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, WNT PAY FARE WITHOUT A SEA Miss Barcalow, Before Women’s . Health Protective Association, ' Declares She Will Refuse Tribute in Crowded Cars, MISS HAWKES AT THE ALTAR Victim of Bigamist Howard Ob- tains Annulment of Marriage After His Conviction and Again Is a Bride. TROUBLE FOR COMPANIES.)WAS AIDED BY THE VATICAN. A Lot of Talk and Many Sugges- tions, but Little Accomplished Afte’ Every Woman Has Some: thing to Say on the Subject. “Let the women buy stock and obtain @ontrol,” “Give us double-dec “Give us mcre cars. ‘Abolish express ca: “Put on extra switches “Above all things give us seats." These and a multiciplictty of other opinions were given voice too yester- @ay afternoon when the Women's Health Protective Association met at the Academy of Medicine. In response to the call issued by the association's President, Mrs. Ralph} Troutman, to the various women's clubs, | representatives from these organizations | were present to co-operate in the move- ment for street car service reform. No Seat, No Fare, “I am not going to pay my fare {tf} I can't get a seat.” announced M Teresa Barcalow with determination. “I pay for a seat and 1 won't stand| up. It's tme for we women to rise. I Won't pay my fare if I can't have a seat, | 60 If you ever hear of a woman being Put off a car for not paying her fare you will know it ts 1!" Mrs. Barcalow's epe the stronge wh a buzz of cc would like to know if we pay for| # tide or a seat," was asked, but the question was unanswered. “If a woman has to stand,” asked Mra. Kato Wilson, “whose fault 's ice’ “The rallroad’s,” was Mrs. Barca- fow's prompt and strenuous assertion. The co-operative meeting of the Women's Health Protective Association and the Women's Club was called to order by Mrs. Ralph Troutman, Presi- Gent, who outlined in brief the object of the conference. Mrs. Troutman spoke of the call she had issued to the women's clubs, hop- ing for their co-operation in finding a remedy for the evil, The recent mest- ing at Mrs. Troutman's home, when Orin Root met with the association and the recent delegation of the association to the Board of Aldermen was spoken of. cars." h was delivered and called Petition to Aldermen. That a petition be presented to the Doard of Aldermen with suggestions as tothe remedy, Mrs. Troutman sald, ‘was the object of the gathering. The symposium of {deas which fol- lowed Mrs, Troutman's remarks were fumerous and varied. Mrs, Selbel em- phasized the nuisance of standing dur- ing the rush hour and gave a ples for the working girl. The President read letters from the Prosident of the Women's Press Club, the New Century Study Circle. In th’ the suggestion was made that a hal! rate system for part of the cars would ameliorate the crowded condition, as when the company saw how many pat- Tonized the cheaper cars they would put.on more of the five-cent fare cars. Letters were also read from Mrs. Bophie Schere, Mra. L. J, Hiller, who stated that standing in the cans had caused a severe fIlness; Jessie A. Fow- ler and Mrs, Howard MeNut. “What are the rush hours?" demand- @4 Mrs, De La Vere. “It scems to me| all are rush hours, aa I can seldom get @ seat. More cars should be put on at all times and the number should not be decreased after the so-called rush hours. It should be made a misdemean- or to have standing In the cars.” hen a seat Is ptd for,” yald Mrs, Echumann, speaking of the open cars, “tho space in front of you 1s yours, too, and ecelling that for standing room is an dafringement of your rights,” Injuries in Crowded Cars, Mrs, Rivers told of injuries recelved through the crowded cars and the con- ductors’ carelessness. Mrs, Kate Wilson told how Orin Root cruelly put his foot down on all sug- Restions toward bettering the present etate of affairs. “Tuere might be one way out of the a@imeulty,” sald Mrs. Wilson later, “and that is for the women to band together buy stock.’ ony Fy not for us to solve this dim- culty,” said Mrs, Troutman, “that Is for the railroad company. We are here to learn the conditions and compiuin, i “We should draw up a petition to lay the Board of Aldermen, and ii Tile nan io eitect, we will call a publle Mas@merting, evory one reaps. the bene- fit of the Women’s Health Protective Asscclation, We d> not act for ourselves fe, but for every one. eielfarge the passage of a bill which pro- vides a seat to all,” sald Mrs. Kate Wil- and I think we should wark Dr. Phoebe Waite th» ble-decked car. aolWhat we really need," sald the Presl- dent, “is more cars, not only for, rush hours, but during the entire day.’ Mrs. Troutman told how she had stood championed on Columbus avenue waiting five {nutes for @ car only to have tt pass y—crowded, “We want the company to co-operate vith us, It Is our Suty. to bring about a reform. It is not merely for our own sex that we desire the standing evil abol- Passengers Limited, A popular idea which pleased the President was that onty a certain num- ber be allowed on every car, Mrs, Tuttle quoted Boston as a model example of prohibiting standing in open rs. eatnna Maxwell Jones suggested that the Woman's Municipal League and the Gchool teachers be asked to co-operate, “I think Miss Jones's suggestion very wise,” said the President, “and [ pro pone’ that we ask all organizations to meet with us at ah adjourned meeting to be held here Dec. 2 at 3 o'clock. “We have done nothing definite to- day, buy next woek we wi accompisn it is not our Intention to. ask Bove We wish to anything unreasonable, a fairly. Nve want to look Into the law of of Miss Hawkes and ceedingly relatives and a’ few family tending. Vicar-General PH. officiated, assisted by After a short trip Mr. and Mrs, Malane (| J. Kaskel, of messages of condolence, pressing sorrow. offers of cut rates, solemn-visaged men resembling undertakers were seen hang- ing around the house, a representative of a erematory called to press the claims of his concern for disposing of the body. The Kaskel family stood all this, but when a number of young men in the neighborhood appeared at the house just night for “wake"’ the limit waa reached, sequence a notice was inserted In the newspaper that had contained the death announcement informing the public in general that George J. Kaskel is very much allve. franchises and study the sidelights of the question. I suggest that we invite ‘Orin Root to our meeting. Any one in- ted in the matter Is Invited to dead ona assist us. ‘ n Bigamous Husband Was Sent to Prison and, Freed from Him, She Is Made the Wife of Willlam D. Malane This Morning. ~ A select gathering of friends wit- nessed the marriage this morning of Mise Helen P, Hawkes and William D. Malane in St. Joseph's Catholle Church, Brooklyn. The ceremony brought to a happy conclusion an unfortunate epl- sode in the life of an estimable young woman, Miss Hawkes !s the daughter of Su- pervisor Harry Hawkes, who for years held an Important post In the Brooklyn Water Department and was exceedingly Popular among both Democratic and Republican politiclans, His daughter, an exceedingly pretty girl, was married two years ago to George Howard, then one of tho electrical experts of the Metropolitan Street Rallroad. Tho wedding reception at the Hawkes home, No. 22 Prospect place, was at- tended by Hugh McLaughlin and scores of Brooklyn politicians, and the young couple were showered with handsome gifts, Mad a Wife Living, Three months after the ceremony a brother of Miss Hawkes learned that Howard had a wife and two children in Massachusotts. Howard was arrested, pleaded guilty and was sent to prison for three years, but under the Indeter- minate sentence act served only one year, Justice Marean, of the Supreme Court, Brooklyn, granted Miss Hawkes an an- nulment of the marriage, but the young woman, being a devout Catholic, re- celved ttle mental rellef from the divoree, Realizing that her life had been blasted by Howard's consvienceless behavior, her health and her mind were nigh to giving way under stress of her trouble, She was kept up by the devotion of her famlly and friends, who did every- thing possible to make her forget the painful episode. Bishop McDonnell, of Brooklyn, was one of the closest friends of the Hawkes family, and when. he learned of Howard's conduct he gave the family much comfort by assuring them that under the laws of the Catholic Church there could be no religious marriage any more than there could be a valid civil contract where one of tho parties to the ceremony was bound by an exist- ing contract of marriage. Church Grants Annulment. An ecclesiastical court was appointed to take the matter up, and when It was established before this body that How- ard's marriage in Massachusetts was perfectly valid a decree of annulment Was granted and the decision forwarded to the Congregation of Rites at the Vatican for