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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL. INDAY, SEPTEMRER 15, 1901, THOUSANDS OF THE CALL'S ATLASES ARE NOW ON THE WAY FROM CHICAGO One Consignment of the Valuable Books Left the Windy City on Thursday Last and -Anc:her Will Be Sent Across the Continent on Wednesday LR Form No. 1553 THE WESTERN Ul of Next Week---These Atlases Will Be So on Ready for Distribution —— INCORPORATED whi e been assented to by (hersnderof (ke on for comparison. and the Company will not Lo'd itsel o L RS o ehere Ll C13/im 3 B0t presseiod & wRNIng witbi A2ey AL ION TELEGRAPH COMPANY. ABLE SERVICE TO ALL THE WORLD. following message. rrors ordelayy E.§ b rquest of the sender. under the conditions named vuove. g dcont and Gereral Manager, ——— e 571 Ch, Iv. Wr. 13 co Chicago, Il11s., Sep. 11, 1901. W. J. Martin, RECEIVED at San Francisco, Cal. llect. 8:50 p.m. Business Manager S. F. Call, San Francisco. First car Atlases via Burlington-to-morrow, second car via North- western following Wednesday. Geo. F. Cram. r = - — THE ABOVE TELEGRAM BRINGS THE CHEERING NEWS TO MANY OF THE CALL'S SUBSCRIBERS WHO | HAVE BEEN PATIENTLY AWAITING THE ARRIVAL OF THE ATLASES THAT TWO CARLOADS WILL YEACH THE CITY WITHIN A SHORT TIME. s - - — - — i 20 e e e e o YOUNG CAOESUS MEETS DISASTER - Templeton Crocker Has| Both His Legs Frac- tured. ocker, son of the late while out for a drive about 3 o'clock. in was accidentally roundabout in which sustained a fracture of re knees. The accident, road to the Crystal ioned by the horse telegraph pole ctanding at the side of the d. H governe: Mrs. Kline, who riding in the roundabout with thrown out, but fortunately aped with a few bruises. Young Crocker vas im: emoved to the home of William H. Crocker, at Bur- whither 2 doctor was summoned two fractured Mmbs set. The in- ides very serious, are nd it will be several months be- oung man will be able to return to scheol. Templeton Crocker is but 17 years of age. i er of Mrs. Burton H b and of Miss Jennie ker, together with whom he i3 heir to the estate of the late Charles F. Crock- er. The young man was to have started Monday for the East, where he has been tending school preparatory to entering ale two years hence. Women’s Auxiliary Headquarters. The California branch of the Women's siliary of the Episcopal convention established headquarters at 1609 Sut- T The foreign missionary ex- be held at the same place. —————— These maxims Jowett once wrote out “for statesmen and_gthers”: ‘Never £ quarrel. Never fear, Never spare. Never man was hurled against a ! tell.” [ [ is A Hard Wood Folding Bed $8.50 Golden oak finish on elm. Double or three-quarter size. The wire fabric in the mattress of double texture and is sup- ported by 14 stout steel springs. Sterling price, $8.50 We’re showing the pret- tiest line of weathered oak novelties in the town. Quaint hall tables and settees, oddly carved rock- ers. Rush bottomed chairs and settles, Sterling prices prevail. Made of oak, height, 36 inches wide. shelves. in the driven through the 18 inches i Tw notched end Plate Racks $1.75 A touch of quaintness making—wooden pegs n 0 s of shelves to hold it together. The goodne: filling. choose silk coverings are mnot-all. Reception Chair $9.72 Sterling Upholstery bandsome polished frames and There is ss below the covers where you can’t see it—good springs and plenty of them, honest workmanship, hair They are coverad in new all silk tapestrics and plenty of patterns to from—no trouble on that score. arrived piness. double Our montily carload of Richmond Ranges last Thursday. A RICHMOND for all around satisfaction and family hap- Two new patterns—ubig 900 pounders for successful hotel keeping. Probably you have read the Bradley & Hubbard adver- tisements in the magazines? B & H lamps usually cost a little more than others—worth more, too—like the best of anything. We’'re clearing out the odd ones this week at prices that put the ‘‘trashy’ lamps around town to shame. A “Wedgewood’’ lamp that was $0.00...cc.eeuuu. for $5,75 A copper and ruby lamp that was $8.50.........for $5.50 And a score of others at just such reductions. Umbrella Racks, $1.49 Rainy weather soon. An umbrella rack may save your hall carpet an ugly stain. ' Made of