Daily British Whig (1850), 19 Feb 1910, p. 13

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Gains 30 Poands In 30 Days Remarkable Result of the New Flewh- Builder Protone, In Many Cases of Run-Downs Men and Women, Prove It Vouksel! By Sending Coupon Below For A Free 50c Package. "By George. | never saw any like the effects of that new treaimen Protoue, for the buliding up of weight and lost nerve jor It acted more like a miracle hag medicine sald a well known gent an yesterday in speaking the revointion that had taken place in bis condition. I be- gan io toink that there was nothing on earth that could make me fat i tried tonics, heavy eating. diets, milk, and almost every- thing else eculd think of, hut digestives beer, you Any Man or Woman Whe Is Thin Can Recover Normal Weight By The Remarkable New Treatmest- ment, Protone. without result I had been thin for years, and began to think it was nat- ural for me to be that way Finally 1 read abbut the remarkable successes brought about by the use of Protone, sa 1 decided to try it myself Well, when | look at myself in the mirror now, I think it is somebody else i have put on just 30 pounds during the last month and never felt stronger or mere 'nervy' in my iife." FREE PROTONE COUPON. It will cost you nothing to prove the remarkable effects of 1nis treatment. The Protone Company will send to anyone a free 0c package of Protone if they will fill out this coupon and enclose 10¢ In stamps or silver to help cover postage and packing, and as evidence of good faith with full instructions to prove that it does the work. They will sige wend full in- strugtions and their book un "Why You Are Thin" free of charge, giv. ing' tacts which will probably as- tanish you if you want te put on mere flesh fill out the following coupon to-day Free 60c packages can only be had by writing direct to Detroit. The Protone Co, 2416 Protone Bldg. Detroit, Mich. NUE. . iv cas ny chinsiessiss LOGICAL ECZEMA CURE ENDOR ED BY PHYSICIANS 1 fl-- Dr. R.A. Folkerts, of Duluth, Minn., tells of his success ig treating patients with D.D.D. Preseription : - "There was a man hers suffering fram eczema for the last fourteen years, and 1 applied the D.D.D. treat ment. 1 also applied it to a man of West Duluth, Minn., who has been suf- fering with Fezema in his feet, and the second treatment in both cases cleared the skin almost absolutely. The first: appliention is 'a balm, and its soothing effect is ond expres- sion. [I shall never be without it, and shall use it among my patients alto gother." : No matter how terribly vou suffer from eczema, salt rheum, ringworm, ete, vou will feel instantly soothed and the itch allayéd at once when a few drops of this compound of oil of wintergreen, thymol, glycerine, eto,, 1# applied. The cures all seem to be per manent, . For free trial bottle of D.D.D. Pre scription write to the D.D.D. Labora: tory, Department K.W., 23 Jordan St., Toronto. For sale by all druggists. All Hands Point to Home , more restriotions put on the coming i SWALLOWED IN CITY HOW EASY IT IS TO ESCAPE DE- TECTION. | Cohenede Janon Episode--Though Hunted by Best Detectives, They Were Lost for Two Weeks--Dr, Cook a Notable Example--Not so Easy in Europe. Rochester Democrat and Chronicle Against the argument that the world is sinall. can be brought shattering effect the often demonstra ted truth that it disap- ! pear. Disappear doesn't mean to,.go to the wilds of Africa or hide on some de wert isle. There .are labyrinths in the great cities foctually the person who seeks to es cape detection. i | - the experience Roberta De Japon, from Philadelphia Frederick Coben, stance of the fact. is easy to with : is an excellent. in- vigilance of all the Sheuock men of bali « dozen cities. If 'this pair could escape detection, !h jtels, » Pe anyone | White that he chanced to show him- it would seem that - almost with a need for dropping from, view | could attain the desired object. i Miss Janon is the granddaughter of {facing swliences of thousands, gave Robert Buist, a millonaire seed mer- chant. With her grandfather she after her mother died, I'he couple lived in a suite, their meals were served in their room, | i i made people they had their own waiter, In some