Exeter Advocate, 1902-10-16, Page 4iter 4bialacate,. milott vs. Trott.
_ . , ceired the whole a the money in clues-
tion, except $1,570, Out of this latterl sTR 1 k ‘ E EN gs
paid,
,.„.„,..s,,_,. Sand.ers , Editor end Peop 1 It will be remembered that upon the
: , s —I . P -, • 't• sum the costs of all parties are to be ; _ GOAL .. E e, . e
i
Tifilli,'SDAY, OUT, 16, 190'4 ' a tbe heirs-at-law disputed 'the right
- NOTES -41.0 COMMENTS ita"""les alim?`1 bY ber as 4 glt
-
t a Urn W. 1-1, Trott. of Exeter, to tar-
rom nix' Penney The dispute cul-
Bruesels Post:,—"The number '-Li valuated iu actiou lew, in which
naU elerles in Ontario es. 170., There one Elliott, of Port Hope, for bimself
Las been tm anunal examof these and Celer'5, 311:$, Tret fee the
cults for the past ewer yn,t..a.. nil, sum of $0,130, being- the amount re -
last exemination has lust come oft eeivea by her from Mr. Penney. The
oud is a very stringent one. For ex- action was tried before the Hon, Sir
ample, a clerk ie given 1,500 letter W„ R, Meredith, tt. J.. at (iodericb,
dthe ee 3 natice
post offices in Ontario, and stands be
ose of evidenthe Wet
lore a case and bas to put each card found the following' tsetse--
in tbe right place mdicating the pees -
age a the letter to its destinetion,
both atilwan ,tva swt-tv routes. 1:13
last year. lea no :clerk had made a
tantes enesee eat ee en the oeiffeeout the 10tb September, tato, and at the
perfect 100 per enut, but out towens
by, U. W. Faerew, Of Cbatliam, wbo
wes trained in the Briisselsliost office.
All the other eleree vtErie4 from 70 to
.99 per eent, This past exam., 1002, re-
eulted ;main io Ward malting the on-
lp perfeet 10a per eeron He certainly
fins bie woint down to a fine paha. anti
Farrow will now doubt promote as a
encompeuse for biscapabilit,y."
Sarnia Obeervert—Inetective nlerray
yesterday afternoon brougbt to Sarnia
tail from Forest, on a remand oriented
by Police Maglstrete Ames, of 'Itereet,
Jeeeph Martel, of Pott. Franktcluttgnd
witb shootiug and woundiog ea-cidef
James Johneton. of tbe Stonen Point
Indian reserve. Tbe prisoner ie only
Veat'S at age, of a wilfid disposition
ana beyonti the etrutrol of hi$ wirelike
wbo restmar the Stoney Point re-
serve, in the vicinity of Port Frank.
The shooting complained of ;eon place
on the Mai of September, in the woot1s
on ttwiceerve. Wit whether aceidentle
tle' intentionally has not yet been de-
termined. The 'boy is said to he of
weak mintl, with a passion for shoot-
ing, and that he was liable to the at
auytbing that ewe in sight when he
bas agar; in his bands. Re has been
remolded for one ween, when he will
eotne liefore Magistrate Jones, at Fors
nit, for hes:ries'. l'he wound. 4 Indian.
fromwhen's beck thirtyeeigli; pellets of
Malebo: were extracted, is more pains
Way then dangerously wountledand
is getting atone; well towards recovery
under the cote of it tlat-tor. The shote
appe in to beset been nred ;a close
lenge.
RUCK BY TRM 1LL1}
u, inson,
aged 1, vu D. flobinson, of
was street and instantly
killcd by he east bound express to.
night. Deceased.accornpanied hy two
other boys. was going home and was
watching a train on the other track
when struck by the express,
THREE CHILDREN BURNED.
Feteeboro. Oat. il. —.News has just
rettehed here of a very sad occurrence
zn eletudor township. Three children
of Mr.. and Mrs. Joseph Parkes were
bladed to death at their home while
thefparents were absent, the father at
revival meeting and the mother at- ,
tending a sick friend. The fire was4
diseovered too I de for any assietanee
too be rendered. Beeides their be-
reavetnent Mr. and Mrs. Parkes *bare
lost their home with all its contents.
