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pees Snore ne cuEeReecree ee WRC ROP UTES er ITT, : psy ‘aa WIDOW SECRET Shields the Man Who Caused Death. HUSBAN Get-Rich-Quick Scheme in Missouri. DIES IN HOTEL ROOM. Beautiful Southern Girl's Plight Discovered Too Late for Medical Relief. -Mrs. Blanche Turner Dennis, widow of Major Hugh C. Dennis, for- mer offlzsr in the Canadian volunteer: find’at one time one of the highest aried 1:fe insurance agents in America, Who xrieved himself Bo death after he Was Connected with the get-rich-quick Scandal which resulted in the indictment @nd conviction of United States Senator J. R. Burton, of Kansas, lies dead to- HER GRAVE “Blanche Turner Dennis D WAS MAJOR. Senator Burton’s Associate in | i | PARKER EFLSES TOIAVESTIAT SUPT, KILBURN Judge Writes that if Bank- ing Probe Bill Passed He Would Not Act. ALBANY, N. Y., March 29.—Assem- blyman J. Mayhew Wainwright, chair- man of the Assembly Committee op Banks, to-day received a personal let- ter from former Chief Judge Alton B. Parker in which he makes St clear that j he would not serve as a member of the Proposed special commission to investl- gate the State Banking Department, even if the bill creating such a com- mission should be passed Former Chief Judge Charles Andrews, of Syracuse, the other jurist named for the commission, {s said to be out of the country and has not been heard from as to whether he would serve. The bil! in question was reported by the Senate Finance Committee as a substitute for the concurrent resolution which originated In the Assembly Banks | Committee, providing for a legislative i the investigation of the banking depart- ment. The Assembly resolution Is apparently dead in the Senate Financ» Committee, the Parker-Andrews special commission bill, which has passed the Senate, is believed to be in equally moribund con- dition in the Assembly Ways and Means Committee, This js the bill which Gov. Higgins referred to Tuesday evening when. he said its failure to pass the Assembly would place upon that house the re- sponsibility for the absence of any in- @ay in a bleak room in the rear of an| Vtstigation of the banking department, undertaking establishment at No. Amsterdam avenue. This voung woman of thirty. beautif ot face and figure. came to New York On, Fep. 17, and she ts suposed to have come here to conceal a secret. Mrs. Dennis's husband figured promi- mently in the affairs of St. Lous, especially at the time of the accusations Rept Senator Burton, of Kansas. jor Dennis was President of the Rialto Grain and Securities Company. His testimony was mainly responible for the conviction of Senator Burton, ‘and also resulted in his own indictment, Became a Widow. AN through the sensational trial no mention was made of the beautiful wife @f the grain operator. She was a mere child compared to him. At the time of his death two years ago this coming April she was only twenty-three. Before her marriage Mrs. Dennis was Miss Blanche Tyrnet, a daughter ot the South, and a girl of remarkab: : beauty. {Upon her arrival here on Feb, 17 Mrs. Dennis went to the Hotel Marseilles, 954 of which he declared himself !n favor. ro r THE WORLD: THURSDAY EVENING, MARCH 2%, eee TYPES OF IRISH IMMIGRANTS LANDED TO-DAY. THREE MEN HURT IN FALL FROM FOURTH STOR The Scaffold Gave Way; and the Bricklayers Fell to the Ground. The breaking of a scaffol@ on the fourth floor level of a new building at Ne. 1774 Washington avenue, Borough Qne Hundred and Third street ard|of the Bronx, this afternoon dropped Broadway, She was gowned in the latest style. She seemed to have an unlimited supply of money, and she Yooked the woman of refinement. Once in the hotel Mrs. Dennis kept the | gj Nerself. If she had callers in her room the clerks did not know of them. ‘Mrs. Dennis was taken ill on Feb. 21. Her condition was serious from the time Dr, Kidder, of No. 80 West Forty-sixth Witeet, was callei to treat her. The ‘s physician gaw at once that Mrs, Dennis Was suffering from drugs and an opera- tion of a criminal nature, and she ad- mitted that she had administered to herself. Was Called Too Late. Dr. Kidder treated her for some days. Ho used heroic methods, but no tm- provement was shown and he called in Dr. Helmuth, of No. 26 East Sixty-sev- enth street. Mrs. Dennis failed to rally under the treatment of the two phys!