■.» , • j! • ;T 2 ' «•*' :• * - ' ’ . S * • ' ’ ' . Terrible M«U| it Hsay Folnte. The floods of the Mississippi valley and its tributaries continues to grow apace. Millions of dollars worth of property have been destroyed and mil lions more must be swept away before the waters recede. Hundreds of lives have been sacrificed and at least three hundred thousand people have been rendered homeless. The governors of Mississippi, Arkansas, Alabama, Ten nessee, Kentucky, Louisiana, Missouri, Kansas, the Dakotas, Nebraska and Minnesota are receiving funds for the *mfortunates in distress. Secretary of War Alger has forward ed all the available tents in the de partment to the flooded districts, but these will be Inadequate. He has also ordered the expenditure of 950,000 cash to relieve the sufferings of homeless citizens and .their families. This is the first time that the war department has ever felt called upon to spend cash to relieve want outside of the regular ar my.* ; V -• ' * _if u OrMUSUt. Xlssn Being Swept Away. One-third of Oreenville, Miss., Is a desert of "water, a scene of desolation Impossible to describe. The water is in nearly 200 houses and Is kept out of the scores in the heart of the town only by the protection so timely thrown up by the citizens to stop its destructive progress. Mgll goes and'* cornea ItyasMffa, doctors visit their patlsitath skiffs, social visits are made In sknsytand skiffs are property equal almost, Ul vrflue to what the mule was a tew days ago. The water is deepest In the extreme northern limits, where it has reached a depth of about seven feet. From this point it sho^; % grad ual'decline. New ToWn; Miss., a' Very thickly built,Strict, peopled almost entirely, by negroes, U under water, the depth ranging from a few Inches to five feet. The Bells Air, t'wUch contains many pretty 'hmties and was beautiful with; green, lawns and blooming shrubs. Is a Venice,’and the only means the peo ple ‘0HRM of leaving- or returning * t& their Iwtmes is by boats, which are numerous and various. The watpr is not as high as in 1890, but will soon reach and pass that mark. Oreenville itself Is a city of refugees of from 15, 000 to 20,000 souls. Relief boats from the Interior are bringing in nearly ev ery hoqr loads of destitute flood suffer ers suddenly Caught by the waters and drlvep brum their homes. Hundreds' and thousands of head of stock are being driven in from every direction. The back water from four crevices la pouring In fearful floods svery hour, . and the'Situation Is growing rapidly worse. xAt Htfena, Miss., the river is •till rising; at'at, Louis, Miss., it Is wising, and $e Arkansas is threatening to rise ima few days. Business men sue bluC bur try to keep cheerful. The worst hatfnot yet .reached the Yazoo {Mississippi Delta, and the half of Its tale of wpe hpanot been told. As soon as the different towns and cities al ready submerged are reached by boat parties from Oreenville and as soon as the remote districts and planta tions can he heard from, there will be enough tii sadden the. hearts of those far spay who are now eagerly wait ing for news and hoping agalnat hope. V Baporter Gtlkwlii Mam - The Post-Dispatch correspondent wont by skiff from here to ell points possible by water In a radius of fifteen miles In every direction from this city, ways a telegram from Greenville, Miss. It was a common sight to eee rabbits or domestic fowls floating on drift* wood, deer on little Islands here and there above the water, and the starv ing creatures do not now fear the ap proach of man. In one Instance a ne gross was calmly smoking a pipe on the root of a log oabin, while a stream of waiter was running through the doors of her hut nearly up to the eaves of the roof. “What are you doing there, aunty?” we halloed. "lie watered in,” came the response. ‘ Would you like us to take you lnT* we offered. “No, sab; 1*11 be skilled out terect ly." Plaintive howllngs of dogs, cack ling of poultry and squealing of pigs keep tbe woods alive, and graphic scenes and incidents crowd upon the sight at every turn. There are dead carcasses floating In the water, frag ments of houses and articles of housed bold furniture of every kind. P. S.