try Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for the blocd :hau to give way to un- reasonable alarm about your kidneys. If you suspect your kidneys any doc- tor can make tests in ten minutes : that will set your fears at rest, or tell you the worst. But in any event to be perfectly healthy you must keep the bleed in good condition, and for this purpose na other medicine can equal Pr. Williams' Pink Pills. You can get these pills through any dealer iu medicine, or by mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 from The Dr. Williams' .Medicine <^o., BrockvlUe. Ont. » Smart indeed is this semi-iitted dress with the shaped tunic. McCall Pat- tern No. 812.^, Ladies' Semi-Fitted Dress. In (i sizes, 34 to 44 bust. Price, 20 cents. This pattern may be procured from your local McCall dealer, or from the McCall Co.. 70 Bond St., Toronto, Dept. W. A 'Wtmlm* to l>7si>«ptica. Tli» lial>it .if ta.Ki.'iK iliX'siivf i.ills .â- !- ler meais inakt-s «'tir**iii<- dyi«|.*fiiti*"H of many lliouHundt^ «if m*ri\ und wonivn b(»- causii- ai'iiltciul <ti)!<!<<t('ntii. .Iruirs and medicines liaie i>raetU'ally iki intlueii'-e iiuin Ihp <*xi'ffsst%'*fly a*-i<i ^â- iniititit>n vf the stomach cnntvnts which is the â- â- ausa nt moiit forms uf tnctiffPHtitm ami 'lys- xeoHia. The lifter diiiiifr |»I1I merely Wswens the !*eiiHU3 vi*n(*i*i4 of th«* sttMnufh Der\e» and thus Kive.^ u fHlH** yenwe of fretnloin from pain. If those who are subj<-<"t to IndlireKtlun. xa.x. itutulc-iu-e. bpU-liinir. bloatiiiK. hearibunik •^tc. after <-a:ln|c would %Kt alxMit un ounce of purt* bt»- urated inaenesiii from their druKfflst and take a teiupoonful in a little water after HK-ais. ther«* woiilil be no further necessity f,ir Ji-u»ts »>r !tie*Uflnf^ be- cause bii^iiraieii tmi^n.-sla ini4Uiii(l\ neu- Uallzes stomach aridity, stops fiiod fer- mentaliun and thus iM.«ur?s ni>i'!nul pitlnle..*s (jlKesiioii t>v (.nablinK the gtomai'h to do its work without nin- dran*'»- Marching Men. From the silver coasts outlying, Where the pallid ships are plying. Sweeping in from East and West Over crag: and mountain crest. Up from desert, grove and glen. Still there come those hosts of men; In their hands the sword aflame. On their lips an ancient name, Cleaving hearts and lives a.sunder, , Trampling thrones and empires under; â- Temples lately love-forsaJten They have -entered and retaken. Earth it,self their tread has shaken â€" Marching men, marching men. Sleeping go<is your shouts awakeni â€" Helena Coleman. McKopotamia Stories. Canon Parfit, of Jerusalem, who de- scribed himself as 'Vicar of Mesopo- tamia and Rural Dean of the Garden of Eden," recently told a few Eastern tales in I^ndon. He said that when he first saw his "charge" the scenery did not impress him. The people were poverty-strick- en and begged for "baksheesh." the children were brilliantly clad in olive, oil and the sweetest of smiles." A .soldier, referring to scorpions and mosouitocs, said: "Everything in the! Garden's lovely (I don't think!) It; wouldn't lake a flaming sword to drive | me out of it!" At Bagdad, the pontoon bridge hav- ' ing been washed away, the Sultan de- lermine<i to 'ouild a new one. -o he set about raising the money. The people were whipoeil and blackniaileil into parting with £-10,000. The bridge cost £4,000, the tax gatherer pocketed the rest. CONTAi NO ALU M Jl/fi/NEGranvktei Eyelids, '^ ***'~^^Sore E/es. EypjInniniiJ by ^^5cui, Dust and V.lnd Q'd.Lk'.y ,^.,„- , -. ,,_ 'rejievej by Mar'ne. Try 11 In ^^ "^^jJ^QycKir £> e:5 And mt^ADyi Eyes. TOUR LYCJNoSMirtiKf JutHfeCttstfoft Mmine Eye Semeily iifl/'^^F/SSV^C^^.