oak, brass drip-pan. $1.45 (Nc'd be glad o have vou You can malke payments open an account with us fo suit your convenience i | i { | i MAIL REAGHES LONDON ON TIME New Zealand Letters Get to England Within the Limit. The Southern Pacific Company received the following telegram yesterday which tells the story of the successful race against time made by John D. Spreckels in the transmission of the mails from New Zealand to London: NEW YORK, Sept. 14. Southern Pacific Company, San Francisco, Cal.: Cunard line reports that Campania passed | Brow Head at 1 o'clock yesterday aftérroon and that her mall would reach London at 4 o'clock this (Saturday) morning. The race with the Australia mail is a success and we know that the route between Australia and London s via San Francisco, Chicago and New York. The Ventura, which was due here on the 2d of this month, arrived on the day she was expected, but too late to connect with the Eastern overland which left that evening. The Australian mails, which she | carried, were consequently delayed until 10 o'clock the following morning. Mr. Spreckels was determined that, notwith- standin; rive in London on the day they were due, September 14. Telegrams were sent or- dering special trains at Omaha and Chi- cago, and the race across the continent against time commenced. The object was | to connect with the Campania, which was | to sail from New York at noon, Septem- er 7. At Omaha the San Francisco train was met by a special, to which the mall was transferred. This special got into Chicago at 10 o'clock on the morning of the. 6th, an hour and a half behind the regular fast mail, which left that city at 8:30. Another special was put on, and by an almost unprecedented burst of speed it succeeded in overtaking the regular fast mail at Toledo, when the mails were again transferred to the regular train of the Lake Shore line. The Lake Shore people delivered the mail to the New York postal authorities, who in turn conveved it to the Campania at 10 a. m., two hours before the sailing time of that vesgel. The Campania made the passage across the Atlantic in record time, and on the morning of September 14 the New Zealand letters were in the London postoffice and Mr. Spreckels had made his promise good. Had Mr. Spreckels failed to deliver the New Zealand mails_he would have suf- fered no penalty. No contract has yet been entered into between the Oceanic Steamship Company and the New Zea- land Government, and there is no fine for failing to get the mails to their destina- tion within any specified time. Mr. Spreckels had simply said that under any circumstances the thing would be done, and consequently he spared no expense in seeing that it was done. McKENZIE SAYS HE WAS WRONGLY ADVISED Fink Makes an Additional Statement Showing That a Great Conspir- acy Existed. The depositions of Alfred Fink, Samuel Knight and Dudley Dubose were signed by the witnesses yesterday before United States Court Commissioner Heacock in thhe matter of the rehearing of the con- tempt charges against Dubose. E. S. Pills- bury, on behalf of the United States Cir- cuit Court of Appeals, obtained an_ ad- ditional stagement from the witness Fink, who said day on which the writs were served, Messrs. Metson, Johnson, Geary, Dubose, Hubbard and himself had a talk with Mec- Kenzie about the matter and on that oc- casion McKenzie declared that his coun- sel had advised him not to obey the writs of supersedeas, as they were void. That was his personal opinion, he sald. Mec- Kenzie did not say who his counsel were, The depositions were then_ signed and mailed to the United States Circuit Court of Appeals at Seattle. —_—— YOUNG MEDICAL MAN FAILS TO PAY ALIMONY Dr, Frank Robinson Ordered to Ap- pear Before Judge Kerrigan and Show Cause. Dr. Frank B. Robinson, a young physi- clan, has been ordered to appear before Judge Kerrigan, September 20, 1901, to show cause for' his failure to pay his divorced wife $50 per month alimony. The couple were divorced May 22, 1900, and when the decree was granted, Dr. Robinson, who was the defendant in the divorce proceedings, was ordered to pay $50 per month for the support of his wife and the two minor children. In the complaint, which was filed sev- eral days ago by Mrs. Robinson, it is stated that