—A later dispatch says that Oreenvllle has been swept away. Big Break at Flower Lake. Another disastrous break In the Mis sissippi levee occurred Sunday morn ing at 8 o’clock at Flower Lake, six miles below Tunica, Miss. The cre vasse. while not yet of great width, Is fully fifteen feet deep and the water Is pouring through the opening with fearful velocity. This will probably be the most destructive break that has occurred in tbe delta. The most fertile farm lands of Mississippi, lying In Coa homa, La Flore,' Quitman and Talla Half a hundred towns stand In six feet of water and the yellow stream is creeping up slowly but surely. Utn at Balsas, Ark.. Gives Way. Advices received tell of a break In the levee two miles south of Helena, Ark. This is the levee for which the people of Southeastern Arkansas have made such a desperate fight. The wa ters from this break flood a great area and back up into the streets of Helena. The relief steamer Ora Lee has ar rived at Marianna, Ark., having made an expedition up the St Francis River. There were on board 160 refugees and 200 head of cattle. The steamer went up the St Francis River as far as Cut Off, and then worked her way down stream, rescuing people from perilous positions. The suffering along the St. Francis River is appalling. The wa ter throughout the ontire neighboring country is from six to fifteen feet deep. The relief boat had on board the body of Mrs. McMain of Raggio City. The body was found at Raggio and it was taken to Marianna for burial; there being no land at the former place on which to give it interment The St. Francis is rising from three to -five inches daily. At points below Vicksburg the river to rising. It is the general opinion of old river men here if the levees below Vicksburg hold the great volume of water in its regular channel it will be little short of a miracle. m Gov. McLaurln, of Mississippi, con tinues to make diligent inquiry touch ing destitute flood sufferers. He will perhaps be compelled to state to Sec retary of War Alger that the amount of 110,000 mentioned in bis telegram will be wholly Inadequate to alleviate the want and suffering. Hon. J. W. Cutrer of Coahoma, a member of the Yazoo-MIsstsalippl levee district, states that he does not expect the waters to abate before May IS. Middlesboro, Ky., is again flooded. The water is four Inches higher than in the flood five weeks ago. Most of the stores in Cumberland avenue are flood ed. Sixty-flve families have been 5 -Mu .i-? ;,A STREET SCENE AT ANOKA, MINNESOTA. ' * *. *t„ - • It is likely to do great damage. Bridges are gone in many places and boats are 4n demand In the vicinity ot the depot and the railroad yards. Rain has been > falling steadily for a week, making, country roads Impassable and keeping farmers off their fields. Every record since that of 1849 has been broken by the Mississippi at Anoka, Minn. Fireman’s grove Is filled with water and the Rum river dam is expected to go out. Millions of feet of logs are floating down the river. North of Anoka millions of acres of farms are under from two to six feet of water and there are grave doubts as to whether or not it can be seeded this spring. River men tonight say that there will be a further rise here of at least six feet. The Jim River Overflows. The Jim river is creating general LEAVING THE OLD HOME TO TAKE REFUGE IN THE HILLS. hntchie Counties, in the northern pert of the stnte are inundated, end the newly; planted corn ^rqpe will be laid In 'waste, ' No loss of life is reported, the in habitants sof this stricken section hav ing made preparations tor just such a catastrophe as exists there. The con dition o( the poorer classes throughout fie flooded area is indeed critical. housands of refugees are huddled on levees and spots of land waltlpg tor re lief. The towns of Rosedale and Tun ica report that everything, possible is being done for these poor people, hot that funds and provisions are last be coming exhausted. In the little city of Rosedale alone 1,800 refugees are' being cared for by the ettisens. p% :■£** -; * A NEWSPAPER CORRESPONDENT NEAR GREENVILLE. washed out. Three hundred people are ted by the city. Boats are plying on the principal streets. At PinevlUe the Cumberland river is rising three feet per hour. West PinevlUe is under wa ter. TJ»e Clinch and Powell Rivers arc flooding the entire country. On the Vppw Mississippi. The upper Mississippi continues to boom, the gauge showing eighteen feet above low water mark. It has been raining constantly for twelve hours. Dispatches from Aitkin, Sauk Rapids, St. Cloud and Little Falls indicate that the river is still rising rapidly and that all records are likely to be broken at St. Paul within the next forty-eight hours. The levee at James street, that city, broke at 3 o’clock Sunday after noon, sending the water all over that part of the cRy with a rush. The flood | encroached into the freighthouse of the Chicago, Milwaukee ft St. Paul road. The Diamond Jo passenger station i3 lu danger Of floating away, and a force of men are busy tying it to the bank. Several of the manufacturing concerns on the west side have been, obliged to