Aid is now being extended by friends.
JUMPED FROM A TRAIN AND
LOST AN ARM.
Paris, Oct. 0.—Patrick Doyle, of this
town, lost bis left arm tbis evening in
trying to alight from a moving Mill
id the station here. Doyle bad been
to London and was returning on the
express, which reached here shortly
betore six o'clock. For some reason
be did not get off until the train was
nlling out when he nunped and fall-
ing backward, the train passed over
his arm between the wrist and elbow.
Ampntatiou was necessary.
JUMPED FROM A TRATIN.T.
Burk's Falls, Oct. 10.—A1ex. Ring,
of Perth, a shante-nmn, one of a gang
of sixty men. bound for the Tomer
Lumber Company's camps, near South
Rivengot off the evening express here
yesterday and boarded it again in er-
ror. Finding out bis mistake, he
jumped off the ears abont a quarter of
a mile north of here while the train
was going full speed. He was found
at midnight lying beside the track, his
collar bone broken and suffering from
severe internal injuries. He is in a
,critical condition.
Mrs, aeo. W, Haloes, of Toronto,
the tuother of oine children,, commit-
ted suicide byenttieg her,‘ threat,
David Warwick', a Red Deer, form-
erly of St, Thomas, On., was dragged
to death by a bro echo he wae attempt,
big to ride;
Tin ee hundred thousand tons of coal
have been purchased io England,Scon
land and Wales during the past few
weene for export to the Vetted Staten
Tiee 'Canadian Paeine aud arena
I may as well dispose of the teas of 'Prank Railwity Lontpaineeiniveilgreed
this ease. so as to get rid of it as much to make a reduction of one-thir4 their
regular freieht rates in Han case of fuel
as possible.
1. think, that leo case wbetener
made out of arty undue len:wine
action on the part of the defendant o
her husband 10 may way eontrolling or
affecting the free will of the deceased,
I come to the eouclusiou on the eel
-
deuce that up to the time of the MA,
ing of this trensaction he was in full
possession of his mental faculties and
mi
lonated mtbe slightest nee
y anyone 01)00 Itiot lo regard to'Ptlits
xereise o ns will,
come to the ecrueln$iou also that
this defendant wae, in a sense, treated
by the deceased as an dopted 4aogli-
ter. not a formal adoptiou, but he as-
eunwd the poeition of e parent to her,
end I accept the statement of one of
the witnesses tbat having, as he evi,
dently bad, an affection for her. that
she bad broken down her health in at,
tending upon him.
I think the deceased always intended
to give the intik of his property to the
defendant. An4 if the rota be tbat
the defendant, by reaeou of Any
fornmlity or incompleteness a the gift,
Is unable to hold that Willett she eia-MIS
or to clain anymonthly CoAllms92-
glen for the serviee$ performed, these
plaintiffs will have the eatisfaction ef
pnttiog in their pochets and tieing
motley which it was uever intended
they shank1 bate, and which if th
man bad it would have gone to oue
who he hie opinion deserved it for the vbaum4
services performed. Some people seem '
to have an extra ktudof Wong for that
kind et money, and are not willing to
recognize moral obligation to make
right on incomplete gift founded 911
constderation in eases such as this.