- cians, and last night it was plain to both of them that she was dying. she | f — to @ room on the seventh | ing planks flying in all directions. One three _bricklayers—Edward Johnson, | Simon Martin and John Clausen—to a pile of lumber on the sidewalk. They landed on the lumber all together, send- | of the planks struck Andrew Walcott, | ix years old, of No. 1776 Washington} avenue, and fractured his skull, The chances are against his recovery. Murtin's right ‘hip was fractured and he sustained internal injuries, Clausen {s suffering from concussion of the brain and internal injuries. Johnson, Who appears_to have landed _on_top of his companions, escaped without a ‘atch and was able to walk home. The other two men were sent to Ford- ham Hospital. Policeman Hopp, of the Morrisania tation, placed Charles Engelhardt, the reman of the job, under arrest on a rge of criminal carelessness. En- uardt sald that the scaffolding was secure enough, but that one of the men probably stepped on the rdze of a plank, aI through and dragged the others with him. ———_ Blood pylsoning had reached an ad-| BIGGEST RUSH vanced ntage. ‘The physicians communicated with Dr. Shrady, the Coroner, and asked that he come to the hotel at once. The Coroner found Mrs. Dennis in great agony. Opiates were administered in efforts to Felieye her, but they were of little use. All the while the Coroner stood over ner béd, endeavoring to get a statement from the dying woman. Took Secret to Grave. If there had been a time when she could make such a statement she would not talk. She stemed to want to dic with her secret. Corener Schrady communicated with the police of the West One Hundredth Street sation, He said that a woman Was Ayilig at the Hotel Marseilles from 4n Megal operation, and asked that the Police be sént to him at once. Detec- tives Horan and Kessler arrived at the hotel, to be told by the clerks that they would not be admitted to the wpartments of Mrs. Dennis. “She has two reputable physicians with her,” the detectives were informed, “and you can’t go up.” ‘The detectives insisted, and there was @bout to be a scene when the Coroner Pppedred and informed the detectives: ‘Mrs. Dennis has just died. She diced 4m agony ond did not make a statement, I do nor believe that the two physicians know any more than I do." The body of the young woman was then taken from the hotel to the under- taking establishment. A despatch from Bt. Louis says that Dennis was Blenche Turner, a Deautiful Southern girl, before she mar- vied the army officer, An autopsy will be held on the body to-day. Coroner Shrady took charge of the dead woman's effects. In her trunks @re believed to be letters which will tell of @ St. Louis scandal. a MOTORMAN IS SET FREE. Coroner's Jury Blamed O'Connor for Woman's Death—Grand Jary Did ‘he Grand Jury to-day dismissed the ‘eharge of manslaughter against Michel O'Connor, motorman of a Broadway ear witch ran down and Killed rs. Mary Greenbaum in front of the Hiotel Bartholdi on Feb. 3, ‘O'Connor was held responsible for baum's death by a coroner's | *®W4y from th ‘al Seep. “Sage O'Wullvan: discharged the | eran, fet, omy hey motorman from custody, +s OF IMMIGRANTS EVER RECORDED. (Continued from First Page.) taken to Hoffman's Island because of 1 peculiar rash that developed among them, ‘The small-pox patient on the Rhein had been in the hospital nine days, 80 the detention of the others will be brief unless new cases develop, There were 2,999 third-class passengers on thie vessel and 2,687 on the Hamburg boat, . Though the weather during the trip was good, there were four deaths aboard the Graf Waldersee. A boy of sixteen died of heart disease on March 21, while the first and second cabin pas- sengers were engaged in a festive cele- bration of Capt. Atbert Krech's fifty- sixth birthday. The boy collapsed on the forecastle deck and died before the ship surgeons, Dr. M. Sandhetmer and Dr. G, Tlumenstock, could get to him. He was