^J Atk Marine Bre Remedy Co., CUcac* « LEMONS WHITEN AND BEAUTIFY THE The use of glass bricks for building purposes is being adopted in many European cities. .As a means of admitting light to dark hallways and basements these transporent bricks have been most satisfactory, and there has l»een no loss in stability of con- i struction when they have been sub- j stituted for the ordinary clay bricks. i On<; mury.ing a neighaor met Spike â- Harrow returning from the timber with a gun over his shoulder. Spike was not so friendly, nor so inquisitive, as his neighbor, and when asked whether he had been "a-shootin','' re- plied shortly: "Yes." "What you been a-shootin".'" "Dog." "Your dog? My! Was he mad? ' "Weil, he didn't look so awfuiiy well pleased." Kiaard'i xajumeat Corei Sarret ia Cowa Oil from the .sewing machine may be removed from material by tacking a piece of cotton wool on each side of the stain . The cotton will soon ab- sorb the oil. SKIN Hi:i,P WAHTES acisarci'a Iilnuueat Cnjres Siitemser. .\ SIDNEY OF TO- DAY. Story of Courtesy Which Surpassed That of the Famous Courtier. We are accustomed to think of cer- tain heroic figures of the %)ast as a sort of supermen, whose gallant and knightly .leeds we cannot expect the .^.^^ ^^ ^ ^.^^ ,.,^^^ ^^ ^^ ^^^^^^^ men we meet every day to equal. BuW „„,„ „,.„ ... ., .,,,_ ,..,.,_ _.;,, , this war â€" like every other war â€" Make this beauty lotion cheaply for your face. neck, arms and hands. .\f the cost of a small jar of ordin- '• ary cold cream one can prepare a full quarter pint of the most wonderful lemon sltln softener and complexion beauTilier. by squeezing the juice of two fresh lemons into a bottle con- taining three ounces of orchard white. ' Care should be taken to strain the ' When w:nu?r snows are piling over field and fence and bough, | There are apples in the cellalf. tiiere is fodder in the mow; â- .And though the north wind threatens dreary frozen month.s :o bring. We laugh because beneath it all we hear the voice of .Spring. i-. |>IE.-: WVNTKl' Til in I PLAIN' ^ and lisii' >»-*,viii|c at iionie. whole or :'l»are time. S'-oa pay. work .«ent anv distance. '•'nArgfit paid. Send .stamp for partfi uiu; > Xat'tia: .M.i:rjiai 'irinif ''""U-a.' â€" â- mscEiii. ASTx: o trs C.V.N. KR TIM-.RS. I.t:.Mrs. ETC. i'.'...:'ia; .»::.! extei'nai. '^ured with- .'tit j.-ii-i oy -lur home treainieuc A\Vite Tiw !-r.,r» i,io late. Dr. Bellnmn Medical «'". l.:''!e.i. '"..IHnewt.od. i~>:it. LOST IX THE DESEBl'. Terrible Experience in Death \ alley in California. The late .yaj. Cien. Funston was once employed as a botanist in the United States .Agricultui'al Depart- ment. He was one of a party sent out to e.-jplore Death Valley in California. The experience is said to have been the cruelest in all Funston's life, and it so nearly proved fatal that he al- ways declared that he could not under- stand why he had not died or become mad. He had started out one morning to ride one hundred and twenty miles down the desert to mail some import- ant letters and packages at a post of- fice. .All day his pony trtidged over the desert, bi'eaking through the crust up to its fetlocks and sending up be- neath its feet strangling, smoke-iike clouds of powdered, white alkali. The thermometer rose that day to' one hundred and forty-seven degrees, a height no one there had ever seen it reach before. The hot air blew acro.ss the wastes so dry, so penetrat- ing, that it peeled the skin from Fun- ston's face, parched his lips and made them bleed, stung and burned his nos- trils, and caused a thirst that nothing. could satisfy. He had only a nuart of water in his canteen and no forage for his horse, and, reali/.ing that to go on farther meant certain death, he decidetl to re- turn. He picketed his horse in the evening, slept until three o'clock in the morning, then