review and approv: Bishop McDonnell on his viet to Rome last summer personally brought the matter up at tho Vatican and brought word back that the marriage ceremony with Howard had been declared invalid. Was shortly after the Brookly: siastical court had granted ite dee cree of annulment that the engagement Mr. Malane was quietly announced to thelr friends. Mr. Malnne Js of a well-known Syracuse family and is connected here With the firm of Ronalds & Johnson, of Man- battan, He had long been a friend of the Hawkes family and was one of sting Hawkes's, moat earnest sympathizers, His devotion to her after the trying epi: sode resulted in'a warm attachment. The wedding ceremony to-day was e; quiet, only the immedia friends at- McNamara Father O'Neil), will go to their new home in Flatbus! SENDS OUT NOTICE HE IS NOT DEAD. George J. Kaskel Also Hunting for the Person Who Published Announcement of His Demise. This ts noth ‘0 the friends of George M7 West Twenty-ninth street, that he is not dead. He prom- ises a sudden death to the person who inserted @ notice in a newspaper an- nouncing that George J. Kasket had passed away suddenly, Mr. Kaskel was in ignorance of his own demise until an inspector from the Board of Health called at his residence ‘to learn what he had dled of. The In- xpector was surprised when he saw no craps on the door and more surprised when he found the supposed dead man enjoying a hearty meal, Then came friends in droves, telephone telegrams ex- Florists came with the purpose of halding a In con- oo Doukhobors Buying Horses, OTTAWA, Ont., Noy. 2%6.—Information from Immigrant Agent Sears at York- ton is to tha effect that the Doukhobor pliarims ‘have settled’ down «ince re- urning {0 Ot jturning tc he village are pur- THE WORLD WEDNESDAY EVENING, NOVEMBER 26; 190%. ISS HELEN P. HAWKES, NOW THE | BRIDE OF WILLIAM D. MALANE, | GIRL TO THE BAR ON RIOT CHARGE Blanche Coffy Will Be Sentenced at Ballston To-Day for Inter- fering with Another. BALLSTON, N. Y., Nov. %.—Miss Branche Coffy will be arraigned for sentence before Judge Rockwood to-day, having been convicted of unlawfully in- terfering with Jessie F. Wheeler during the recent strike riots. When arralgned yesterday she fainted and was paroled Jp the custody of her counsel, Miss Coffy Is nineteen years old and lives in Waterford. The trial in the County Court attracted much attentlo: the prisoner belng charged with attac ing Miss Wheeler, who lives In Meohan- icsville, as she stepped from a Hudson Valley Railway car. BROKER TURNED TABLES ON WIFE. She Sued for Divorce, but Ref- reee Found for Husband, and He Will Get Decree. The sult of Florence E. Simmons, an actress in the Frank Daniels company, for a separation from John R, Simmon stock broker, has resulted disustrously. Mr. Simmons set up a counter claim, alleging that the actress-wife had Stopped at a house in West ‘hirty- fifth street with a man as his wife, The matter was referred to Thomas F, Wentworth, who finds in favor of Mr. Simmons in a report filed to-day and Maurice Meyer has applied to Jus- Uce Truax, o1 tie Supreme Court, for @ confirmation of Reteree Wentworth s report and a decree of absolute divorce for Simmons, John R. Simmons was associated with Arthur L. Meyer, of the Webb-Meyer syndicate, His marriage to the pretty actress was celebrated Oct, 28, 18%, In her suit for separation, Mrs. ‘Sin 4 alleged that he deserted her without cause July 7, 1898, and had since re- fused to support ‘her. On May 19 last Maurice Meyer went before Justice Greenbaum, in Supreme Court, and asked leave to amend his answer’ so as to include a counter claim for absolute divorce, He sald Simmons had been searching for his wife ever since she began the sult, and his search had been rewarded the ‘night before, when he broke tn the lass door panel in a flat In West Thirty- firth street and found pot only his wife but a strange man thefe too. “Mrs. Sim- mons Py Known as ‘Mrs, Carter” in this house. Referee. Wentworth summarizes the testimony on that situation, and says Mrs. Simmons also livea under the name of ‘May Morgan, BIGAMIST HUSBAND SUED FOR DIVORCE First Wife Had Him Arrested First, Then He Served Time, and Now She'd Be Free. In the long line of plaintiff's seeking a @ dissolution of the marriage bonds in the undefended divorce court, where Justice Truax presided, was Clara ¥. Blackford, a petite and attractive wom- an, who demanded an absolute divorce