Strabeslof Gaykofek!, a steer- age passenger, and his body was buried at sea, Three Bables Die. On the following day a nine-months- old infant died in the steerage showing the peculiar rash, which became almost epidemic in the third-<class compart- ments, Three days later an elght- months-old child died with similar symptoms, On the same day a boy was born In the steerage. This infant was christened Adelbert Koester, Capt. Krech acting as godfather. A few hours later he pre- sided at another ceremony, when the Uny body was dropped into the sea. ‘The passengers were all greatly inter- ted in the birth of the baby, and a enerous collection was contributed to he bereaved mother, Seldom ve ocean travellers had the opportuni witness and take part in Such an exciting race as the Walderseo and Rhein made of thelr passage from the Lizard to Sandy Hook. Both boat left thelr German ports on the seven: teenth. and were almost abreast off th Lisard. ‘Then thelr bands saluted with martial aire, and the oaptaina decided on a race across the Atlantic, and the boats rected off the knots at @ pace that furnished a week of thrill, Wae a Thrilling Race. On March 21 the Rhein began to draw & t y. dersee, and when gpa ice then said some’ tube to wn the i et LIVELY BLAZE PUT SHOPPERS IN QUICK PANIC Women in Dry Goods District Alarmed by Fire in Shoe Store. At an hour this afternoon when the shopping district around Twenty-third street and Sixth avenue was thronged with women fire sprung up in the sec- ond floor of the L. M, Hirsch shoe storé, at No. 404 Sixth avenue, driving men and women from the place in a | panicky rush. ‘The blaze, which haa been smoulder- tng beneath the flooring on the second floor, seemed to envelop the entire upper part of the three-story building in one explosive burst of flame, rvlling out great clouds of smoke into the street. There were only a few workmen on the floor above where the fire started, and they got down safely on the fire escapes. The rush from the lower floors occasioned a jam, and for a time the strett rang with the screams of women and shouts of men. Deputy Ghief Ross, of the Fire De- partment, happened to be passing at the time, and he got the fire apparatus to the scene on the Jump. Though the blaze had good headway, it was con-| fined to the upper floors of the shoe store, doing about $3,000 damage. HE DIVED THROUGH GLASS TD ESCAPE Trapped Flatbush Burglar Lands in Flower Bed and Gets Away. Henry Schwartz, a private watchman fn South MifwooJ, Flatbush, saw a light in the residence of Albert 8. Mudgett, at No. 608 East Twenty-sec- ond street last night and started to in- investigate, As the stepped on the front porch he heard @ crash of breaking glass in the rear, Running around the house he saw a man disappearing over @ fence into an adjoining yard. Schwartz fired five shots at the fugitive without effect and the man escap‘d, Mr. Mudgett and his family are away from the city. ‘Dae burgiar entered the house and had thoroughly ransacked it when discovered by Schwartz. In es- cuplng he dived through a window in the kitchen and ianded in a flower-bed ten feet below. The soft earch broke his fall, Before vaulting the fence he threw away his hat and coat. The coat pockets were full of Jewelry stolen, supposed, from the Mudgett resi- the engine-room staff and the shafts began tw revolye with mighty energ). By dhwn of the 28d the Hamourg boal had picked up the Rhein again. All the cabin passengers and hun- dreds from the steerage swarmed on the deck of the Waldersee and cheered, The bands of both vessels were at tue inside rails, the Waldersee’s musicians in playing, "Scheiden thut Weh,” or, Engush, “The Parting Gives Us Pal But the Bremen liner did not long take the Waldersee’s wake, Her skip- per went down to the engine room And spoke German words of fourteen syllables. The stokers got busy, the oilers were prodigal, and when after- noon me the Rhein was crawling up on the Waldersee. ‘Again aa the big steam-Ariven sea mon- sters drew abreast thelr bands pvlaved tnunting airs and the passengers sank mighty choruses late into the night. The racers see-eawed back and forth until the 