However, perhaps that 15 a question
1 find as a fact that on the 17th of
May the deceased made up his mind,
probahly seeing that he WAS becoming
Winn in body, and apprehending that
his end wasapproaching, as be must
have done, made up his mind to make
provision then as to the money that
was in the banlo for the defendant or
some time before. Akont April he
consulted the manager of the bank as
to the proper way at carrying otte his
intention, and told him that his inten-
tion was that the money in the bank
sbould be transferred into the names
of himself and the detendant so that
If anything happened to him, meaning
by that when death came to him, she
should get what wasleft. Subsequent -
lovas I Mut he, in order to carry out
tbat intention, directed the defendant
to go to the batik, giving bet at the
etene time ninal to deposit, sending
her to the bank to have the mimeo
transferred into his own name and
hers, in the way I haye already indi-
cated. That he was desirous of having
that accomplished without tbe neces-
sity of going to the bank, but if ems-
sary he was willing to undergo the fa-
tigue and pain probably attendant up-
on bis going there. The bank manag-
er suggested that it could be done
without him, and thereupon, on the
179h and 18th, the whole of the money
bt the bank MIS SO teansferrea; by the
indorsement of the deceased it was so
transferred that as far as the bank was
toncerued it was pledged to the de-
fendant and the deceased, or the de-
fendant onthe deceased, and tbat the
intention of What was dorie was that,
Its the deceased had told the manager.
he intended to do, that what remained
should at his deatb, without his fur.
tiler act, come into the possession of
the defendant. In saying that I am
not at all determining Hetet there was
not—that is a question I leaye open—
a transfer of the property at an earlier
date. I accept the statement of Dr.
Browning; the deceased tolatim when
he suggested to him shortly before bis
death that the strain on the defendant
was too much, and suggested that he
should get another sister, Mrs. Wil-
liams, to take care of him, and the de-
ceased told him Hint he intended that
the defendant, Mary, should have
what was left at his death, and that
be had already transferred what was
in the hank to her. I believe too, sub-
stantially, the account which Trott
gave. There is no accounting for what
men will do. Some men will go home
and tell their wives of such.- a. thing,
and some will not. Ile swears he did
not. He swears that there was an ap-
plication made to him by.a tnan named
Andrews to ask the deceased if he
could lend hina $3500 on mortgage,
that he did so, and the deceased told
him he would not lend it, he intended
to leave the money in the bank, and
intended to transfer it so that what
was left should go to Mary, and get
it put in the bank book so she could
draw it after his death. I do nbt see
any reason to disbelieve that. It
agrees with all I have believed. I do
not know any reason suggested by Mr.
Watson, except that he did not tell his
wife, why I shoulcl reject that. I do
not see any way in which, if I come
• to the conclusion that the gifb cannot
be maintained, any ground. on which I
Can base a jgdgment in favor of the
defendant on her counter-claith for
compensation. On the evidence there
was no idea at all of compensation for
any services so performed. They were
services that naturally could not be
compensated l'Ey tuoney, one of those
cases which fregnently occnr, where a
man makes an arrangement with a
iueluber of a family, ..vhich is always
subject to be changed according to the
will of the man. She frankly says she
depended on him to carry out what he
indicated he intended te (10 for her,
i took her cluEnces in that Evay., She
has no claim in law against this estate
l for that.
shall also consider, If the defend-
ant does fail to estahlish •her right, to
!he money as a.gift intervivos, wheth-
0: it c nnot beismitained as "donatio
mortis causa." 1 reserve -4 judgment
upon these points.
Certified correct.
F. 7. Die:lc:sox Peporter
Since the trial a jii416-Enent. has been
agrt:ed upon by which ;Ars, Trott re -
brought to MDutre4L
During a thuuderstorne Whicli passed
over Baden On Tuesday night light -
big stelick the barn of Mr. Geisier. In
a few minutes the building was all
ablaze. The farm ie rented. by Pry. J.
Lehmann* Air. Lelemau's father, Mr,
ebristlaeLeinuan, aged SO yearnwent
to timbal -a to let oat the male, but
perished io the MAIM "
,...,•••••071".1,114
$oreething Wrong With the Shammy.
There is a pronnineut deetttr in. Ger,
wantOwn who bnnY n little
oke on himself, says.: tbe Philadelphia
"Evening Telegr.aph." It appears that he
emploted an been rtervent who bed just.
antra fretil the sett" Startieg
out 'oite mornings he 'noticed his face
window e were either dirty, and ceiling
Bridget, be instrncted her t e. clonethemn.
before be Interned.. At the aia tbne
be told her that be woOld.etop .ond per-
ehafte a new thamola AMA an. seed it
Ileum and with thie sbe Wriato clean the
windows. After be bed .gone hia.roencla.
he found them thiekly streaked with
grease. Ile called Briaget, and the tot -
mein; colloquy took Pince:
"neulget, didn't 1 ten you to. glean the
vinnowe?"