mounted and started back. When the fiery sun rose over the mountains his horse gave out and staggered weakly ; and so Funston dismounted and led it. For many miles he walked, determined, in spite of his agony, not to give up until life left him. Suddenly he hearii two distinct shots. He stopped and looked in ' every direction, but could see no stnoke or sign of anything human on the desert. Three times he heard shots, and then it dawned on him that they did not come from the desert or from the mountains. The fever/ brought on by the terrible heat had ' caused the snapping of the nerves in his head to sound like rifle shots. .\l four o'clock the next morning he staggered across the doorway of aj ranchman's house and weakly cried ' for watoi'. He hatl walked forty miles through the desert in a night and day' of such fearful heat a.s even Death Vallev had scarcely ever known before. • ^.__ . I Riwe Hedge. Rose hedges are not tiiicomntoii in Great Britain hi\<1 in Kurope but they are somewhat of a novelty here. Rose h«<lges are good for screening the vegetable garden or as a dividing line between neighi'ors. Make a deep trench of well manured soil «nd use such varieties as Ameri- can Pillar, Crimson Rambler, Doroth.v . Perkins, Climbing Captain Cristy, Ex- celsa, I'aroline Testout, For supports use posts with galvan- ized wire stretched between them. Thiec or four stvanils of wii\> will be re<iuired. proves that the nobility of the human spirit is eternal and essential, and that it manifests itself iiuite as often in men oi' humble birth as in the sons of the proudest families. I remember, says a writer in the Fortnightly Review, that when I was a boy the story of Sir Philip Sidney at the battle of Zutphen bit deeply into my imagination. 1 derived it from a large, popular history of England, in ^ imo ,11^ f^ce. iieckrartns which the incident was made the sub- ject of a full-page engraving over which I used to linger with delight. For years afterwards the picture, with additions and embellishments, would come back at intervals to my mind. The scene, as I envi.saged it. wa.s re- plete with an ornate dignity. The bat- tle raged decorously in the back- ground; men in correct attitudes, with ' pulp gets iu. then this lotion will keep fresh for months. Every woman knows that lemon juice is used to bleatrh and remove such blemishes as fi-eckles, saliownees aisd tan and is the Ideal skin softener, whitener and beautlfier. Just try it : Get tb-.-ee ounces of orchard white at any drug store and two lemons frcm the grocer and make up a quarter pint of this sweetly frag- rant It-mon lotion and massage it daily , Into the face, neck, arms and hands., It is marvellous to snioiuheu rough, ! , red hands. 1 MONEY ORDERS The safe way 10 send mout.-y by uiai! is by Dominion Express Money Order. Every piece of farm machinery | .should be put under cover. Grease all' the bearings heavily and cover the e.\-| posed bright metal parts with cheap grease of some kimi. Vaseline is good ami can be had in large (luantities at small cost. The iron frames and The liquor business h;xs always been a curse to the v.orld. Before Colum- bus discovereii .Xmerica, the author- ities of the city of Ghent, in Europe, found it necessary in a time of dearth to forbid the conversion of grain into the brewing of beer. Thus does his- tory repeat itself. O O- -O O o O o â€" Oâ€" <l- -o 1 WOMEN ! IT IS MAGIC ! ? LIFT OUT ANY COrS Apply a few drops then lift ' corns or calluses off with f fingers â€" no pain. ] â€" 0â€"0 â€" o-~oâ€" O o o. â€" o- -.J â€" o â€" o o .Just think! You can :ift off any corn or cal- lus without pain or sore- When ba>"{ng your Piano insist on having an "OTTO HIGIL" PIANO ACTION .