24th, when the. Rhein made @ spurt and ran uway down the path of the getting sun, her band playing "Give My Regards to Broadway.” On March 25 both ships were enveloped in @ fom and id not semak each other again until yesterday, when the Khein wan leading by a mile,. She cleared the Sanfy Hook bar twenty minutes in ad- vance of the Walderses, MAS, KERNOCHAN NOT 70 MARRY YOUNG FORSTER No Engagement Ever Ex- isted, Says Young Wom- an’s Mother-in-Law. That Mrs. James L. Kernochan, widow of the late ‘Jimmy’ Kerno- chan, gentleman jockey and huntsman, was never engaged to John H. Forster, “THuntsma) of the Meadow Brook Hunt Club, was the announcement made for the first time to-day by her mother-in-law, Mrs. James P, Kerno- chan, of No. 8% Fifth avenue, Those who are familiar with the hunting set of Long Island say that this marks the end of what was generally considered to be the charming romance of the pretty young widow. Forster. was a young Englishman who came over from England as a protege of Peter F. Collier. He was a younger son of a Leicestershire family of limited means, and for his benefit. the Meadowbrook Huat Club created the position of Huntsman, with a salary of $12 a month and other perquisites. He had full charge of the pack, and was by no means a servant, being ad- mitted to membership and having his club dues remitted in consideration of his services, He was known to be without funds, but was soon popular with the Long Island set. it was this knowledge of his finan- ctal condition that led to the liveliest speculation. At one time it was said the elder Mrs. Kernochan would be pleased if her daughter-in-law should marry the Huntsman and would in- crease her income from {ts present figure, $14,000. to at least $70,000 a year. Then the tide of comment and rumor took another curn, It had not changed up to to-day when the romance was declared off. It was sald that the elder Mrs, Kernochan would disinherlt her daughter-in-law if the young woman married Forster. The eldor Mrs. Ker- nochan denied thte at the time, but the story was persistent. ‘That she did not view her daughter-In- law's suitor with favor Was evident to-day when she sald to an Evening vorld reporter: P Werlgon't care to hear that man's name mentioned. I never met him; never saw fim. He sailed for England two months go. I do not want to talk of him, Raked if the engagement had been dis- solved, she sald: Phere never was an engagement, I have always said there never was, This qan has gone away, and I don't know wish to continue talking about him IN PANIC AT FIREWORKS EXPLOSION. NEWARK, N. J. March 29.—Irwin nineteen yeans old, of No. ivenue, was provably fatally in- jured this ‘afternoon by an explosion In Bernard Wollf's fireworks factory, on the meadows, His arm was blown off and his skull fractured. His clothing was torn to shreds. Part of the building was blown up and several girls and men who were ut work in the place fled in panic. All of these ped injury ———————— LEARNS TO BE FIREMAN. Worcenter'’s Deputy Chief Comes Here to Study im the Ranks, Deputy Chief Avery of the Fire De- partment of Worcester, Maas., will en- ter the Fire School of Instruction here to-morrow and take the course for pro- Permission for this Fire Commissto O'Brien at the request of Chief Col mai of the Worcester Depariment. Later Mr. Avery ia to be assigned to one of the down town companies, where he will have plenty of experience. He is fitting himself to wee @ School ot patruction on similar lines in Wor- cester, GRL'S AREST DUE 10 WHST AND WHISKEY “There’s a Lot of Drink- ing at Bridge Parties,’ She Tells Court. “It was bridge whist, Judge,” said Beatrice Morton, stunningly cowned and handsome, explaining to Wuhie in the West Side Court to-day her arrest as she staggered down the steps of St. Raphael's Church, at For- tieth street and Tenth avenue, last night. “Uhave for the past three weeks bean playing bridge whist every afternoon. You have not the least idea how much whiskey and wine women drink at these gatherings. The: spirit of gambilng is in the air and it demands a drug ¢o quiet the nerves during the play. “Afterward the effects begin to be