the pbysician has failed to contribute the full court, and that for the last five months he has not given her any portion of the monthly stipend. NEW-BORN INFANT IS FOULLY MURDERED Baby Is Strangled With a Cord and the Body Thrown Away. Michele Fatini and Joseph Masoni, who live on Telegraph Hill, were playing yes- terday morning on the old Spreckels re- finery lot at the intersection of Sansome and Union streets when they found the body of an infant lying on the ground wrapped in old rags. The remains were taken to the Morgue. An autopsy was performed by Dr. Luigi D, Bacigalupi and disclosed that the body was that of a newly-born female infant, that imme- diately after birth had been allowed to bleed to death, and in.order to make cer- tain that it should not’live some one had deliberately strangled it with a cloth cord. The body of the murdered babe had evi- dently been lying in the lot for three or four days. Girl this delay, the letters should ar- | at on September 14, 1900, the | sum ordered by the ! SILES ENLIVEN ~ REALTY MARKET Business Offerings Have Preference With the Buyers. e Records Indicate That All Sections Command Attention. SR oA HE sales of realty the past week include the transfer by Harvey Dana to Daniel Roth for $32,500 o a lot 27:6 by 91:8 feet on the south | line of California street, 137:6 feet west from Front street, with a two-story and basement brick buflding, through the agency of Bovee, Toy & Sonntag. The same brokers have sold the northwest corner of Washington and Leavenworth streets, 137:6 by 70 feet, to Walter Dan- | ford for $16,000. The Von Rhein Estate Company has sold for Willlam and Jeanette Wolf to Jo- seph Hirschfeld Property an the north line of Ellis street, 164:7% feet east from Octa- via, 27:6 by 137:6 feet, for $16,000. Easton, Eldridge & Co. have sold the following properties: Sfx flats, from 419 to 425 Harrlet street, from Hannah Barry to Jorge de Urloste, for $3050; twvo flats and lot, 25x80 feet, at 1110 and 1112 Harrison street, near Seventh, from R. B. Me- Collough to J. Crowley, for $4760; lot, 25x80 | feet, and two houses at 3422 and 3424 Nineteenth street, near Mission, from Jane Kedfen to A. | H. Qiatman, for $300; a lot. S0x100 feet, with four cottages, at 1327, 1329, 1331 and 1333 Twenty- | fifth ‘street, from Mrs. Margaret Steinbach to H. A. Curtis, for $000; lot, 2x100 feet, on the couth line of Fourteenth street, 75 feet east of | Folsom, from Mrs. Julla L. Jones to H. A. Curtls, for $1750; a cottage and lot, 25x100 feet, {on the east line of Hampshire 'street, near | Twentieth, from Henry Deveney to John Dueb- ; the house and lot, 25x114 feet, at cond street. {rom Dwight Ed- wards to J. L. Baar, for §2500; lot and cottage at 2763 Octavia_ street, near Union, 3IX72 feet, from Edward Delenae to Wililam Hadfelder, for §2450. Near the Park. Sales have been made by Sol Getz ‘& Bro. as follows: Lot, 25x120, on east line of Tenth avenue, 150 feet south of L street, with one and a half story cottage of five rooms, for $3000, to Mr. | Connelly; 2x100, on south line of M street, §2 west of Eleventh avenue, for $100; 25l west line of Ninth avenue, 100 feet'south of N street, for $460; 25x120, on west line of Tenth avenue, 250 feet north of L street, for $700; 2x 127:6, cottage and lot, on the west line of Four- teenth avenue, between Clement and California streets, from Mrs. Howe to Mr. Carvill; 50x100, on south line of Montana street, 215 feet west of Plymouth avenue, for §20; 25x120, on south line of Twenty-first avenue, 235 feet north of K street, for §350; 57:6x100, on southwest corner of street and Forty-third avenue, for §50; 50x 120, on west line of Forty-third avenue, 150 feet north of K street, for $00. A demand_for houses and lots In the Sunset and Richmond districts is report- ed by Sol Getz & Bro. Saies that have been placed upon record the last week include the following: | , Jagob Stern and others to Owen W. Brennan, for $36,000, 23:33x80 feet, on the east line of | Stockton street, 47:2 feet north from Post; Ad- | dison Lambeth to Gustave Harschall, for | $24.450, ‘morth cormer of Sixth and Clementina | streets, 8x80 feet; estate of Egbert Judson und | the San Francisco Chemical Works, for §I | 000, 500x35x43x96 febt, on the west line of V i lencla