from John L. Blackford, of Chauncey street, Brooklyn, alleging that she was married to Blackford, then a detective for the y Central In 189, and that he married another woman in Novem- ber, 1899, in the person of Alice Morgan. The story adduced by George Robin- son, her lawyer, was that, accompante by Broker Charles Bemenholts, brothe: in-law of Alice Morgan, of Weatfeld, N. J... to whom she confided her euspicions that her husband was May Morgan's supposed husband, she took Detective Gargan, of the Cen:ral Office, to the ‘Hotel Marlborough at 4 in the mornin, of Dec, 1, 14%, and the officer snatche John L. Blackford from his bride of a Ony and locked him up. je served in. Trenton prison for bi ‘That’ wife's Cause'2f uotiog, "2 BRIDAL PAIR FOUND WITH THROATS CUT The Wife Dead and Husband Dying, They Are Discovered in Dallas Hotel Room. DALLAS, Tex., Nov. %—Lee Welgel and his bride were found In thelr room in the Texarkana Hotel with thelr throats cut. The bride was dead, her throat belng severed from ear to ear. Weigel was still alive, and the phy- siclans give some hope for his recovery. Welgel ts a rallroagd man and was married to Miss Mary Quinn at Anni- ston, Ala., ten days ago. They were on their honeymoon trip and came to Dal- las on Monday, being @een about the hotel very little, STRESS TOO MUCH FOR MILLIONAIRE Wall-Paper Business of Alfred Peat Grew So Rapidly His Mind Gave Way. miNtonatre declared Alfred Pent, the wall paper man, has been Insane and been committed to the Manhattan State Hospital. His business had in- creased so rapidly that the tax on his mind was too great. For two years the volume of sales has Increased $1,000,000 a year. The first intimation of his mental in- firmity recelved by Mr. Pent'e friends was a week ago when he was sent to a wanttatum at Ilushing. Yesterday Judge Scott, of the Supreme Court, ad- judged him Incompetent and ordered him eent to the asylum. Mr. Peat Ived elegantly on a large estate near Greenwich, Conn., which was once occupled by Andrew Carnegte. Two years ago he purchased the estate, which 1s near the Fairfleld County Golf Club, and stocked {t with fine horses, For some time his most intimate friends have noticed that he has acted in a pecullar manner, but they did not think that the mental malady would prove to be so serious, When Mr, Peats atarted tn the wail- paper business he advertised extensively in the citles where he owned stores, * For years his business grew, but of late it has increased by leaps and bounds, until the tax was too great and his mind gave way. Mrs, Peats was appointed committee of the person and property of her hus- band, She filed a bond for $50,000, She occupies apartments at Sherry's, where she Is living in seclusion, broken-hearted at her husband's misfortune. YOUNG HUSBAND TO GET DIVORCE. Pretty Young Wife Makes No Defense to Charge Based on the Statutory Grounds. One of the prettiest as the result of to “grass widows" Jay's grist In Justice ‘Truax’s uncontested divorce mill is Mrs, rine Barrett, who was the bride of Joseph C, Barrett, a Brooklyn machin- lat, only three years ago. She is Just In her twenties. Charles B, Le Barbier, counsel for the | young husband, elicited from the at-| taches of the Chelsea Hotel, Brooklyn, that she had been at the hotel with John Walst Jer her Into UILLIN VOOR FREED I COURT Former Wife of Surveyor Lyon, Who Was Found Unconscious from Morphine, Has Recov- ered—Friends Care for Her. WAS ACCIDENT, SHE SAID. Mian Constance Voorhis, former soclal favorite, stage aspirant and wife of former Surveyor of the Port George W. Lyon, who has been tn Belle Hospital since last Thursday recvering from the effects of fifty grains of mor- phine, tvas discharged by Magistrate Flammer, in the Jefferson Market Po- lice Court to-day, She was charged with attempting to commit sulcide. Miss Voorhis, as she calls herself, since her separation from ‘her husband, five years ago, went to police court from the hospital in a cab. She was accompanted by her sister, Misa Voor- his, another woman who was hand- somely gowned, and @ policeman Women Friends Meet Her. At the court she was met by a dozen women friends, all dressed expensively and forming a contrast with the miser- able wretches who frequent that troub- lous spot, These women. had deen cen- tred about the Rev. Dr, Ernst Voorhis, a brother of the accused woman. None of them would speak concerning the case. When Miss