felt. I left my friend's house and thought 1 was going to my carriage. In some way I became lost and went into the church in my fear that some- body would see me, for I knew I was in no condition to be alone. I cannot give my address, because it would ruin me if anybody should know of this, The girl was discharged with a rep- rimand after promising to mend her ways. BROKER ARRESTED ON LARCENY CHARGE Harry H. Hoyt, Who Went Into Bankruptcy, Accused by a Customer. Many investors tn Brooklyn are in+ terested in the case 9 Hanny H. Hoyt. who, under the firm name of Harry H. Hoyt & Co., reecived large fuma of money for investment, later going into bankruptoy. He 1s under $2,500 cash bail to-day following his arrest on an order fssued by Supreme Court Jur- tice Sutherland fn the actlon brought against him for the recovery of . $2,200 by James Herbert Ivins, a dentist of No. 143 Lawrence street, Brooklyn, Ivins alleges that he deposited the money with Hoyt for investment and that when he ited to withdraw his account, he found that Hoyt had en- tered a’ peiition in bankruptcy, Most interesting in the case ace the affidavits secured from clerks formerly in the iMloy of HON AC OAVINS, th = cording to Ivins's counsel. indicate that Hoyt was running a bucket shop, Hoyt had an office in tre Temple Bar Building, Brooklyn, and at one_ time maintained a branch at No, 44 Broad- way, Manhattan. He formerly had seat’ on the Consolidated Exohange, but sold it before the bankruptcy proceed- ings. |He ves at No. 300 Union street, Brooklyn, where he was arrested. VON BUELOW DENIES BREAK WITH KAISER. BERLIN,; March 20,—Chancellor von Buelow during a speech in the Reichs- tag to-day on the hecessity for sepa- rating the colonial from the foreign policy by creating a Secretaryship of the golonies said: |"Phe rumors of a ‘Chancellor ctisi of which you have heard, are. just 2% foolish as those. imputing ‘personal ma- tives to the parties In this House.” COLUMBIA’S STADIUM BILL PASSES SENATE. (Special to'The ving World) ALBANY, March 2%.—Senator Page's bill to extend Riverside Park, so. ps to permit the construction of an ‘ath- letio Hele 905 ates on the North River Univeraity: ased by the Senate to-day, Magistrate | LITTLE MOTHER WAS A HEROINE IN FLAT FIRE Children Locked In While Parent Went to Tele- phone for Doctor. “You nurse Sammie while I go for | the doctor,” sald Mrs. Millle Sabin to five-year-old daughter Hannah as | she left her apartment at No, 774 East | One Hundred ana Fifty-seventh street. | 4, And: Joseph, you must be a good boy | til mamma comes back," she said to her three-year-old son.” “Maybe I shall bring some candy," she called to the children as she locked the door and hurried downstairs to tell her doctor over the telephone that one- year-old Sammie had the measles, Joseph had just gotten over them. She went to the corner drug store and called up Dr. Druskin, of No. 214 East Broadway, and had just finished her tale of the new misfortune in her little flock when a fire bell in the street made her drop the receiver. ‘Where is the fire?’ she oried, run- ning from the drug store. Sae had al- ways had a dread of fire, She saw a crowd gathering at the Goor of No. children in their arms and clinging to their skirts were tumbling into the street. ‘The fire-escapes were filling. And up on the third floor at her own windows she saw a curl of smoke. } “Oh, Mrs, Sabin, it is a fire in your { rooms," several women shouted, | “My Kinder! My kinder!” cried Mra, Sabin frantically as she ran upstairs, So great was her excitement she could not find the keyhole, ‘The janitress had | to go to her rescue. When the door swung open a cloud of smoke swept out {and Mrs. Sabin swooned. She thought her family had peen annihilated. The janitress dragged her back to the hall window, When the Janitress ran back to the door she was amazed to find little Han- ah staggering out under the burden of Sammie's helpless form and with Joseph tugging at her frock. ‘The janitress snatched them up and carried them back to the window, where she dropped them alongside the prostrate form of thelr mother, “Mummy! mummy!" they yelled. It was the first