street, 65 feet north from Fifteenth, also 130 feet on the morth lide of Fifteenth street, east from Guerrero, with property in other , on t N o | counties; James McDonald to the Archbishop of | San Francisco, for $16,500, southeast corner of | Efghteenth and Howard streets, 180x122:6: J. H. Dunham to the Mercantile Library Associatios for $10.000, 60x137:6 feet, on the eouth line of Greenwich street, 137:6 feet west from Kearny, Sale by Referees. G. H. Umbsen & Co. will auction on Monday, September 23, properties of the heirs of Matthew Crooks, at 14 Montgom- ery street. The list to be offered includes the following: Adjoining properties on the north corner of Third and Jessie streets, southeast line of Stevenson street, 57:6 feet northeast from Third and 117:6 feet northeast from Mission; Nos. $10, 912 and 914 Kearny street, east line, nortn from Jackson street, with additional frontage on Montgomery avenue; lot and improvements at 915, 917, 919 and 921 Dupont street, west line, between Washington and Jackson streets; lot 64:0x137:6 and brick bullding at $32 and 34 ‘Washington street, north line, between Dupont and Stockton streets, and portions of Potrero blocks 197, 208 and 203, Easton, Eldridge & Co. report offers at their auction sale last Tuesday as fol- lows: Lot 45x€5, on the north line of Twenty-third street, 77:6 feet west from Folsom, with im- provements, Nos. 3116, 3118, 3120 and 3122, § lot 25x101:6 and 9-roofn hoiise, at 5505 Twent second street, 55 feet west from Noe, B e s 2T ) BiG INGURANGE DEAL EFFEGTED Pacific Mutual Sells Its Industrial Business to the Metropolitan Life of New York. Almost a Million Dollars In- volved in the Transaction. The Largest Amount of Money Ever Paid for Industrial Business. PR O Bl The largest transactlon by far that has ever occurred in local Insurance circles has just been consummated by which the Pacific Mutual Life Insurance Company of California transfers its industrial busi- ness to the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company of New York. The magnitude of the transaction can scarcely be real- ized by those not familiar with this branch of insurance. Industrial or week- Iy payment insurance is something new to this State and the Pacific Mutual has been the only company up to this time that has ever engaged in the busiress on this coast. Some six years ago the management of the company, believing that this form of life insurance was needed in California and that the business could be success- fully prosecuted, added this department to its regular life and accldent business and the correctness of that belief is at- tested by the result of its six years' busi- ness_in that line, as by this transaction the Pacitic Mutual adds almost a million | dollars to its assets for the protection of its policy-holders, the largest sum of money ever paid for business of this | character. Its industrial business has always been profitable, but with the advent of the Metropolitan, the largest industrial com- pany in the United States, competition would have been very keen, and the man- agement of the Pacific Mutual, knowing its industrial policy holders would be fully protected by the policies of the Metropoli- tan, thought it wise to realize a handsome profit by transferring this business and devoting its entire attention to its life and accident departments. The Pacific Mutual has been engaged in business over thirty years, and is now do- {ing a larger business than ever before in its history, and with the money realized from this sale has been advanced into the foremost rank of life insurance companies of the United States, its percentage of surplus to policy holders now being larger than that of any other company doing business on this coast. The holders of regular policles in_the company have been fieauy benefited by this transaction, and the industrial policy holders being transferred to the Metro- politan, noted for its liberal and broad gealing, will undoubtedly be well cared or. 1 $135,000 to $175,000. Los Angeles is also to CONT BLOOD The blood poison sufferer who ADVERTISEMENTS. LN POISON bases his hopes of a cure upon mercury and potash is doomed to disappointment. These minerals may dry up the sores and eruptions, and perhaps for 4 Mercury and Potash, holding out false hopes of a cure, lead the unfortunate victim into a mire of darKest despair and doubt. 