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¥ © Bhe is a beautify) girl and was much er Married Girl Who Ac- Him of Breach of Prom- \ Ise While Twelve Good Men / © Were: Deliberating. iB “SURPRISE TO THE couRT. Poreman Wat About to Make An- __ Mourlpement When the Accused’s Lawyer Startled All with News) _ *; @f the Quick Marriage, “George A. Bteln and his beautiful Youngs wife are to-day receiving the Mongratulations of thelr friends on the | Reppy termination of their troubles, For m @ays Stein had been on trial be- fore Judge Harrison 8, Moore in the > Queens County Court-house. He was © gharged by Mise Lillian Kratt with a ‘@erious breach of promise of marria; Stein is the proprietor of @ cafe in atreet, Manhattan, and hts father f one of the largest holders of real @etate In Steinway, Miss Kraft, the Plaintiv’, is the daughter of Herman who holds an important position the Steinway Piano Company, Lillian ‘Ae twenty years old and his only child, i @ourted. Dramatic End to Cane. ‘The evidence was all in, and the jury | fhad deliberated for an hour. They had ‘Peturned to the court-room little dream- fing that the case was to have a sudden “Gnd dramatic ending. “Have you agreed upon a verdict?” Judge Moore. “We Wave." answered the ‘We’ “Wait'@ moment, Your Honor,” sud- @enly interrupted Lawyer Hart, who had represented Stein during the trial. "Fhe judge frowned at the lawyer aud fhe foreman of (he jury started ahead with his verdict. “f must ask,” continued the law; Wthat this case be reopened at once on @he ground of newly discovered evi- ence.” ‘The lawyer's manner convinced Judge @hat new and important evidence ‘been discovered, and he consented $0 have the case reopened. Mr. Hart Gales she Rey. Calvin W. Loftus to the @tand. He testified that he had just in marriage George A, Stein and ¥, Kraft. @ of the jurors started to applaud there was cheering in the body of y caurt-room. Judge Moore = poreed this, and, tumning to Stein, } Sust Beat the Jury Out, Are you married 2° foreman. n ret Kratt friends of married couple were shower- tulations on them. It appears it while: fe Jury was out he is on both sides came together and that the bes ut of the dif. ,Wee to have the young people Mins Kraft were summoned were willing. clergyman it for and the marriage touk “in District-Attorney Gregg's office rdtot of BODY MAY SUNK INA BOE ‘Cap Which Murderer Fink Wore Morass. _ BLOODHOUNDS LOSE SCENT.|: * A new clue to the whereabouts of Beorge Fink, who stabbed and killed Henry Freese at One Hundred and) Forty-fourth street and Forest avenue, | ‘Broux Borough, on the ni f Feb. 12, Was discovered to-day. In, the opinion @t some it proves that Fink perished in the Bronx marshes near the scene of stroyed, but $3,000 worth and other jewels was saved by Battalion Chiet. Durr. smelled su that (he parlor was a mags of flame: fears that the to come front h. presence ete STEIN, WHO WERE WEDDED DURING A TRIAL. CARED IRL DOWN LOE Miss Elsie Kolle Had Fainted in Her Father’s Burning House in Brooklyn and Was Bravely Saved by Neighbor. CLOSE CALL FROM DEATH. Fainting at the first alarm of fire. Wisle Kolle, the daughter of Mr, and Mrs. John Kolle, was found unconsclous in the hallway of their home in Pros pect avenu Mectween Fitth and sixth avenues, Brooklyn, to-day, and carried down a ladder from the second-floor window, The house was totally de- diamonde Tho origin of the fire In not known. ‘The House ts /a frame structure, adjoin- Ing Prospect Hall, the best-known Ger- man resort In that section of Brookiyn, ‘The hail ts owned by Mr, and Mrs. Kolie and they attended a dance there it night. It was afier 6 o'clock this morning when they went to their own house and went to bed. ‘Their four. children were sill asleep. Shortly before 8 o'clock Beriha Hanson, & mervant, and Mra. Miller, @ relative of the family, were preparing brenk- ist for the childven, when the