manner he managed to get a big influence over the girl, this smooth-tongitéd Frederick Cohen, an influence the more surprising since he was almost three times her age Miss De Janon was well-known by sight to those hotel, and the instant that she dis appeared in compény with Cohen, af- ter an exchange of notes that showed the pair had been contemplating the step for some time, the police flooded the country with their photographs. Fromsthe oddly mixed appearance of the pair, it should have been an easy matter to run them down. The disparity of their ages marked them out as something peculiar. More over the distinguished appearance of the girl as contrasted to the undoubt- edly plebean antecedents of the man, should undoubtedly have served to ex- cite suspicion to them wherever they might go. . To make the situation still more grotesque, the little heiress, she is only 'sixteen years old, insisted on taking with them her little fox terrier, "Tooisie." Yet in spite of all these marks of identification, the couple were able to escape. Lhe police for two weeks. a day, } 3 must report the faci to the police. i { Only visitors, staying as guests, are ; = timmune from the regulation on re : ' i porting. Every person who pays for 4 » 4 with | that will swallow up ef- | of the heiress, Miss [graphs of him there were in existence. who ran' away | the wailer, ' turn to the civilized world, he j everywhere the prey of the { shooter. The pair fell into the hands of the! In 1 i police in Chicago a few weeks ago, af- {him sie by srde with the 'ter having, for two weeks, escaped the | the United States he Holmes | With a garland of flowers over "his { had lived | ae at the Bellevue-Stratford, Philadelphia, | to drop out of the world's sight for and as | {hy was who frequented the | THE DAILY 'evem if they only stay for isneiter must. have his name register ed. Suck a rule in the United States would have led to the detection of 'Miss De Jamon amd Cohen much quicker, for they avoided the hotels for the double reason that they knew they would be increasing the likelibood of being caught, and also | because their money would not pér- mit them to pay the heavy bills. Dr. Cook, branded by the scien. tists of Denmark with being a faker, | furnishes another remarkable case of {being able to disappear. | It is hard to think of a face that 'is any better known than that of the Brooklyn doctor. . When he announced his discovery of the North Pole, newspapers made a wild scurry to get what photo- When he made his sensational' re was snap- Denmark they photographed king, in was pictured i smoulders, he was Jhotographed ain in sutomobiles, and every: iseli no matter how briefly. | Moreover, Dr, (ook lectured and the world a chance to get 4 most ex- {eellemt ides of what he looked like. Yet in spite of oll this, he was able months, and just at a time when { the imputation--of faking put upon i by the scientists: of Copanhagen most anxious to se { him him. Join D. Rockefeller furnished an- otter remarkable cose. During the investigation of tle { Standard Oil Trust a few years ago, | badly wanted for the testi | mony, Yet the richest sawn in the world had ny difficulty in getting out of sight for six weeks making as good a job of the process as though he wera the veriest stivet wreck whom notoly. knew or gave the second | look to. Process servers und detec- | tives were on his trail, his various houses were watched, amd every known means of search employed, hut it was not unti! John D. Hecided that he was ready to come to the | stene again that he was located. | Gideon W. Marsh, president of the Keystone bank, Philadelphia, defgult- | ed some 20 years ago, and got away before the police coud, get him. His description was sent every- | where, and the best police talent of | the country spent its energy trying to locate him, but knew only failure fer its pains. Mardh wandered all over the coun |! try. He was everywhere. He experi- ewved all kinds of misery and finally voluntarily gave himself up to justice From Philadelphia they went to New York, but stayed only a few hours. i Thea they decided to got out of! the jurisdiction of the 'United tates government altogether, and wen: to Montreal. From Montreal they