-orselets and bright lances, stood \ wheel.* of mowers etc., should be paint- ed. It is the height of extravagance! to leave tools out in khe weather a.V any season, particularly during win-^ about; in the centre lay the dying hero, an arresting tigure. with his | curled ami, 1 suppose, peifumed ring- 1 lets, his elegant sword hilt, his white' tci-. and spotless ruff, hi.s slashed jerkin, â- his Klizabethan hose and stockings. . You saw the draft of water offered ' (in a silver gobletl; and than you be- i..^l'na'"'l's Liniment Co., IJmited. held the knight, about to raise it to Oeiitlemen. --Theodore norai>\ a his lips, turning to the wounded sol- ^'"'"^'"*'' "^ mine, was completely dier at his side, with his courteous I'ured of rheumatism after five years "Friend, thy necessity is greater than o' suffering, by the Jtidlcioti.-s use .if mine." Certainlv a erand thinir done' M'-^-^RD'S l.j.VI.MENT, The abcve facts can be veriiied b> wriiing to him. to tbe Parish C'-iesi or ;iny of his neighbors. .•\. COTE, .Merchant. St. Isidore. Que.. \2 .May. "HS. Lertanily a grand thing done in the grand mansier! In the earlier days of the war 1 came upon a' paragraph in a news- paper correspondent's letter about ths fighting near Festubert. .-X British soldier was lying wounded on the ground, fevered with thirst, close by a German even more desperately hurt. Stretcher bearers arrived and offered the Briton a tin of water. The ntan was reaching for it eagerly when his glance fell on his lormenteii enemy. ".â- \fter 'ini," he said, and handoil liack the vessel for the Clernian to drain. So now. when 1 .^eek to recall my old vision of Sidney at Zutphen, it is P''*''*- *'"^'h »* Iteeping the patch free blotted out by another: a vision of a *'''''"' weeds, conservir./ the moisttire, man in drabbled khaki lying in the "."'^ forming a clean mat for the Iwr- horrible ciinisoned tilth of no man's '"j** '" '"'P*" O"- --^fter the fruit has land; of another man in a torn grayi '"'Pened. the stra*v may be removed. tunic, drenched with blood, staring' ' with woltish eye.s at the water; of the •â- '''»'*â- â- I-tnlm« nt Cnrs s Dluhthena. former shutting his own parched lips u, « tight over his teeth and putting the "â- ' ^"" The best mulch material to use is clean straw; this is placed on the strawberry plants four to six inches deep after the ground has been frozen. In the spring after the ground is thawed, the straw is worked arounti the plants. This serves .several pur- .A. Cincinnati man uls- cuvercd this ether com- pound and named it frecjone. Any d.-ug- gist win sal! a tiny bot- tle of froezont., like here shown, for very !itt!e cost. Y'ou apply a f«w drop-i direi'tly upon a tender corn or callus. Instantly the soreness iisappears. then short- y you will find the corn â- r callus eo loose that y -u can lift it right off, Freezone is wondar- - ii. It dries instantly. It doesn't eat away ths corn or callus. but shrivels It up withotit â- •ven irritating the surrounding skin. Hard, soft or corns between the to«», IS well as painful lailaws. lift riyht off. There is no pain before or after- wards. 11 your dmggist hasc't freezone. tell him tu order a small bot. tie for you from his wholesale dn:g hcuse. Ah! That's the Spot Sloa.^'s Liniment goes right to it. Have you a rheumatic ache or a dull throbbing ueuralgic pain? You lan tind a. quick and effective relief ui Sloan's Liniment. Thousands of bullies have this remedy handy for all exlern.il pains because time and v^ine a^aia it faa* provca the quickest r«Uei. .So cte«n and e«9> to apply, too. No rub- bins. ^^ »tain. no inconvectence ao i* the case \«itb plaster* or oiiltmeats. If you onco u»e Sloan'aLiniment.you wdl Revar bcuah- uuCit. Ceuetoua atzed botlla*. at ail dru^futa. :5c.. soc., ji.oa Liniineiit KILLS PAIN ' ng precious draft by with a short, iil-said word of refusal. Surely a greater hero, that tianieless cockney, than th? sworded and scented courtier! ••.