servant oke. An investigation proved Missed Eldest Daughter. Mrs, Miller called to those asleep in When He Filed Into Bronx) the ms and, dressing hur- riedly, they hurried to the street, When Woods Is Found at Edge of|outside 4: was found chat le, the eldest daughter, who is twenty years old, had not come with the rest. The luwer floor had by this time be- come enveloped in flames, and tt was mposslble to Nter by the doors, mother and fa were frantic In thelr ung woman had tried had been burned tn the ut an way, Rescued by Neighbor, John Poppe. nelgabor, ran to his house and brought a ludder before the fire department arrived and placed It to the front window on the second. floor ‘oping his way through the smoke, he ind the prostrate figure of the. girl the aallway Just at tae lop of ‘the ataiis. ibis crime. Others believed that ne ta! ried ner to tne Wiodow with meh iat: well away, culty, for the faimnes were breaking Bova playing at One Hundrea and] {nrough the Huon And the rooms were , dense led WIth smoke. Forty-second street and Southern Boule-|hunds and face were un verd at the southery edge of the marsh found a cap w-day which was later to Marly Recovery, Queen, the paysician! fant United Btates N, Jordan, said to-day ys penditlan wes muon Jordan ia down with home, No. oi West bs ah a Feached the window Once in the air, with ho curried her do Adertified as the one worn by Fink when| heaton witne ghey the home of 0 vhe ghbor, wiiere she was sovived hy Me was last seen. On this occasion hej Mise. “Hie sald she had stattod fot Bs “rt the stairs when sae head ery of Beer ee. a ei Donne. An the vielnity and} ice, bur had tumied when she wae the mo of water flames leap up in front of her, , From the fact that Fink's cap was ne amembors nothiiy at f reeling found at the edge of the marsh, the con, | 0,t88 floor. Smoke soon filed the build » the cons | verco: i sion was formed that he had sunk | # 8nd she Was overcome, (th the depths and that the body never Ito Farnnce fer Jewels Mould Peitound. Ae the surtace of the| , Wien Mrs, Kolle saw that her daugh Kafe shy remembered that. ner Eptare J8 frosen It Is considered more) jowels had bron’ loft Cong an Be tikely by the police that he threw the | Cilee Dust wont Mt eee gs battalion GOP Awey and escaped across the | the second floor window, and alter much ‘morass, | Sieoulty fengned Mra. helle’'s room di : | and broughc them. out. b Bloodhounde which were put on the! he firemen nad mich trouble with of the murderer led the way to the! the water wen in the hydrants, and cS rye nefore they could get a siream on tne ee rrr cr the moarah, but) could | rouge it hopoleas mabe of Hames, other wide. Vhey the greater t of their Bho Anding of the cap has renewed the, attentio the big hall adjotne 4 tY Of the police, who had come| if ®H pln y | 4 atered by 4 it gonclusion that Fink had made| ihe Aramen was four feet Ihis escape and pad gone io Chi-| long and as large ax a man's arm 4 4 which had came through the wate: ae pipe and lodged in the hoi The ee -@ clogged Mle hose, stopping the Mow of N. JORDAN BETTER, | "attr und tie“hose nay burae Mouse Comple Nothing was y Destroyed, from. the house except the di ide, and the lone of the structure and furniture will real 9,000, according to an. getimats by’ Mr a Prowpeoct Hall meeting place of burned two years ago. e story building Was finished only a short time ago and opened to the public two Werks Ago Mr. Kollo is utterly in the oaune of th here Was no toy ay NAD RUNAWAY AMONG SHOPPERS Horse Tears Down Broadway with Hansom Into Busy Four- teenth Street, and Scores in Terror Run for Cover. A POLICEMAN STOPS IT, Whe Fourteenth street was crowded | to-day at the Inneieon hour wivh sl wine and hundreds of podestriang an horse with « hansom caused Hut for the bravery and pres- a panto, mind of Policeman Underwood, Sixteenth Pr t, there might have been a series, Wwagedéen, horse