went to St. John's, and then boardetl the steamer Corsica for England, But the purser would have nothing to do with them as long as they in- sisted om carrying the dog along with #hem, and they left the ship at Halifax. Then they took a train and to Boston, goimg from cago. But even im Chicago it was not due to the work of either the police! or the private detectives hired by the family that v were finally ap- prehended. It was nothing © mare than the accident that 'led the keap- ocr of the boarding house where they were staying to note the simi- larity of their appearance with that of two lodgers she had who repre sented themselves as father and daughter, that led to word being sent to the polices. © . Then the heiress were caught. It is not likely that they could have gone this far in a foreign country. In Germany there are a great many went there to Chi and the waiter and gomg of strangers. In the United States hotels are under regulations, and must keep a register, but there is no further es. pionsige of the temporary homes of thats who are cothing amd going. But in Germany, the dweller in a private house, who takes boarders, when he read in a news aper that a distinguished citizen of his own city had advised him to come back, serve tre wenténce, and make a new start in life when the ends of justice had Leen satisfiod. He had escaped deteo- tion for tem years. : Marsh is now serving his sentence. John Armstrong Chanler, detained in a lunatic asylum, esos, and for | eight months evaded the officers of the law till he could formulate a case. and reach his friends, through whom he eventually demonstrated that he was sabe, and entitled to his liberty. i Chanler is the former husband of Amelie Rives. Charley Ross, kid: naspil when a boy, three decades ago. was never found, although his 'ather Christian Rosé, who died a couple of gears ago, t a fortune tiying to find some trace of Kim. . eres ADBBIE NEN ADEM. Wilbu# Iv, Nesbit in Life. n Adhem (pretty as you please, sed as neatly as one cver segs) One day was absent when her friends "gan To turfl Such absent ones Beneath thelr | sca SC " "She paints!" 'veawed one, and sadly rhavk iter Read, Sirts another with a shudder sald. "I've heard that so and so and so and | 80," a thir Declared and all cried, "Well, upon my word!" 1 And so in half an hour péor Abble's © As well as reputation ahd once honored name Were torn to tatters, and her friends declared She was (he sort by whom fool men were snared. And that if they were she they'd have more pride Than td give cause for rumors unde- nied. In fdet, they came to the conclusion th Threatened « With Diabetes =.= Ben Adhem should not be | i : as the happiest spot on earth, but in order ta enjoy it properly it must be. YOUR OWN HOME----not the land- lord's property. Every man can have & home of his own If he goes the . right way about it, and we can show him the right way. We have plenty of desirable properties which can be bought ag cheaply as if you were pay- ing rent. Let us show you. FULL PARTICULARS AT D. A.Cays, 57 BROCK STREET. # = ji & HAPPY ESCAPE FROM KIDNEY TROUBLE, 4] The life of a man on the road is not all sanshine. Late travelling, excodsive use of rich and sweet foods at hotel tables, too inet makes it a This is the experience of F. Hardy, written from his jin London: strenuous Mr. | "TLate®last. spring 1 noticed 1 was | losing strength, I bad a thirst for water and my ly active. Same months had suffered vague pains in the small of the buck, was more or i loss sleepless, started to Ferrozone, {which quickly made me feel so jmuch better, I cut out sweets, su. | war and starchy foods, and took Ferrozonoe tabletn with cach meal. {The results were surprising. A re- | vegst j newal of my started that: was - and vigor me rave for water all the time. T wasn't laid up a single day, and attribute my success and robust health entirely to 'Ferro- zone." ** - Jack was known as the giant killer, + a ------------------ £ = course, much | Away an afternoon at tda and whilst smoking and the strain of getting bus- | And each ene then prepared her lengthy & see 1° Tyee | suggesting who to ask and who to home For it, you see, was an exclusive club, great | Lo. files en Adhem's name Ted all