*Wes, eor." .
fiAnd didn't 1 tell yen to."0.50 the
WANTED.
We would like to ask 'through the
nolumns of your paper, if there is
any person who has used Green's Aug-
ust Flower for the cure of Indigestion,
Dyspepsia, and Liver troubles that
has not been cared—we also mean
their results, such as sour. stomache,
fermentation of food, habitual costive-
ness, nervous dyspepsia, headaches,
tiespoildet t feeling, sleeplessness—in
fact any trouble connected with the
stornaehe or liver? This medicine has
been sold Fir many years in all civiliz-
ed countries, and we wish to corre
pond with yon and send you one of
our books free of cost. If you hever
• tried August Flower, try one bottle
first. We have never known of its
failing. If so, something more serious
is the matter with you. Ask yonr old-
est druggist. e
Sold by 0. LUTZ.
BIG FIRE AT GODERICH.
Godericb, Oct. S.—The Godesich Or-
gan Coas factory, the pioneer of the
town's industries and one of the lead-
ing factories of its kind in Canada,
was totally destroyed bylire at noon
treday. A fierce gale was blowing,
which rendered the efforts of the fire-
men quite leeffectual. Only about
$500 worth Of stock and the lumber hi
the yard were saved, and the loss will
exceed $50;000. The origin of the .fire
is said to have been a, y4)ung boy light-
ing 0 match in the fitaslung 20010 dur-
ing the noon hour. The Ore is a severe
a;Ess to tbe workmen, about 82 being
inployed at present, and the factory
working -overtime to catch up with
their 41rd.er list, In the loss are about,
00 organs, which were to have been
shipped to Liverpool, and abont 400
sobs of, hdthroOni wtiodwolltof which
good -4 the company was toe largest ex-
porter in Al,tieriCe.. The total Insur-
ance' oh the God evich Organ's ;Com -
105.'s premises Is .The
interested 1110 the 0un, ri id)
A:1.1;.:1,..%LL, 1'1100.11/X 12051NV05L01'Z1.
"nes, sen"
"Well, did you use itt"
"Sure I did, eorn
"Let me ace the chamoie." said the
doctor, and Bridget promptly brought it.
, nee for the tirst tune he leaned that
Los wife bad Wt tbe name half hour
before he din in tile morning and bad
oat home some tripe. The doctor cle-
clinea to say what happened to the
chamois skin.
little gobs at powder,
Little opeeks of paint,
Make the little Freckle.
Look as lt
Jack—It is mighty hard to be the
eon of a aelf-made millionaire. Tont—
nnhy so? Jacic—& fellow can't decide
whether to go " .o busInces an lime up
to lee father's reputation, or go into
society and live It down.—"Town Toe.
len"
In a, speech in London the other day,
Sir Henry Campbell -Bannerman told an
admirable story of the edvice gleen by
an Englishman, a Scoteltman and au
Irishman, respeetivelys to a iodic -mail
whose servant was constantly breaking
articles in the household. The English-
man, in his blunt, boned way, said to
the employer: "011, get rid, of him.---dis,
miss hire." The Scoteluneens adviee was,
"Stop the money out of Ids wages,"
"But," said. the Master, "he breaks more
than his 'wages *mount to." "Then,"
Paid the Irishinan, "raise his wages."
A good store, comes from the Davideen
Theater, in Chicago, and runs to the of-,
feet that a man. from up the State went
in to see the opera tbe other night, pull-
ing bis money from his pocket before he
reached the box-anice window. "I want
tow git a good seat," he said, loud
enough to be heard all over tit, lobby of
the Wetter, "anti I want it aght -down
the middle lane, and doe° up taw the ex-
ercises." He gat it.