lore past Tiffany's down Broadway at a wild speed, the hansom mwiying from side to aide, the driver having drepped the reins, Hend down and ears back the unmanageable horse plunged bet n two trucks and made for “dead man's curve.” Just as he reached the bend in the street railway Underwood sprang for ward and grabbed tne reins, He war dragged to a apot in front of the Mor ton House, the horde stil madly run-! ning. when & eross-town horae ear nd weet hove in sight, | ¢ driver of the car, seeing’ a collis- Jon unayoldabie, switched his team ove and loft the rails. As he did so Under- Wood was caught between hangsom and Kiveet car and trampled into uncen- sclousness by the horse The shock was #o severe that the | street car, already half upset by run- ning Into a snow Lauk toppled over on Ite side end Jay thore, blocking the road, until a repalr gang arrived There were ouly a few persons In the car at the tim they all scooted Out, escaping any hurt. ‘The driver of the hansom Juckily got away without \ ry But Polleeman Underwood was put in An ambulance after regaining conscious Heam and taken to St. Vincent's ‘Hoa pital. ‘The surgeons there sald he was seriously inj ho danger, Min} body Was with brulses and wounds, | GOT SCRATCHED IN SEUESTORY FALL Harry J. Brady Plunges Down an Elevator Shaft and Es- capes Practically Uninjured. What the physicians at Hudson atreet Hospial consider one of the most re- markable escapen from death that they have Marry J. 2) encguniered appened ady 22t Linden @: nue, Jersey City, this afternoon at % Idapenard street at the building, 0. Brady was working whieh fa being gone sirueted for his father, John D, Brady He way on the seventy floor by the el Vator ehatt, and waa pulling a heay pank across the what, One end «lipped and fell down the shaft, causing Brady fall alno, ‘Lhe plank and man went together down the ehaft to the cellar, a fall of neven stories, Mrady shouted ax he fell, and work- men soon reached him, He wea not uncontelous, GUC an ambulance Lok bim to the Hudson Street Hospital. His Injuries were all found to he euper ficlal. ‘They lated of & slight bruine| on the nose, a alight cut on the knee rear rr | 4 rumbling nolse and ja litle. varing ru ' Es _THE WORLD: SATURDAY EVENING, FEBRUARY 11 | LILLIAN KRAFT AND GEORGE A. ROYAL PRINCE 1S AGAIN DENOUNCED Philip of Saxe-Coburg Gotha, the Husband of Princess Lou- ise of Belgium, Is Accused of Fresh Wickedness. IS WATER ON A DUCK’S BACK. VIENNA, Feb. 21.--Prince Philp of Baxe-Coburg-Gotha has again been de- nounced, Prince Philip Is the husband of Princess Louise, eldest daughter of King Leopold of the Belgians, In a de- bate on the Army hill yesterday Herr Daszyneki, the Polish leader, asserted that Prince Philip forced hia wife to en- courage the attentions of the late Baron Hirach in order that rhe could be in & position to ask the Baron for money. Herr Dassyneki tased his accusations on the @tatemant of the former Keuten- ant of hussars, Gfiatteslich, who was recently released from prison, The Lieu tenant had eloped with Princess Louis and aubrequently served a term in pri on, It was while he was in prison that he made the charges against Prince Philip, wvfter har elopement Princess Loulse was placed tn an insane asylum, but was released Inst June, Prince Philip haa been denounced so often for so many crimes that this lat Accusation will not disturb him. H. ried Princess Louise when she was mn years old, ‘Thix wan in 1875. with him was unbearable. Once he took @ riding whip and pub- licly Taahed her. ‘Phe poor woman, with the marks of, the whip still freah on her face, appearad pefore her royal father and ‘begged that a Myorce be permitted, It was refused. ‘The cruel treatment ac- corded the P: 8 caumed with Ljeut. M Heh. In a duel the Prince was severely wounded by Lieu Mattasiion BELGIAN PRINCESS INSULTED BY NOBLE HUSBAND—SHE LEFT, | { PRINCESS