Voorhia arrived she was met by former Assistant District-Attor- ney Schwartzkopf, who had been re- tained in her behalf by Col. Asa Bird Gardiner, who, as the closest friend of her father, the late Commodore Jacob Voorhis, has exercised the functions of | a guardian over her, While they were waiting for the case to be called in court Col. Gardiner came In and sat beside the young woman. She wore a long Newmarket mackintosh | over a handsome street dress and seemed | remarkably cheerful. She smiled and| chatted with the former District-Attor- ney. Her face was sallow, but the| slightly sunken cheeks had been Mber- ally rouged before leaving the hospital, and she looked what she says ehe 1s, | an actress, | ‘When her case was called she stepped | up to the bench and smiled at Magis- trate Flammer in recognition of the time, five years ago, when this samo Mag! trate had ordered her husband, thg wealthy Surveyor of the Port, to pay her % @ week to maintain her. Called It an Accident. But the Magistrate did not recognize her, at least he gave no sign of it, and nded rather crossly Why did you do this question three times. “Tt was an accident," said the woman. Dr_ Lesile Meacham, of No. 69 West Forty-eighth street, thén stepped up and wald “Ihave been treating her for two ye: for nervous and heart troubles. Fo that Jengch of time I have been pre- scribing morphine tablets for her. It must have been an accident.” The Magistrate hesitated a few min- utes and then he sald, as though he were stll In doubt: “Well, T guess I will discharge you, but—never mind. You're discharged.” Miss Voorlis and her companions hur- ried out of court. 1, Gardiner asisat- her carriage, and, accom- panied by her sister and two other women, she drove " Taken Home by Friends, repeating the When taken from her room in the M Hill Hotel last Thursday she was cious and was belle to be dying, When roused from her sleep In the hospital she said that she had had much trouble, and that might have been aman. Friends sald that she had been in love with a former office holder under and that he had refused to This story was denied by rdiner. Is sang in the chorus of last season. Her father was the owner of the yacht Madeleine, the fourth successful defender of the Amer- iea’s Cup, and was commodore of the Indian Harbor Yacht Club, SAYS HE WED UNWILLINGLY. Plea of Henry Wilson on Wife's © of Abandonment Charged with abandonment and non- support of his young and pretty wife, Henry Wilson, twenty-one years of age, told Magistrate Tighe in the Butler Street Court, Brooklyn, to-day how he had been compelled to marry her against his will. Mrs, Wilson, the complainant, dented that her husband had been forced to marry her, and sald that, immediately after the ceremony in her aunt's "home, at No. 477 Sackett street, Wilson had left her and gone to live at No. 63 Sande street. Rev, Frederick Wiltlam Davis, the minister who performed the service, con- firmed the young husband's statement He said that the wife's cousin noticed Wilson's reluctance and threatened to call her brother to shoot him on the spot if he did not marry Bllzabeth. Magistrate Tighe adjourned the case until Jaa. 1, es Chorus Girls to Head Grand March. ‘The grand bal masque of “The Smart Set” will be held at Manhattan Casino, One Hundred and Fifty-fifth street and Eighth avenue, to-night. Extensive preparations have been made to make this, the Inttlal ball of the season, a duccess. The Neapolitan Troubadours will entertain the audience from 9 until SOCIETY WOWEN SEE AREAL DUEL Charles Tatham and Atherton Brownall Handle Duelling Swords at the Fencers Club and Each Draws Blood. BUT IT WAS ALL FRIENDLY. Young Men Merely Gave an Exact Imitation of the French Duello for Members of Famous Families to See. The three hundred elegantly gowned women, including members of the Van- derbiit, Astor and dozens of other fami- les of New York soclety, who yesterday afternoon sat in the galleries surround- ing the highly polished arena of the Fencere’ Club, in the Windsor Arcade, are wondering to-day whether they wit- nessed a real duel between two skilful swordsmen, Though used to many realiatic sur- prises, they were not prepared to see blood drawn from the points of raplers handled by men who pursued each other with panther-like movements and flash- ing eyes, As the swords flashed and rung when they croased with speed and grace “bravo!” after “bravo! rang from hundreds