shut down because water put their fires out. TL. relief societies of St. Paul are busy extending buccot to the suffering. The number of people who have been forced to leave their homes is about 1,200. The water east of State street has become so deep that several houses have floated from their foundations. Logs to the value of about 360,000 float ed down the river Sunday. Flood* In Minnesota. Ortonvllle, Minn., has been complete ly cut off from communication with the outside world. A train cannot go 20 miles from this city in any direction. Lac Qui Parle lake, Minnesota river. Big Stone lake and Lake Tr; .aa form one vast sea. The lake and riv er are merged into one, rising at the rate of half an inch an hour. A heavy northwest gale is driving the ice,which is yet a compact and solid mass, out of Big Stone lake into the overflowed bottoms of the Minnesota river, where havoc with railroads in the valley east of Yankton, S. D. The water is a foot higher and threatens to take out bridges and tracks, as the approaches at both ends of the bridges are cut ting badly. Three miles and over of track of the Great Northern, Milwau kee and Northwestern railroads is now completely disabled,thus cutting Yank ton oft from, the outside world. Farm ers In the bottoms are moving out with boats. Word was received ask ing for Immediate assistance, and men and boats are departing tor the flooded district The water still continues to rise at Yankton. The Ice is broken at Grand Forks, N. D., and trouble is ex pected fron that source. Basements in Third street stores are cleared of all goods. Above Grand Forks the ice la still solid. Between there and Fish er a long trestle on the Great Northern went out Sunday. It'wlll require a week after the water has gone down to impair this line. Railway Station Floating Away. A special dispatch from Trenton, Mo., Bays: Grand river is still coming up and the bottoms are completely under water, causing much damage. Wel don bridge, four miles north, was washed out, and considerable timber of the Quincy, Omaha and Kansas City railway extension has been lost. The base ball park is completely sub merged. Mr. Winslow, manager of the water works, has received a tele phone message from the power station that the water was running in through the walls, and that if the flood was any higher tomorrow the men would have to vacate, leaving the city without any water supply. Six young men on horse back attempted to cross the bottoms west of the town today and were swept from their animals. Three got safely to land; the other three floated down stream and were rescued from the tree tops. i The Floods Barocci In Iowa. A dispatch from Sioux City, la., says: Residents of the Floyd river bottoms here are again flying to higher ground. At Merrill, James andkHinton, points' above Sioux City, the stream is out of its banks and flooding the val ley. Here the bank is higher and a three foot rise will be necessary before the floods of a fortnight ago can be repeated. The rise still progresses, however, at the rate of two or three inches an hour. Burlington, la., telegram: A huge landslide fell from the water soaked bluff between Burlington and Fort Madison, covering the Burlington rail road track ten feet deep with clay, rocks and trees. All traffic was stalled for several hours until a big gang of workers could clear the track. There have been a dozen bad landslides in this vicinity the past week on account of heavy rains. Alton, 111., telegram: Two feet more of water will stop trains on the Bluff Line, St. Louis, Chicago and St. Paul, but if the weather remains clear it may not go that high. Several ex tra crews of men were busy today pil ing in rock to hold the weak places in the embankment, where the waves threatened to wash out the track. Dubuque, la., special: The river reg isters twelve feet above low water mark, a rise of half a foot today. The water Is now within three feet of the danger line. Special telegrams from points In South Dakota, Iowa and Nebraska bring word of Increased floods in all the rivers. Rain has fallen almost in cessantly for seventy-two hours over an area of more than 100 miles in radi us from Omaha, the fall being fully four Inches for that time. This has greatly increased the volume of water in the already swollen streams. Thou sands of acres of farm land are un der from four to six feet of running water, and many families have moved from homes In boats. Of the 10,000 car-loads off oranges that wjll be marketed in California next season fully 6,000 will be navels. A BREAK IN TUE LEVEE NEAR MEMPHIS. Spring Humors Those unsightly eruptions, painful boils, annoy* Jg Ing pimples and other affections, which appear so ^ generally at this season, make the use of that grand Spring Medicine, Hood's Sarsaparilla, a necessity. Take Hood's Sarsaparilla now. It will do you wonderful good. It will purify your blood, glye you an appetite, tone your nerves* strengthen your stomach, and cure all Spring humors. Be sure to get only Hood’s.; Hood's Sarsaparilla [s sow by all druggists. Price, $1; six for gk g_I_nan- arc prompt, efficient and nooa 3 rlllS easy In effect. 