LOUISE OF ANOTHER CAVE-IN ON PARK AVENUE, Occupants of Boarding-House at Thirty-eighth Street Fiee from Breakfast Table to Street When Walls Crack. JURY'S VERDICT FREES DUNCAN, Kentuckian Declared Not Guilty of Shooting Bruce Head, and Divorce Proceedings May Fol- low the Acquittal. THROW TRUNKS OUT WINDOW ‘Tho boarding-house conducted by Mrs, Mary Crawford, at Thirty-eighla street and Park avenue, patronized by persons In easy financial circumstances, started to cave into the subway excavgtions to- day and a panle among the boarders re- sulted. Forty of them were at breakfast when a colored waiter entered the room and atickly anni®unced that a plece of plas- ter nine feet across had fallen from the Kitchen cetling, Imme v there was a stampede for the di At the mame time there was a pereeptivle ck, deseribed the boarders aa a “inking sensation,” thon ne house totterel (real ‘acks shot across the dining- room wallg and the bricea-brac tum- bled. Women rushed to the street or into (hehelways. When the falling building had settled a moment the more hed back to thelr rooms to save what thoy migat. Theew Trunk from Window, In @ few minutes a trunk dropped fram 4 wingow, then a lot of furniture game n, with hind-bags, satvhels and mher receptacles which may have con- Walned. valuables, But most of the boarders vemained in the cold and enow-covered sireets. They Were hatlops and still carried the nap- kins they had taken from the dining- room table. A bak block aw y Building Inspector McGee was at work with a gang of m Oring up the fronts of residences which were slowly sinking into the sub- way, McGee hurried a score of mon to Mrs, Crawford's house and they at once began the worlpof placing beams aguinat the front of the building, The doorstoop had already gone down and the cracks in the front and side of the house indicated that {t was fast sliding through the shale which traverses the | rock rvof of the subway, 1 Must Re Shored, Inppector McGee said that it was plain to him that every house on the east side of Park avenue, between Thirty seventh and Vorty-finst stre whie was not already shored up, would have to be to save them from going into the subway, Every: house in the block between Thirty-seventh and —‘Phirty-eighth atreets, except Mrs Crawford's, showed indications of sinking last apring, and the fronts of several « thom elk down into the tunnel. since | thay have all been shored up, the wreat beams blocking that side of Park avenue, A few w. hevera! houses in the next block north gave way similarly and now they have been helped by great brace them against ihe reat f the Bullding Depart. of the opinion that all the hous that side of the street | would be affected by the Ginnel, as the sivata of xtale ry parallel with the | fronts of the houses and extends the “ the tunnel ord’ boarders remained in beams which f vhs theatre several beams ‘were the. balling and then sta KILLED WHILE AT WORK. 1 Baek 4 W. Perry- Howat Crashed His skull, Patrigkh Galvin, forty years old, ed- and a alght scratca the o! upon aldng hi Comporure 'y taken to his hone, He Was able to w, aed as ver hat made the esoape fro; the mine remarkable war that che sai Wee Of COMED ond ard an @ FOCk, dress unknown, while at work on ferry. boat No. 4 of the D, 1. & W,, at One Hundred and Forty-firat street and Harlem River, Tee, truck on ie heed € ucke: netantiy killed, 18 body wi ved to Or ovens . L 4 Alexay- ak THE CASE WAS A MYSTERY. PITTSBURG, Pa, Fob. %.