2 2 o months no external signs of the disease are seen, but just as sure as you live, you will experience again the. horrible effects of the original poison and the added torture of Mercurial Rheuma- tism, ruined digestion and most offensive ulcers and sores. The use of these minerals diverts the poison from the natural channels and forces it back into the blgod and system, where it reys upon the more vital parts, and heart disease, quick consumption or some other equally atal disease ends the patient’s sufferings. Mercury and potash are given to combat and de- stroy the deadly virus of Contagious Blood Poison, but they never have nor never will accom- plish any such result. these drugs is only temporary short-lived. No wonder, then, the blood poison victim grows despondent ter tak- and abandons hope when, ing mercury and potash long with a mass of pustular sores ‘The advan- tage gained by a lorz course of regularly, and having followed to the letter his physician’s instruc- tions, he sees the old disease return- ing,bringing many newandstrange symptoms, and, in spite of medical skill and in defiance of all human efforts, the body is soon covered copper-colored spots. The mem- branes of the mouth, tongue and throat thicken and ulcerate, glands inflame and throb with pain, hair and eyebrows fall out, sight fails, and it seems not an organ, tissue or fibre of the body escapes the ravages of thig terrible poison. | ing failed to arrest the disease, the pitiable sufferer feels that his choice lies between a life of the most intense mental and vhysical suffering or self-destruction. But you can be cured quickly and permanently of Contagious Blood Poison by the use of S. S.S. It antidotes and destroys this peculiar virus, and no other known medicine does, and we confidently assert and believe that S. S. S. is the only true cure for this vile disease, this monster plague. It is strictly and wholly a vegetable remedy, and we offer $1,000.00 for proof to the contrary. No bad effects follow its use. and restores it to its original purity and strength, and not only removes all traces of the i disease, but destroys the effects of the mercury and potash ’ as well. Profit by the experience of thousands who have been restored to health and happiness through the timely useof S. S. S., and do not be duped and doped by so-called specialists and others who have nothing to offer you but Don’t despair of a cure because other methods have failed. S.S. S will net you, and the balance of your days may be the best and happiest you have ever known or dared hope for. Write our physicians all about your case, describing as accurately as possible your present condition, symptoms, etc., and they will cheerfully advise and help you to get well without any cost to you whatever. Our Home Treatment Book on Contagious Blood Poison gives much information about the We will be glad to mail you a copy if you desire it. THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., Atlanta, Ga. | disease that we are sure will interest you. and and and mercury and potash, put up attractive form than that It cleanses the blood of this prescribed by your home ; BRI — - Mineral remedies hav- ison in a different and perhaps more gllgsician. isappoint Nos, 3364, 3365 and 3370 Ninteenth street, 122:6 feet east from Misslon, with three-story im- provements, $500; threé building lots on_the | north line of Chéstnut street feet west | from Van Ness avenue, :6 feet each, $500, $§25 and $900; lot 25x100 feet and 4-room cottage with basement on the east line of Hampshire street, 219 fect south from Twentieth | street, $1500; southwest corner of Golden Gate avenue and Baker street, with street work | done, 37:6 on Baker by 9:10% on Golden Gate | avenue 320. Club of Axchitects. An _architectural club, composed of | draughtsmen in the offices of San Fran- | isco architects, is proposed. Among | those who will be members are August | G. Headman, George Wagner, Fred Le- | ! benbaum, 7Tobey Learwall, E. Hilder- brandt, William Betts, Fred Reihardt, T. A. Farnkopf, M. D. Schmidlin, Alfred and Eimer Krafft, A. K. Johnson, A. L. J son, J. A. von Ahnden, A. La