25 cents. A Shining Lxample. ••Mr. Peabody, who was an Ameri can," said Dean Hole the other day, ••was one of the greatest benefactors of London. His houses built for and occupied by the workmen are models which every great city , would do well to copy. At a flower and plant ex* hibition in London which I attended four or five years ago, I was surprised and delighted to find that a large num ber of tl'.e prizes for the best plants went to paople who were dwellers in Mr. Peabody’s houses. That shows what a better atmosphere will do for the working classes. Pubiic gardens; and parks and workingmen’s clubs, I think, are always conducive to tem perance. But people will never bo made temporate by constraint. To secure temperance is impossible by mere human obligations and vows. Force of common sense, conscience and spiritual influence are necessary.** AN OPEN LETTER from the Noted Philanthropist mad Worker Among the Poor, N. J. Smith, the Pounder of the Omahn Rescue Home. This Noble flan Is Spending His Life Among the Unfortunate—Bee* suing the Fallen and Helping Those In Dlstrsss. To the Public: Having hod considerable dealings with the Dr. B. J. Kay Medical Co., and used their remedies with remarkable success, I have no hesitancy in soving that I have the utmost confidence in the reliability of the company and the personal integrity of the doctor, ae well as the merit of hie great remedies, Dr. Kay’s Renovator and Dr. Kay’s Lung Balm. In my work among the unfortunate I find many sick and suffering who have not the means to Surchase necessary medicine. Dr. B. J. lay cheerfully offered to supply whatever medicine was needed in suen cases free of charge, and through the kindness of the generous doctor I have carried relief to many a poor desponded heart. All per sons who send money to thin company for any of their remedies will, I am sure, re ceive honorable treatment and the goods will be sent as promptly as ordered. N. J. Smith. Free pamphlet will be sent on application to Dr. B. J. Kay Medical Co., Omaha, Neb. The KnquMica yuitufio^sion. “Sis, I think you had better shine my shoes and wash the dishes,” said a wealthy New Yorker to his sister, who moves in aristocratic circles. “What do vou mean by such non sense?” she asked. ••No nonsense about it. I see you are flirting with an Italian count. If you are going to marry him you ought to be fitting yourself for the position.”—Texas Siftinsrs. Educate To nr Bowels With Cascareta. Candy Cathartic, euro constipation forever, 10c. If C. C. C. fall, drut'gists refund money. Bow Tie Won ner Regard. . Mrs. De Neat—It seems to me that for a man who claims to deserve char ity, you have a very red nose. Moldy Mike—Yes, mum; the cheap soaps that us poor people has to use is very hard on the complexion, mum. ALFALFA SR Eli FOR 8AI.E. Send for samples and prices to llershey Ele vator Co., llershey, Nebraska. Plenty or Attention. Little Boy—That watch you give ' me doesn’t keep good time. Father — Perhaps ■ you forget to wind it. Little Boy—Forget to wind it? Why, I wind it forty times a day. They Telt tht Ifm*. Phonographic clocks, which verbally announce the hours of the day, are made in Geneva. You can get a clock that will speak in any of the modern lamrucacs. jW. L. DOUGLAS $3 SHOE « For 14 t distanced a.) __ _ . S lodoraad by ever 1. S best in style, fit and 9 ever offered at C3.00. ■ It Is made in all tl _ arpwT «a J ..BEST.. IN THE WORLD this shoe, by merit aljne, has j r__ _ wearers bp the \ larabiltty of any shoe 1 _ _tha'iJkTSS ? 6HAPE8 and S PTYI*K» and of every vaMet/ of leather, s One dealer in a town fiven exclusive sale ~ and advertised ip .local paper on receipt of * reasonable order.fc JVWTfte for catalogue to i W. L. DOUGLAS Brjckton. Mans. aiaiaiaiaiaiaiaiaiaiaiaiaMHaiai*iaiaiaiaiai.aiaMMi ’Ve sell the best malces of facturers’ Prices. \vi cost cut to fit rooms. Dealers in nearly every town in the west sell our (roods . from samples. If there is no agent in your town order direct from us. Sam ples sent if desired to select from. - (Agents wanted—Dealers only.) ORCHARD & WILHELM CAR* BRulsEL Carpets at ANO Manu th slight additional PET COMPANY. OMAHA, NEBRASKA Please mention this paper when or dering.