—Dr, Ellis Dunewn, of Louisville, y., was found not guilty of Ue charge of shooting Bruce Head with felonious intent, The jury rendered a wealed verdict after being out four hows, and when court opened to-day it was read by Judge Frazier, Dr. Duncan was at once discharged from custody, That the verdict was a popular one shown by the fact that when che uncement wax made that the de- fendant had been acquitted it Kreet- ei with cheers and a loud clapping hands. Dr, Duncan was the recipient of many congratulations fre friends and strangers, He had a smile on his face tense relief thar and showed an alr of i pet Fiat e ordeal was over. He sald Tot Gieeaew his family affadrs. and tended to pursue the name policy of si- lonce that he had wlways maintained excop: when compelled to tentify. He eave for home to-nigh “ithe shooting occurred while the prinz here ine vipals were In camp near Oetovers tt created much comment be- cause of the seeming absence of a mo- tive for it. ‘The firat Inkling of the a was made public on the first monly trial here, when Dr. Duncan went e siand and testified to alleged {m- proper conduct on the part of his wife and Bruce Head, who had been a iife- jong friend of the fami A Bath Dr, Duncan and lieed are promi nent Kentuckians, It x understood that Dr, Duncan will now secure a divor and as soon as the legal formailities 4 over Mrs. Duncan will become M MAYOR'S MARSHAL wITS HS. 108, George Whitfield Brown Sends in His Resignation, but Offers No Explanation of His Act. George Whitfield Brown, Mayor's Marehal and Chief of the Bureau of LAconses, has resigned bik office, He sent hin resignation in several days ago, but the Mayor ald not make it known wnlll to-day, No -explan wae given, Ma Low, In acc the resignation, 1, i a letter to Brown: “In mecepting your resignation, In view of the enlargethent and reorgani- tion of the bureau that 1 am desirous thank of bringing about, 1 want to you for your ¢ e attention to the Quties of the office which you have held and to congratulate you upon the creditable resulis obtained in 1902," Vall! Brown's successor fs appointed the Mayor has designated Deputy Mer- riman to take charge, and has difected James B. Reynolds, the Mayor's secre- tary, to exercise a genera) supervision over the office, Mr. Reynolds at once sent for the fifteen policemen attached to the oMfice and iis regular atvaches and held « private falk with each one in the Mayor's private room, ‘The ob- ject of the conference could not be learned, Aw the Mayor did not visit bis oMfce in the Cliy Hall Wo-day, aud as real Brown |eft before -the an- Aincement of his, resignation, the causes leading to it could ugt iw earned er aroma firat bes with the Bureau of Teen e connected les during the adminietration of Mayor BXison, and has d und enue wares ce, Vader ; was n Mayor’ Hal Bave Rone! ig! When ry - He? Low came tah a mast Dy: WL AE TRED |White Pupils Objected to Him, and He Is Accused of Striking One of Them in the Face, Cut- ting His Cheek. HE DENIES THE CHARGE. Charges of gross miscon a ine ompetence will be preferred against John 8, Brown, jr, a colored teacher in Public Schoo: No. 58, in Weet Fifty-see- ond street, beforé the Board of Bduei tion Monday night. Behind the charge ik a story of race prejudice which dis- rupied the school work. Brown is now under suspension. Brown was assigned to the school a Jittle more than two weeks ago, and he had hardly been placed in charge of a class of ten boys when the trouble start- el, The white boys objected ty a negro cher, and it is said they adopted every method intended to give him trou. ble. it Is charged that he struck one white boy on the eh tain ek in a and th ok by the teas J. 8. Taylor, superintendent of/the district, ix authority for the Mt that the ehange will be/made nst Brow He also says that/some- effort to main- ( the blow eut ‘als is sirongly de- discipline ng of the nature of assault will be Included. Every effort {* being made to make out thac been pended had he been a white man, and that race has nothing to do with the case, Brown lives at West Sixty- sixth sireet. For two rs he had Heon in the Customs service, but before that was a public ool teacher and, en instructor in colleges, a STEPPED BEFORE EXPRESS TRAIN Man's Boast that He Would Cross the Track Results in a Horrible Death, Parsengers