Franchi, B. E. Gottschalk, E. B. Scott, C. R. Ward, E. A. Schulacher and H. G. Corwin. The first meeting will ‘be held at the Builders’ Exchange assembly hall. Plans submitted for the new County Jail at Los_Angeles vary the cost from erect a_new school building in the Sixth Ward, to cost about $22.000. Proposals for the construction of a building at Point Reyes for the Weather Bureau ‘will be opened next week in| Washinston. The Starr King building on Geary street will be more extensively improved than was at first proposed. The height will be seven storles. Bovee, Toy & Sonntag are the agents. The Sunset district members of Cooper's Congregational Church are grading a lot on the east line of Ninth avenue, near L street, and a church structure will be erected at that place. Samuel Halladay has borrowed $33,000 from the Hibernia Savings and Loan So- clety upon the property 137:8x137:6 on the north line of Clay street, 137:6 feet west from Gough. and the southeast corner of Clay and Octavia streets. The residence to be erected for Dr. E. P: Hoyle on the north line of Jackson street, east from First avenue, will cost about $15,000. A. Soher and S. Rademaker will expend $22,000 for two buildings to be placed on the scuth line of McAllister street. A. Goodman will huild elght flats on Mpyrtle avenue, west from Van Ness ave- nue, the estimated cost of which is $13,000. Great Bank Building. Many fine buildings are going up in New York. Real estate is rising and eligible residence sites, where elegant homes might be placed, are growing scarce. A 16-story building will soon be placed on the northwest corner of Union square and Sixteenth street for a home for the Bank of the Metropolis. This structute wiil cost $400.000. The New York Herald says concerning it: Interests connected with the erection of the new building declare that it will surpass any other structure in and about Union Square. The plans call for a fine modern office building, to be bullt of limestone, brick and terra cotta. All the ficors will be designed for first-class offices, with the excention of the ground floor, which’ will be occupied by the Bank of the Metropolis. This site, with a frontage of 32 tending back 10 feet on Sixteenth street, Is one of the best known in the city. Here Bren- tano's store was long situated. It has recently removed to mew quarters. On August 15 the work of tearing down the old building was be- gun and now only a rapldly diminishing plie of bricks and dried mortar remains. Work of erecting the new building will be commenced as soon as is practicable. Last February the site was bought from Austen G. Fox and Re. becea Fox by the Central Realty Bond and Trust Company for the sum of $250.000. James Stillman, president of the National City Bank, is, together with other interests of the Standard Oi1l Company, interested in the Central Realty Bond and Trust Company. Some of these ger. tlemen are also interested in the Bank of the Metropolis. It was learned on August 16 that the Brentano site had been quietly reconveyed to the Bank of the Metropolis, which im- mediately announced its intention to erect & buillding as has been specified. Theodore Rog- i feet and & Inches on Union Square, and ex- | ers Is president of the Bank of the Metropolis, which is & State institution, With a capital of There is one thing a woman will keep to herself, and that is her age. » g CALL ATLAS IS ELEST GFFERED ON THE COAST The CALL Premium Atlas is the very best Atlas offered newspaper readers. We invite comparison with any other Atlas ‘now offered on this coast. This fine Atlas is offered to CALL readers at the ex- tremely low price of $1.50. All new six months sub- scribers to The CALL are enti- tled to the Atlas at the pre- mium rate of $1.50. C o Tivoli Seats to Be Exchanged. Persons holding seats for the Tivoll matinee performance of Saturday, Sep- tember 14, which performance ‘was not iven on account of the death of Presi- §ent McKiniey. can exchange the same for seats for any performance during 'he coming week. “Faust” and ‘“‘Carmen” will be the same alternating bilis. ““Faust” will be played on Monday, Wed- nesday, Friday and Saturday evenings and “Carmen’ on the other nights and at the Saturday matinee. The management wishes to disappoint no one who has pur- chased