time they had thought of being afraid. ‘They thought some- thing terrible had happened to their mother because she was so still. Wher Mrs. Sabin opened her eyes ana foun: them wailing over her she became hys- terical with joy. The firemen had trou- ble getting her out of the building. The firemen made short work of the fire, and then the captain went down to interview the family In the hope of finding out how it all “happened, “it was Joey who did it,” said Han- noh, “When mummy went, out Joey got some matches and set fire to the settee, I took Sammie ffom the bed ‘and tried to get out, but the door was locked. ‘The neighbors surrounded little Htan- nah and told her how brave she had been and what a fine little girl she was, Little Joey was not interested. He cast furtive glances at hia mummy and seemed to be trying igure out what was coming to him and just how he would get it, Mummy .said pop would attend to him. TOMPKINS TOO LATE WITH ‘YELLOW DOG’ BILL ALBANY, March 29,4Assemblyman Tompkins this afternnon a/tempted to hand up a resolution to investigate Andy Hamilton and.the ‘Yellow Dog’? fund, but Speaker Wadsworth ruled that the resolution could not under the rules be offered at this lale day, It was accordingly returned to the As+ semblyman. ‘The reslution provided for continu- ing the Armstrong Committee one year for the purpose of findmg out where 4jthe “Yellow dog" moneys went. EXPLOSION KILLS 250. Japanese Cor Miners Lose Liv in Takashima, / TOKIO, March 29.—By an explosion orci pier Frantic women with} VAIN HUNT FOR FIFTH AVENUE PORCH CLIMBER Army of Detectives After Man Who Stole $25,- 000 in Five Days. The clever burglar who has broken into six houses in the aristocratie quar- ter about Washington square and Fifth avenue and stolen more than $26,000 worth of jewelry and silverware in the last five days is still uncaught. Inspec- tor McLaughlin hints that although he has more detectives than he cares to mention on the job they have discov- ered nothing except that the man is a prince of porch climbers. When the inspector was asked to-day ax to developments, he shook his head and sal “This 1s one of the really good men in the business. We'll get him in time, and when we do it's likely he'll prove to be a man of education. He probably works alone, xeeps away from women and doesn't teu: his business to any@ody. ‘That's why he’s so successful. He re- minds me very much of Frank Davis, who back in 1893 turned a lot of good tricks in the swell houses along Fifth faventle and adjoining streets between ‘Twentieth and Sixtieth streets. He was A man of education and said he had Ohce attended a famous college in Ire- land. “He was just such a worker as this fellow who's been doing the Washing- ton Square houses. In fact, the re- semblance was so strong that yester- day 1 looked up Davis's record to see whether he might not bave been dis- charged and once more on the job. I found that he is in Dannemora serv- ing out his twenty-four-year sentence that won't expire till 1921. So there's another clever burglar who's got to be sent up to keep nim company.” The Frank Davis to whom the In- Spector referred kept up his work for More than six months, breaking into houses and getting away safely, some- times for three and four nights in suc- cession. At last Inspector McLaughlin detatied thirty-one detectives to look for him. They were as thick as cops in Chinatown, for they kept within his chosen field, bounded east and west by Sixth and Park avenues and stretching only thirty blocks north and south. He was finally arrested while mak! his escape from Detective-Sergeants Heard nd Price after breaking into the resi- dence of Arthur B. Bast Fifty-fifth street, eee ‘ he entered were Amcog: the places ie residesces of Bradle: fartin. Charles Lanier and George Rives ie tested all ailver and gold with acids before bothering to take it away, and in his little room on Chatham square, had a crucible where he melted up che metal and extracted gems from their nettings. In this way he was able to dispose of his stuff without trouble. He worked alone and had no intimates. A year after he went ¢o prison he was removed to