on the Delaware nnd expremé train that r boken at 12% to-day nd Lack- wohkd Ho- were ‘horrified by tho killing of a man by the train as It essed throug magic. ‘Nhe man's ham and he wus em- a In one wf the caanu- ng concerns that are lopated aear the west end of the tawn, | He how left the factory as the noon i ratte ‘blew lo go home for hin midday ea {Phere were a hundred others with him, | ali Joking and laughing, As they reached. the tracks the gateman liwered the gate and warned toem back, All but Harri- coun heeded the warning. “LM beat it over,” he @ald, and he ran ariund a milk platform ®ullt at the crossing, He stepped from vehind the viatform dircetly In front of the express gine. Hie bidy was tified in the alr and hurled « duindned feet away, torn id mangled beyond recognits ‘The (rain was stopped, and many of the pansengers alighted and ssaw the re- malhs lifted on @ stretcher and removed, The President A Blave to Catarrh, Dr. Agnew's Catarrhal Powder Re~ lieves in 10 Minutes, D. T. Sample, President of Sample's Installment Company, Washington, Pa., f unduly DIONT IDENTIFY ACCUSED NURSES \John O'Gara, Who Made Charges Against Seven Bellevue At- tendants, Fails to Recognize Them at the Hearing. TREATED CRUELLY, HE SAID. The investigation Into the altered eruelties inthe aloohotic ward fn Belle vue Hospital was resumed to-day in ihe library of the Criminal Court. John O'G who, map the changer against the weven hurses, was a witness, Te testified that he was sober when taken to Bellevte Hospital, but admitted he had been drinking. Me said three baths were givep him in addition to the regulation bath, and that the nurses then assaulted him, Under eross-examination by Samuel Untermyer, who represented the trus- tees, O'Gara could not identity any of the seven nurses ‘present at the exam!- pation as the persons who had aseaulted him. At the conclusion of O'Gara‘s texit- mony the prosecution closed its case. ‘The defense then cailod the nurses who are jointly accuse’ of maltreatment of O'Gara, ‘Phey are Charles W. Pritehurd, Edward Riordan and ‘Thomas Sehiey, rses. and ‘Thomes E. Apderson, Olds and Georse G. James Vurses. The night nurses swore 4 gol no baths on the nicht 1 Question, bit slept most of the night testified that the ward was noi nofsy that night. emphatica!! denied attacking O'Gara, and explained er that there were twenty-nine o in the ward and that the p made their usual rounds du night james O'Beirne, a bartender, of M2 Amsterdam avenue, who was a tient jn the Institution at the ti (fied that he serve O'Gara see any attacks or any maltreatment of @ny sort Mire Delano. BS ve ing intendent of the the ol, ehowed by books en different visite sv ard during the night heaving Was Indefinite a CARS ROBBED OF | BRASS FILLINGS, Long Branch Road Victim of Thieves at Point Pleasant, N. J. (Sportal Jo Phe Evening World.) LONG BRANCH, N, J., Feb, 21—A bold railroad robbery took place at Point Pleasant, which is the southern Brown would bave | terminal of the New York and Long Branch Railroad. Pennsylvania train No. 213 brought some passenger coaches) yesterday from Jersey City to Point Pleasant to be used on return train No, 28), bi he coaches were left standing on the siding at the termingJ, and thieves n- 0 of the coaches and stole fifty #8 ventilator hapdies, each one measuring about eight inches and wetgh- ing fuity @ pound. When the crew of No, 250 came to ake taelr train out they found the rs had been rifled, In casex where the handies could nyt pe unscrewed trom thelr sockets, the thleves gave the handles a twiat and broke many of them off close to the sockets. One coach was taken to Jersey City with but two handies ieft in it, while the other one ad but one. writes: “For years 1 was afflicted with Chronic Catarrh, Remedies and treat- ment by specialists only gave me tem- porey relief until | was induced to use ir, Agnew's Catarrhal