the kidneys | at, ; 3 x 8 uite surpris- | ing. I lost that intense thirst that |stasy. Held in their friendship as she once | had been, But that she should be spurned with glances keen, And that while some reports might not be true, "a person never really Knew." The next Jay these samé friends met to compile A Het of those who should be asked to w \ sn And whe (think you, was most imparts nt guest? Jack and the Beanstalk. The beautiful 'prindess was in 'a sad | predicament. "I have a bat, be | sare, bt how shall ever get wimmsl in time for the party to- morrow 7° she monned. That night Jack planted his magic at one corter of the hat, and by mening such was the growth of the able, the comiiction was tripimeod in the latest style. v "Oh, oh!" cried the princess In & As for the wicked giant who had | been paying her i he, was practi < 3 he eox- claimed. And fe that day forth [ 40. HUTTON, Gen. Agent. SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 19. 1010. a -------- : ~ Most § LIFE' LARGE GAIN IN SURPLUS BUSINESS INCREASED yn. EXPENSES DECREASED. The Directors' Report submitted at the Annual Meeting of the Canada Life yesterday was as follows : -- The Directors have pleasure in submitting their 63rd Annual Report showing the transactions of the Company for the past year, and setting forth the financial position as at 31st December, 1909. The Year's 'Applications to the number of 5,117 for assurances of $12,198,814 were received during Business. the year, and the new policies paid for totalled $10,139,434.00, an increase over the new business paid for in 1908, which in turn was greater than that of 1907. It is very gratifying to note that the Canadian business has again shown a substantial increase. The business from the United King- dom compared favorably with that of last year, while the hnsiness from the United States has been well maintained. The total business in force now amounts to $124,772,856, the increase for the year being over $4,000,000, : The Income The income for the year was $5,697,319.59, being larger by $361,277.05 than that of and Payments. 1908. The payments to policyholders totalled $2,032,332.16. Notwithstanding the constantly increasing volume of business transacted, the expenses of management decreased in 1909, as compared with those of the previous year. A similar reduction in the expenses of management was ow» -- 'reported a year ago, the decrease in each year being not only in percentage but in actual amount. The total assets now stand at $39,686,063. 57, hay .ag inex. sed in 1209 by $2,972,948.33, The Assets. the greatest gain in any year in the Company's history. The assets of the Compan: arc creasing at the rate of - arly $10,000.00 for each business day of the year, and the safe and profitable investment of these rapidly growing .unds is a serious responsibility which receive. the const.nt care of the Directors. The Surplus. The increase in surplus reported a year ago of $1,060,000 Was up to that Hime the largest in the Company's history. The Directors are able to announce an even larger gain for 1909, the increase for the year being $1,195,125, bringing the total Surplus over all liabilivies up to $3,322,764.65. Such a result could only be attained by a strict adherence to those principles of management which long experience has shown to be the essentials of success, namely, judicious economy in expenditures, prudent investment of funds and skilful selection of risks. Allotment The Directors are gratified to be able to announce that the surplus (included in the of Profits. above) earned on quinquennial dividend policies issued prior to 1900 enables them to declare a bonus upon such policies as follows :-- Upon life policies a reversionary bonus addition of 11 per cent Ye ' annum upon the sum assured, amounting to £62.50 per £1,000.00 of assurance (or its equivalent value in cash or reduction of premiums to policyholders so electing); upon endowment assurances the bonus addition will be not less than $50.00 forthe quinquennium for each $1,000.00 of "assurance, payable at the end of the endowment period or prior death (or the equivalent of such bonus addition in cash or premium reduction to policy- holders so electing) . : : The profits now declared on these policies are on a cash basis from 30 per cent. to 40 per cent. greater than at the previous quinquennial division in 1905, when over $1,000,000.00 was allotted to such policies. As illustrating this, attention is drawn to the following actual examples from life policies, taken at random and showing the profits now ieclared, on a cash basis. The table also shows the large increase in profits now declared over those of the two previous quinquennial divisions :-- CASH PROFITS Policy No. | 36637 17135 Issued 1885 Issued 1875 $215.50 $224.50 331.20 345,50 453.00 467.10 | Policy No. 4972 | Issued. 