of pretty Ips, but when one of the fencers broke down his oppo- nent’s guard and pressed the blade to his breast until the red blood spurted out through his shirt more than one of the beautiful spectators turned pale, Planned Realistic Duel. The two fencers were Charles Tatham, a wealthy young lead manufacturer, of No. ¥2 Beekman street, and his friend, Atherton Brownall, one of the most prominent men in athletic circles in Bos- ton, and a leading member of the ex- clusive Boston Athletic Club and the Algonqujn Club. Mr. Brownall is now the guest of Mr, Tatham at his hom No, 92 Lexington avenue. Both are ekiitul fencers, and as yesterday was to be ladies’ day—the red-letter day of the season at the Fencers' Club—the two men planned to give the fair spectators the most realistic exhibition possible of the French duello, with the result that Mr. Brownall is to-day suffering from_a six-inch wound on the arm an¢ Mr. Tatham from a severe scratch near the left shoulder. Each man, when he stepped upon the raised dais covered with i vet in the centre of the club's a real duelling sword. Th are long and razor keen and practically of the same pattern as the weapon with which Aaron Burr slew Alexander Hamilton, In order to avoid serious accident, however, the points were tip- ped with tiny cork buttons. Bach man was dressed In a ploturesque costume similar to those worn by Dumas's fa- mous Three Guardsmen—black _ silk Kknickerbockers, silk stockings, patent- leather ties and white silk fenolng shirts, ike Deadly Antagontin: “We had made up our minds," said Mr. Tatham to an Evening World re- porter to-day, “to give ladies a truly thrilling imitation of an affair @honor, so. that when we crossed swords we looked the part of deadly antagonists.” When the two men got well into the encounter ‘their cheeks were flushed and thelr eyes blazed as t pursued each other about, thrusting nd parnying, kiving ‘stroke and counter-atroke, untli every apectator down to the Inst’ mat!- irl was on tiptoes of expectan After a few minutes of scientific work, Mr. Brownall managed to get In a good thrust over his adversary’s guard, reach- ing his left breast and plercing his shirt flesh, Then as the two men drew y it could be seen through the flash Ing blades that a red gtream wns tri ing down Mr. Tatham’s otherwise snow. white shirt, and the all-pervading hush gave way to a sigh of fear. This sigh was only momentary, though, for as the men continued to press each other flercely the blood of the on) ‘son began to tingle and many an eye blazed Tathan Draws Blood, For a few seconds after his wound Mr. Tathan assumed the defensive, but finally, seeing an opening, he passed Mr. ‘Brownall's guard, and as his thrust was backed by great force, he {nflicted a nasty gash on his opponent's left forearm, ‘from which the dlood spurted. | The, duel then came to an abrupt end, and, judging from the many pale faces ‘that looked down from the galleries, had it continued any longer many of the fair spectators would have fainted. Mr. Tathan In speaking of the duel this morning said: “It is true that we cut each other, but for goodness sake do not let It appear that the cuts were deep or serious wounds, Both of us recelved mere scratches which, though they bled a great deal, really amounted to nothing. Mine was about the size of a oin scratch and could be covered by a postage stamp. Still we thought it a good example of the French affair @honor in which neither antagonist la more than merely scratched,’ —= MOVE TO SAVE PATRICK. Attorney Tomlinson Takes Steps to Obtain New Tri Attorney Tomlinson appeared to-day before Recorder Goff on behalf of A! bert T. Patrick, now in the death house at Sing Sing, convicted of the murder of Millionaire Willlam Marsh Rice, to apply for a writ of mandamus for a new trial His application was partly based on the report that Dr. Hamilton Williams, the at that time Coroner's Physician, had told. some one that in his opinion the aged millionaire died fro natural causes, On the stand the tor gi at Rice died from Dr. Willams 19 argument was {t as his opinion t the effects of eth now In Europe. 