Powder, Jt gave instant relief.” Heart Cure te for the Moors a Dr, i A aT As ‘House-Hunting Mado. Easy by Reading This “TO RETURN JEWELS Must Surrender Diamonds Vals ued at $1,514 to Man from Whom He Purchased Them Baum muet return thirteen whit> bililiants,. welghing hteen and five-elghths and. om - teenth and one-sixty-fourth chratey esto Isidore Hochberger, or else pay him their value, $1,514.75 ‘And $350 damages keeping them sinee Oct, 5 191, The rdict of the Jury In the case w tied to-day, ‘The sult was brought ough Charles 4, Hoffman to repleyin gems before Judge Haseall inthe Comrt. Hochberger — testiffed that | Seaéph Jacobs and Herman Raum wore painters sind on J@seyrh's representation t he Was worth $18.00, including an $11,000 stock of diamonds and jewelry, And gwed no\man a cant, he aold the lal: ants to’ Baum, accepting fiv> promiac sory notes in payment. entd be, had been unable to collect an the notes sar prevail upon Baam to return the brile linuts. ic Gabe Baum denied tt all and declared he rad paid the dill, fais B04 NO ARGUMENT NEEDED, ° Every £0 ferer from Cata’ Balves, Lotions, Washes, Spre} Douches Do Net Cure. lotions, salves. spreys and) ipo) halers cannot really cure Oatarrh, heomwse this divenne te 2 blood @isase, and. incall, applivations, {f they accomplish. anything a all, simply ive tranalext relief, ‘ ‘The catarrha! poison is in the blood, and the muvous membrane of the nose, throat and trachea tries to relieve the system by secreting lange quantities or mucus, the ischarge sometimes closing up the nostrils, | dropping inio the throat. causing deafpe by closing (he Eustachian tubes, and after @ tume causing catarrh of stanidch or yi throat aud tung troubles. : A remedy to really cure catarrh must Be an internal remedy which will cleanse the | bleod from catarrhd! poison and rémove the fever and congestion from the mucois uti brane. cy abe ‘The best apd most modern’ remediow for this purpose are antivepiics ¥clentifically: known as Red Gum, Hlood Root an@ y=? Grastin, and while each of these has <beew successfully used separately, yet it has beem. dimeult to Ket them all combined iu ou” palatable. convenient and efficient form. 9.7 The manufacturers of the new catarrh cure, Stuart's Catarrh Tablets, bave sue; ceeded admirably in accomplishing this.re- - sult, They are large, pleasant-tasting los enges, to be dissolved in the mouth, thus reaching every pant of the mucous meme brane of the throat, and finally the stomach, Unlike mavy catarrh remedies, Stuart's Catarrh Tableis contain no cocaine, opiate er any injurious drug whatever, and are equally beneficial for Uttle children ep@ adults. Mr. C. R, Rembrandt, of Rochester, N. ¥., fays: “I know of few people who have suf- fered ag much es 1 from Catarrh of the head, throm and stomach. I used npraya, inhalers and powders for months at a time with only light relief, and ha@ no hope of cure, I brd mot the means to make @ chauge of climate, which seemed my only chance of cune. . ‘Last spring I read an account of some remarkable curcs made by Btuart’s Caterrh ‘Tablets, aud promptly bought a fifty-cent box from my druggist, and ebtainel such positive benefit from that one package that I continued to use them daily until I now consider myself entirely free from the aise gusting annoyance of catarrh; my head w clear, my digestion all I could and my hearing, which had begun to fail as a result of the catarrh, has greatly improved, until I feel I can hear ax well as ever. They ary @ household necessity iu my family, Stuart's Catarrh Tablets are sold by driige Riets at {0 cents for complete treatment, and for convpnience, safety and prompt results they are undoubtedly the long looked for’ catarrh cure. ‘i Powders, List of To Lets: «2 COURT ORDERS: HIM. « Ara feral beh Th Beh it if Sa rah Teck nok 1b Daas +e eal n 3% ie B BEGIN TO-MORROW TO oth eS aes eed ) USE 3-TIME RATR, ADVERTISE