\fter 'imi" It is better than the nobly mel- lifluous phrase that made Sir Philip Sidney immortal. «â- Deafness in Soldiers. k novel cure for deafness in sol- diers has been found by British doc- tors, who believe in the power of sug- gestion to accomplish much that their nieilical skill cannot. Much of the deafness at the front is hysterica!, born of the soldiers fear of going deaf from the incessant piniiiding of the ex- plosives about him. .Many limes these men cannot be I'ureti by direct treatment, and it is then that the imii)ue system is brought into play. They are given very slight anesthesia and a tiny incision made in the skin behind an ear. Then an iron plate is hamnicreil violently close to the ear. In ulmo.st every instance where the deafness is hysterical the patients regain their hearing immc diately, convinced that a serious ami therefore helpful operation has been J performed. couple t)f men sawing wtHiii the other day with a cross-cut saw. and felt soriy for them, the saw Iug),.ii <i). T'hero was not enough set in it. Half an hour spent in put ting that sa .v in good order would have saved a great ileal of strength, and the men cotdd have .sawed fur more wood. (.letting reatly for work is just as important as working. "ll is not being out at heels that makes a man discontented: it is being (lilt at heart."- Bliss Carman. ABSORBINE '^ - TRADE MARK RKtttSWVT.or.r will re; , c inflamed, sw ollen Joints, Sprains. Bruises, Sufi Bunches: Heals Boils, Poll EvitQuitlor, Fistula and infected sores quickly as it is a (-osiiive aatisepiic ind gT;iii;ile. Pieasajtt tu utr; tloes not biiiiter ai mnoTf [he Si'r. an.l vuueaa wufictbc b,»r«c. j 5; OJ (>ff tK.ltif , iltii*rrr4. , Book 7 .M frc». .Mi^OKBINE. JK .liir anttKrlic.lunrnt f.'taianklM. 1 rciuc*a I'alntaL Sw.ii;rt\ Vein*, Wen#. .Mratn*. Bnii»c«i j Knpi pain an4 ttiAtmmauon. Pilca i) OO per bonle tl . dra^rra nr .JcUrrrn). Wlit irll roa aorr If ^a wiha, < Liberal rr;it Bonte for 10c- ;» itampi. , V. F. YOUNS. 0. D. F., SIB Ltmsns 8l(t|.. Muilrau. Gtn. : •^fc^b;Qf toti A^M^Mn;. Jr.. ira oiij.- Is Pimples o;i Back and Scalp. Hair Came Out. Healed at Very Trifling Cost. "I i.i'.'ul red piinpltis comiiiur out b»» low my right shouldsrbiade. "rhe pim- ples festered and th«n spread on my back. This had a bnmii-.g itciiing feel- ing. Tlieu an eruption broke out on my scalp ii\ a patch and haircameouL 'I used Ciiticura Soap ititd Ointnicm. and after! bad used two l»xe« of Oinlmeiit with tliree cakes of Soap I was healed." (Signed) Geo. I. ft^iies, Edmonds, Brit- ish Columbia, Iidy 4, WIT. Caticura Soap daily and Cuticura Ointment occasionally prevent pimples *.id other eruutiir.s .Nothing better. For Free :^amp>« Each by Mmil ad- d'Cis postcard: "Cuticura, D«pt. A, Boston, I'. S. K." Sold evervwher-. Mluard's I>iiilm*ut Cnna CulAa. Btg. ISSUE 2- Machinery For Sale I >\HEEUHK ENGINE, lSx42. New Automatic Valve Type. Cor-iplete wth supply and exhaust pipl.tfli flywheel, etc. Will accept $',2oJca«h for immedute sale. 1 SLEl TRIC (iENER.MOR .}() K.W.. 110-120 Volts D.C. Will accept $425 cash fc- Immediate sale 1 LARGE LEATHER BELT. Dcuhle. EndWs.v:. 2i*inch x 70 ft. Will accept $300 for Irrmediate sale, sithough belt is In sxceMent eoik ditlon and new one would coat about $600. PI LLEYS. Larg* size. 2i}x66â€" $30 ; 12x60â€" »20 ; 12' 2x48 â€" $'2 ; 12x36â€"43. t BLO\\ ERS OK FANS, Buffalo make. On* 10 Inoh, of^er 14 Inch liiecnarge â€" $30 rach. RE\L ESTATES COKI'OR.VFION, LTD. (iO Front St. West, Toron^