seats, and the above arrangement Bolas. good il Tuseday: &vantiy, Septem- ber 17. ACCUSED TEACHER SAYS MARK IS PREJUDICED | Miss McKinney’s At{orney Protests Against School Director Acting as Investigator. The Board of Education met behind clesed doors yesterday for the purpose of beginning the preliminary investiga- tion into the charges preferred by Albert Lyser, principal of the John Swett school agalnst Miss M. McKinney, one of his assistants. Attorney Stephen Costellc ¥ appeared for Miss McKinney, and pro- tested against Director* Mark holding a position on the court of inquiry on the ground that he had pre-judged the case. Costello asserted that Mark had prac- tically condemned his client beforehand, | and was therefore ineligible to act. The | board refused to entertain Costello’s pro- | test and ruled that Mark could act as | one of the investigators. Costello there- upon stated that he would sue out a writ | of prohibition to prevent Mark from act- ing. The trial of the case of Miss Mc- Kinney was set for next Friday. The board held an oral examination for applicants for teachers’ positions. About 150 would-be pedagogues were put thro a test intended to show their ablility teach in order that they may be assigned to the eligible list of fifty, which is to be formed by the board. ————— Suits for Divorce Filed. Three suits for divorce on the ground of desertion were filed in the County Clerk's office yesterday, as follows: Paul- ine Soss against Christian Soss, Helen A. Hankins against S. J. Hankins and D. Howard Foote against Florence L. Foote. pad g [Men Exclusively " DR. SSUMING THAT THE FUNCTIONS to this prostatic disorder are referable to that patlents suffering from this disease ness." s Neurasthenia or exhausted nerve forc: the damage always prove successful. \ stagnation of the blood follr quality and guantity of nouri organs to receive fresh nutrition. disease. home treatment, desired. understood it should be apparent that when damaged by either contracted dis- order or dissipation that disordered function must result. The first symptoms pointing invariably followed, sooner or later, with all of those symptoms known as “Weak- The most common form of damage to the gland is congestion of more or less severity, which finally becomes localized as Prostatic Catarrh, and If this catarrh once becomes chronic then various mervous symptoms ariss which are known to physicians from this so-called weakness are healthy and robust men in every other respect—men who have possibly been treated by tonics. electricity, etc., for a weakness which, (f the above has been made clear, will be understood mever to have existed. For the past few years we have been calling the attention of the medical frofession and others to the fact that the above well defined symptoms were not weaknesses.. but results of inflammation. and that drugs could not cure. but procedures direc It s no longer a theory, but a fact, and the adoption of the Talcott Prostatic Dilator as a necessity in the treatment of these troubles 1s proof of our assertions. Colored chart of the organs sent free on aj tion. It explains why, if 3 man has been treated for a weakness, he has not been Varicocele Should Be Cured. Varicocele is am eniarg=ment of the most vital normal condition their function Is to earry off Owing to the breaking down of by the paralysis of the muscular coat of the veins, The vital nerves, ment, atrophy Is the result. per cent of the male population are afflicted with varicocel We guarantee to cure varicocele In one without the use of knlife, 2000 cases without a single faflure or unpleasant result. and the fullest investigation of our methods and can refer 997 Market St., Entire Upper Floor, Cor. Sixth Street a § | 5 | 5 | § i TALCOTT & CO. OF THE PROSTATE GLAND ARE the reproductive system. It is first noticed arc embarrassed by prematureness. This is The greater number of patients suffering ted toward repairing pplica- cured. blood vessels in man. I waste material, ety thus enabiing the e valves, caused jhey become dilated and local béing deprived of their proper Sl‘x(l:«llcl prove that 25 e in some st caustic or ligature. Wé have cured over We fnvite correspondence to cured patients if m%tmm SO0 VIO QUOROIDHO QTR0 SEOIOHONIH0H m&fim