1865 Policy No. 1514 Issued 1854 205.00 304 80 0521.20 Policy No. "Policy No. 64320 Issued 1895 ' J a Qaingquennial i Year. i i $2209.00 351.20 474.10 $164.50 1906 265.50 1910 367.00 Basis for illustration in eich case $10,000. 1900 The Directors confidently anticipate at this announcement will be received with general satisfaction by the _aany perscns who will share in the large mmount of profits to be distributed on hese polities. Quinquennial dividend policies issued since 1900 receive their allotment of profits each five years from the date of issue, upon their premium "date in place ol the fixed date {... at 31st De- cember) for older policies. The premium rates and reserv:s for such policies are on a different basis from tLat for po._ciesissued pricr to 1900. For these more recent policies as well as deferred dividend policies a modified form of the Contribution System of allocation of profits has licen adopted by the Company, and under this system the profits will vary with the plan of assurance and duration of the policy, as well as with the age of the assured. : : oR The amount of surplus now to be allott 'd to quinquenn:.1 and maturing deferrsd diwi- Jdend policies will. it is expected. exceed 32.000,000. ; a er : Our work is so well in hand that the Profit Certificates oni all policies now entitled to participate will be mailed on this occasion at an earlier date than formerly. a ' Retirement The following Directors retire by rotation: --Kenneth MacKenzie, Esq., Frank of Directors. Sanderson, LL.D., Hon. Robert Jaffray, Adam Brown, Esq., and E. R. Wood, Esq., the first two representing the policyholders and the last three representing the shareholdery, all of whom are eligible for re-election. ; an : 1t is with pleasure that the Director's again record their appreciation of the efficiency and zeal with which the officers, staff and fied représentatives have pegformed their respective duties. Toronto, January 31st, 1910. GEO. A. COX, President. Financial Statement Condensed From the 63rd Annual Raport as at the 1st of January, 1910. Assets. Liabilities. QGoverrment, Munici> and other Leserve Fund (Hm. 31; p.c. and 3 p.c.).$34,897,771.00 'Bonds, Stocks and Debentures. . . .$10,649,430.00 Death claim "in co irse 0: set. sment Mortgages on Real Estate 10,152,403.91 and Instalme Fund 'inv ps Loans = Policies 5,605.758.56 Diiicuds oe icyholders in course Bo Rae, iy hg ea ey Reserve for Policies which may be Re. Hamilton, Montreal, Winnipeg, St vived .... . ... vidy os : 84,687.00 John, N.B,, and London, Eng.)..... . Other Liabilities oh rps 19,861.92 Loans on Bonds, Stocks, ete. ... ..... Total Surplus on Policyholders' Ac Premiums in Transit cnd Deferrcd count (Hm. 3'} p.c. and 3 pc) 345,130.16 15,840.45 2,048,782 43 174,233.01 686,626.63 006.827.24 410,454.00 261,447.79 $39,686,063.57 4,322,764 65 -- ------ i i-- § 1.348748 & 264,278.50 Death Claims (net) ldatured-Endowments (net) ... . Dividends paid Policyholders (includ. ing Bouns Additions Paid with Death Claims and with Matured Endowments) La Surrender Values of Policies PE $ 3,751,334.70 104,850.13 4 192,119.08 Interest, ete. ... ...... ... ... ...x 174112576 188,758 84 ------------------. Total Paid to Policyholders . .$ 1,993,902.85 A ---- PaidAnyuitants ... ... . ..... ...§ Commission, Salaries, ets. = = = = Taxes, Govt. Fees, Stock Div'ds. ete. Excess of Receipts over Payments . 697,319.59 PAGE THIRTEEN. t Information how a policy will shape for you will ba cheerfully given at the office, ~ 18 MARKET ST., KINGSTON. LOUIS A. LAMBERT, Special Agent.

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