A huntifig party of ladies and gentle-
men were detained by a storm at the
hut of a Virginia backwoodsntan. Din-
ner being served, there was an embar-
rassing paucity of knives. The mother,
wishing to Imprees her aristocratic
guests, called in a commardieg tone to
her young daughter, "Fetch some more
knives, Sairey; you know we've got
thousands of 'em." "Law, no, mann;
they're all tharl Thar's '134 Butch,'
and. 'Little Butch; and `Razor -Backe and
Tunty."
David Lloyd -George, a member of Par-
liament from Wales, tells a good story
on himself in connection with a Disestab-
lishment meeting in which he has been
taking part in Wales. A few days pre-
mious, it seems, there had been a Church
Defence meeting held in the same place,
at which a certain prominent dignitary
of the Establishment had spoken,- re-
ferring to whom Mr. Lloyd -George's
chairman observed: "In my opinion that
Churchman is one of the biggest liars in
North Wales, but, thank gtedness,
got a match for him here to -night!"
"Chums" tells of a certain wild beast
tamer ivho had been on had terms for
some thne with else of his neighbors,
and the other day, as the result of a vio-
lent quarrel, the latter'with a friend,
attacked the former just before he was
timed to give his performance. The
tamer, unwilling to make a scene, took
refuge in the lion's den. Judge of the
,amusement of the spectators when they
beheld the two men standing in front, of
the cage and. shouting throttgli the bars
at regular intervals: "Come out of thee
you big coward; Come out of that!"
coP*IiATORS IiEn TO nmoan-
yEr.,vs
ACCEI' TR 'ThPPtO or
CoMSSZON.
tiORGATCS CfrIWPRUNCP -WPM 11‘111A
WM$Itag!ST.
Washington, Oct. 1-4.-Tite Onera-
t.Iss hove agreed to the. appoint-
ment Ota etrottnission by 'the Presi-
ilent og the Voirted States, to whom
shell 14e relercea ail questions at
bviuo UOtween lite etrotonoies nod,
their 0;M emPloyeeswhether they
belong to a inio g net, nun tbe
tieeisiOit og the eommission orgial
be neetenterl hy the operators. The
ventatisfrion Ps to eteartiet el mut
u,.oir or • paw engineer 01*,
ceri, au einert zabaleg g'ngt'"
neer not connected with Ithe
couX Paining irCopertisur. one of *Ike
4ott5es of On Votted Stoics Coort or
tbe Eteeteva Ristriet ot Pereettelt
vauta, Aran nrominent as a Nodal,.
egist and. a Wart who ler neittve on
tIPIPatiOn lo mtnIn ,g areal selitene coal
Is Smellier with 'the physical anti
Commercial features trit the btorineSS
flee eneratore alga notice a eine( of
tiveie preen:nation that the miner
shall retura to livoric arit ROOtt Orr t
OotItrilltutIOZI is constituted, and VQ10$0
aU Ottri`tOrelAce NVItit tiOtt.^OltIO
Men, titO OOMMINAllOo tO attrigO date
*then its *ruling's Atoll be effective.,
Owl to govocu so *fon oft ofitylor-.
Picot between Om caution -4e* and
ood for everything
that runs on wheels.
Sold Everrovhere2r:
_
Made by INPEattar... orr. co.
tenor own employeee *os tet least
three nentre. Weis etattetnent 'WA*
rea4 to the rreet4ent as an net of
courtesy before being' aivea to titer
errernir
wsunesearre, °et. 14..—weeo pre -
Went **Was sliersvit *ie ideOn
bulletin thset *lee oyez -More laarta
ugcree4 to arbitration hie retorted, to
make a etatentent.
Waehlegtem, Oen Pierpont
Morgan and Robert S. Bacon, one of his
partners, arrived here over tbe Balti-
more 4n Ohio Railroad from Philadelpitia
about 10 teelont, and were driv-
en to tbe Arlington Hetet They re-
fused to see anyone, and went at once
to their rooms. It was reported that
Gorge Y. Baer, President of the Reed-
ing Railroad, was also here, having count
front Philadelphia with Mr. Morgan and
bis partner, but lie eould not be found.
Shortly after going to his room Mr.