the Matteawan Asylum while shamming insanity. In 1894, with four other desperate men he escaped, but was captured a few days later. SHANGHAI FIRE CHIEF CALLS ON CROKER. Mr. Bidwell Looks Over Apparatus Here and Watches Fire- men Drill, Gordon 8. V. Bidwell, Chiet of the Fire Department of Shanghaf, China, who has been spending a six weeks’ leave of absence visiting the large citibs of this country, studying firefighting methods, visited Chief gear toa Croker at Fire rr, Bidwel ed over the apparatus there and. watched the Drasutionary firemen going through their drills. NATAL MINISTRY POLICE ASKED. ° TO FIND THREE MISSING MEN One, an Ironworker, Had Left Home to Work on Non-Union Job. ‘Three mysterious disappearances, tn ‘one of which foul play is suspected, were reported at Police Headquarters within an hour this afternoon, Mrs. Teresa McGinniss, of No. 104 Front street, Brooklyn, asked Sergt. Sut- livan to afd in finding some trace of aer husband, John D, McGinniss, a member of the Ironworkers’ Union, who }left home on March 2% to go to work on a non-union job. Nothing has been heard of him since and his wife and friends fear he has met with violence, EB. F. Burnett, of No, 1 Broadway, general agent of the Western Passen- ger Agents’ Association, reported that Frederick M. Kahil, of No. 67 Lexington had yanfshed, “Burnett said accounts were straight, and ag to have been married on Easter his disappearance was doubly Kahil's fiancee accompanted Mrs. Mary Fitzgerald gaid her hus- band, James F. Fitzgerald, a dealer in produce, left their home, No, 233 Varick street, on March 5 to go to Hoboken on business. Nothing has been heard of him since, Just before his departure he gave his wife all of his previous week's earnings All good dealers sell Armour’s Extract Ff Beef There are a few-who-will offer you “Just as good, without the label.” But, remember, there isn’tany Armour’s—narany “just as good”—without the Armour label. Sold by all druggists and grocers. IARMOUR & COMPANY, Chicago HOLZWASSER Grand Rapids Furniture; Open Every Evening Until 9 o’Clock, 10 1. discount alto ‘ cash purchases ‘during’ March, oS LIBERAL CREDIT Our terms state, New Jersey and Connectical If you purchase Furniture, Carpets, Qc. © nounting to #50 Worth, $5.00 Down, $1.00 per Week Ti) SICAL ae eo $100 ** 10.09 “* 2.00 #150 15.00 2.23 $200 20.00 “ 2.50 * $300 30,00 matt 1) Sethe} Accounts up te $10,000 by-special RESIGNS IN A BODY. PIETERMARITZBURG, Natal. March 2%—The fnterference of the Colonial Office in London with matters in which the Natnl Government considers to be outsile the Imperial Government's jur- isictlon led to-day to the resignation of the Ministry headed by Charles John Smythe. ‘The latter had confirmed the death sentence imposed on twelve natives who took part in the murder of police- men duriag the recent uprising in this 1 colony. Winston Churchill, Under sec- retary of State for the Colonies, cabled to Premier Smythe ordering a ‘suspen- sion of the executloins pending the Home Government's consideration of tho sentences, The Premier curtly_re- fused to do 80, whereupon the Gov-| ernor, Sir Henry MeCuliom, under let- ters patent, postponed the executions Thereupon the Minietry Immediately re- iene COD LIVER OIL, It almost makes you sick to think of it, but it isn’t nearly as bad as it used to be. The improved method of refining it makes it much easier to take, and when made into Scott’s Emulsion al- most every one can take it. Most children like it and all children that are not robust are benefited by it. When the doctor says “Take cod liver! oil,” he generally means) Scott’s Emulsion; ask him if he doesn’t. They; know it is more easily} digested and better than the plain oil. scot & bb writ, 48) Pla BL, New York, ‘ arrangement. BELWEEN BOLH AND S18f BTR | vor ntand ” whobebensenees, RL rent—Sold at we PENNY. A AL kt PRO! “ SERA ‘OR THURSDAY. Pr F4BARCI COR WEST. baa pried atcacs Rapway's | .BADY Stas 3% Ores Belaticn, Sy BUSINGSS OPPORTUNITIES, OOOO On ae pe amen ee ¥ for gale fi HAND EAUNDRY 1 lea ln ropelyay. yeasonay| bt LOST, FOUND AND REWARDS. 85 ROWARD for return, of, any, Rte LAUNDRY WAN Marne 2% gate