12 o'clock, At the stroke of 12 the grand march will be Ied by the chorus girls from “A Chinese Honeymoon” and “Silver Slipper"? companies. journed until one week from next Friday, ‘There's a quick, 8 FIFTY YEALS, suniption, AVOID CHEAP larcer Wey A SEE TiLat ¥: GET IT; alev so that th Justice Truax tokt Mr. Le Barbier to | hand up his decree, whioh is equivalent tn vot parlance to saying he would sign it. Doctors everywhere prescribe it and all Racking Cough! Neglected—often means pneumonia or consumption. Dr. Buit’s Coven Syrup {0 13 INFALLIBLE. ‘Mise Bara B. Willever, “Twas troubled for months with a severe cough, which would have turn Hon hut for the timely uso of Dr. Bull's Cough Syrup.” Do not accept cheap substitutes offered by unreliable dealers, who are thinking of ASK FOR THE OLD RELIABLE’ DR. BULL'S COUGH 8YRUP.” SMALL DOSE. @ PLEASANT TO TAKE. jure cure—the old reliable IT HAS STOOD THE TEST FOR IT 18 HARMLESS, It prevents con Phillipsburg, N.J., writes: ed to consump: SUBSTITUTES. BULL'S HEAD" is on the package. STOP THAT COUG Colds Lead to Catarrh—Catarr Leads to Consumption. A Beautiful Girl's Experience. oy E25 Miss Alma Lillia, 606 18th street, Island, Til., says: “Iam a firm friend to na, for it cured me in two a of a cough which had been aa) me for three weeks, which had developed a se! catarrhal affection of the and lungs, I had a number of cok during the year and each I me with a Tittle more then this bad cough was worst, I took cough medi until I sickened at the sight o them, But Perunacured me in such quick time that I am its firm triend. Four weeks’ Pconstant use of it got the cas tarrh entirely out of my aya- tem, ae “It deserves all the bestowed upon it, 7? — Lillia, comes chronic. ‘The fourth step, the tarrh begins to spread from the head throat. ‘The fifth step, the cal pre to the bronchial tuber and Tuna, eM becomes consumption in its first-stage. At any time during the p ' catarrh, from the first onset of the Mts “flnal ettlement fn tho lu can be relied upon tO stop the disease. cures entirely. Even after consumption has become thoroughly developed, many have found in Peruna a permanent After they have been given! up by phys to die of consumption Peruna has them. We have hundreds of testi a INE CASES of consumption out of ten occur in this way: A person catches a cold, The cold is not properly cured, and they quickly catch an- other one, This cold ts dilly-dallied with by no treatment, or some treatment that 1s {neflectual, und the cold continue ‘Then they catch anoth jd und begin to cough. Then they take cough syrups, but they do no good. By and by they get tired of taking medi- cine, and give up in despatr, Their cc'] continues, and thelr cough Be grows worse, Then they apply to a doctor, | that declare these facts in the most enthu- 0 wo sinstic language. ve ° Only to discover that they are in the first | sinstle language, sy stages of consumption. isa Lillia, of braska, writes the following letter: “Washington, D, Cy April’ 6, 1901, “T have Used Peruna at various times duce, ing the past year or two with most eatigingst tory results, relieved me from an irritat~ started out ex- tly in this 'wa} , she took @ course of Peruna before it was too late. She had caught several colds, then a cough de- veloped, She took all sorts of cough medi- clnes until, as sho puts it, “I sickened at the sight of them," In four weeks Peruna had cured her of her catarrh, and her sys- tem was entirely rid of tt. This 1s what Peruna Js doing all the while. Not a day, and probably not an hour, passes but some one has a similar ex- perience with Peruna, ‘The first. step toward consumption ts catching cold. The next step is a failure to oure it promptly. ‘The third step is the development of catarrh, which gradually be. “Tt CT 4 4 ing cough—the result of excessive effort Ri. the Presidential campaign—and I am a 2 believer in its efficacy In any such trouble. é —Jno. Thurston. aw if you do not derive prompt and ; tory results from the use of Perung, se at once to Dr. Hartman, ‘giving « fu 5 ment of your case, and he will be pleased te give you bis valuable advice gratis, Address Dr, Hartman, President of ‘The, anitarium, Columbus, Ohio. Hartman GOLD DU Golves the problem of easy dish washing, It cuts grease and cleans. dishes better than anything else. its work quickly, wed and economically. Made only by THE N. K FAIRBANK COMPANY, Chicago, New York, Boston, St Louis.—Makers of OVAL FAIRY SOAP. " —s it hospitals use it exclusively in cases of coughs, colds, croup. bronchitis and all affections of the Uiroat. It cures aigkly and ' permanently, “Phousands of testimonials recel from grateful Batlonts who Rave been clired by: De. Dull's Comeh Arun’: AW taney Semel