Morgan came down stairs, and left the
betel far tbe teinporaiy Whitt. House,
where he W48 at once shown upstairs and
nee the room where tne President was,
end
it conference on the strike situation
began. Secretary Root joined the party
a few minutes later.
Seerettere Cortelyou, by authority of
those present at the White House, made
public the following authorized state-
ment e011eerning the eonferencer—Mr. 3.
P. Morgan came to Washington with Idt
partner, Mr. Bacon, at the request of
the -coal companies, who desired that as
a matter of courtesy their statement
should be shown to the President Lefore
It was made public. Haviug been laid
before the President by Mr. Morgan, it
is now given to the press
o the publio : The managers of the
different coal preperlies comprising the
anthracite coal fields wish their posi-
tion in the preeent strike to be under-
stood, and therefore make the following
statement of facts :—
There are in the anthracite regions
about 75 operating cc:lupe-lees and Arras
and 147,000 miners and workmen (of
welch 30,000 are under age), comprising
some twenty natiotalities and dialects.
Of these workmen possibly one-half be-
long to the United Mine Workers' Union,
of which Mr. John Mitchell is President;
That organizatior ,va-8 originally form-
ed in the bituminous anal region,and
three-fourths of its rnembers are miners
of bituininous coal, and bituminous coal
is sold in active competition with an-
thracite coal. The remaining workmen
in the arithracite fields either belong to
no union -whatever, or do not belong to
the mine workers' union.
MANCHESTER' CONFERENCE.
Premier Balfour Will Deliver Sev-
eral Addresses,
London, Oct. 14.—Conservative
delegates arrived yesterday at
Manchester from all parts of the
eountry to attend to -day's opening of
the conference of the National Union of
Conservative and. Constitutional Aeso-
eiations. To -day Premier Balfour ad -
Messes the conference, and speaks at a
meeting in the evening, when he will
devote his seeesh almost entirely to the
education bill. It is,, expected that the
Premier will make -a declaration of "no
-surrender," but that the Government
on the resumption of the debates on
the bill will Intimate a willingness to
Incept certain amendments, with the ob-
ject of removing the scruples of dissen-
tient Liberal -Unionists.
Despite the correspondence which has
passed between Lord Boeebery and Wm.
Black, the Liberals, with the exception
perhans of R. B. Italdttne, Will offer unit -
pd opposition to the measure. The Lib-
'eral League is disseminating literature
in which the bill is unequivocally con-
demned.
The rii.ng of Psonges.— " BUQIVS I1A1PY Tnouc ri- h
One Ruonred a
Fifty Thousand Canadian
leave decided for
Vornen
'The: " 111)P- Thou
K
arige.
onot Ranges were not good, enough—Why sboul
Dou't be imposed on by
',just as good" talk, The
construction of The "]..appy
Thought " is patented,ite
design registered, it is totally
different in every respeet tie any
other. There is none like it.
There can be none so good. If
you only knew "the time, the
trouble, the laher it 'would Save
yonhow little feel it uses, yon
would not be one Single day without QUO.
le The WM, BUCK STOVE
they be for you
• '" Utalt. .
'arse, 114strairratrallll
HEAMAN Exeter.
111111111T.
CAN BE CURED,
EDITOR'S NOTE. The McMinn
System of Treatment for the,cure of
Consumption, Pulmonary Troubles,
Catarrh, General Debility, and
nearly all the ills of life, is medicine
reduced to an exact science by the
world's foremost specialist.
By its timely use thousands of
apparently hopeless cases have been
permanently cured.
The Emulsion of Cod Liver Oil
needed by SOMQ, the Tonic by
others, the gxpeetorant by others,
the ()AIM by others still, and nu
four, or any threes or two, or any
one, may be used singly or in com.
bination, according to the needs of
the ease.
Full instructions with each set of
four free remedies illustrated here.
Our ceaders are urged to take
advantage of Dr. Slocum's geuerous
offer.
L lett 0 PV
Ci4F.5
R Ttin°A. • E
D LOG
,e tqA,
it
Incendiaries at ii.A...gston.
Kingston, Oct. 18.—(Special.) — several
10555 05 incendiarism have been experi-
enced here duting the past week. 2lt0000y
morning, in four different places, the board-
ing-house of Mrs. Anderson. SOng street.
'VMS set al)laze. The inmates escaped 01.1y
aftr great trouble, some juinping from win-
dows. Firemen subdued the names. Wed-
nesday last an attempt was made to burn
the same place, hut the tire was discovered
in Lime- Thid rnorniug..on- the front door
was found this sliD:---"Checher-board ;
rour move now; evon um" Revenge is 0011..
'idered the ifictive. On Sunday Charles
Ntoen's barn was hred.. by rasealS and al-
most destroyed, A.., :11i CI -111A 101)511150
tattle to burn his dwolling,
' The students of Quemn's have doelded to
eet a brass inemorral ,ablet to the themori
ef the, fete I'vlucipal Grant in nonYanatio'n
L.L.= Jur.a
The honor of thus effsctively arresting
the proTess of this fatal malady rests
with the wonderfal system of treatment
which has been reduced to an exact
eclinice for the cure of Consumption and
for the cure of Catarrh and other ,n_revaient
conditions ..vhich pave the way for Con-
sumetion—tbat ,successful method evolved
by America's greatest scientific physician,
Dr. T. A. • Slocum, whose great liberality,
through his Free Trial Treatment, sent
broadcast throughout this based land, has
contributed Most to the rout of the most
potent agency in the clestruction of human
life in this hemisphere.
Iiis Free System of. Treatment -has
arrested the hand of death in the cases of
thousands of consumptives and has pre-
vented the disease in countleis instances.
The Slohurn Treatment consists of four
distinct remedies for the cure Cif Con-,
sumption, Weak Lungs, Bronchitis,
Catarrh, and all pulmonary and west-
ing diseases, and is based N'on principles
essential to the correction or function, the
rebuilding of the tissues, the overthrow of
lishment of health in all the departments
of the human body.
The four preparations embody all the
necessary elements of a complete treat- '1
ment for Consumption—its cure and pre-
ventiort—ap well as for most of the chronic
and wasting ills of life. Apparently hope-
less cases are cured by their timely use.
These free remedies comprise the gyeat
curative forces discovered by the emi-
nent physician, Dr. Slocune they represent
the acme of the _pharmacist's skill and
-with them will be round explicit directions
for their use in any case.
'You are invited to test what this system
will do for. you, if you are sick-, by writing
for a FREE TRIAL TREATMENT and
the 'Four Free Prepare tions will be for-
warded you at once with complete direc-
tions Inc use. -
Simply write to the T. A. Slocum Chemi-
cal Company, Limited, 170 King Street
West, Toronto, givine, post officeand
express address, and -the free medicine
(the Slocum Cure) will he.promptly sent.
-Persons in Canada seeing Slocum's free
offer in American papers will please send
parasthc animal organisms ancl the estab- for samples to Toronto.
:,1Mi:41Tgiik:;&*(.5;4.K.IMYSvit
, Viltfi40
,THOUsANDO of men are prisoners of disease as securely
A as though they were confined behind the bars. Many
ha -ye forged their own, chains by the vices of early youth,
,exposttre to contagioug disease, or the excesses of manhood.
They feel they are not the men they ought to be or used to be.
The vim, vigor, and vitality of manhood are lacking. Are
you nervous p.nd despondeut? tired in the morning'? have you
to force yodiself through the day's work ? have you little am-
bition and energy? are you irritable and excitable? eyes
sunken, depressed and haggard looking/ memory poor and
brain fagged? have you weak back 'with dreams and losses at
night? depoeit 111 Urine? weak sezually ?—.yea have •
Plervolls Debility and Seintnal Weakness.
— Our NEW RiEtTetOto THISATB-HTZPIT is gitarauteee to
cora or Ma Pay. 25 yeave fin Detroit. Mutat
Becoority. Ileware of quacks --Consult old established,
.1 reliable physicians. g."ottaultation Ft-eo. Books
Free. Write for Question tilank for Home Treatment.
Wee
sesentete
DETROM
11