I MUNYON'S Eminent Doctors at t Your Service Free Not a Penny to Pay for the Fullest Medical Examination. . s If you are in doubt as to the cause f of your disease , mail us a postal re questing a medical examination blank. Our doctors "will carefully diagnose your case , and if you can be cured you will be told so ; if you annot be cured you will be told so. You are not obligated to us in any way , for this advice is absolutely free. Yo'u are at liberty to take our advice or not , as you see fit. ' Munyon's , 53d and Jefferson streets , I Philadelphia. Pa. Pa.'Frying Trying It on ! Nan You look . perfectly lovely In y that gown. Fan - Thanks. That's all I wanted to : knot- : . Fortunately I bought iron ap- s ; . proval. rfl , ' Mrs. : TVlnslow's Soothing Syrup for chiWren teething , softens the gums , re- duces inflammation , allays pain cures U'iml colJc. 25c a bottle. . . Kcvlvnlw of History. 1 : The Greeks were entering Troy on _ _ j . the wooden horse. _ r "Tho first joy ride , " they chortled. j Then the slaughter commenced.- 4 New York Sun. . PILES CURED AT HOME BY NEW ABSORPTION METHOD. If you suffer from bleeding , Itching , blind or protruding Piles , send me your address. and I will tell you how to cure yourself rxt home by the new absorption treatment ; and will also soud some of this home treatment free for trial , with references from your own locality If requested. Immediate re - lief ami pormanent cure assured. Send no money but tell others of this offer. Write today to Mrs. M. Summers , Box 2. Notre 'Dume. ' Ind. Identifying Gussy. ! "What sort of a looking chap is Gus- , " sy : 7" . "Well , if you ever see two men in a corner and one leoks bored to death , the other one is Gussy.-London Opinion. 1 FASHION ; HINTS , ; " . ' . ' . t _ - . # , , , , . . Y . . yr 1. , , / , . " . ' . . o ; . 'I' . ' . i ; . . i . . ; F i. - \ ' . J ; - . _ . . j . z , . , : I a'I , I , . . . ; I 1 L . / i . - - - t - - : : ; - 14L _ h - A fine example of a coat for all round wear , is this one of black broad- cloth. The collar and cuffs are inlaid with heavy corded silk. A handy coat for evening train wear , when a fancy wrap is somewhat out of place. SOME HARD KNOCKS. Woman Gets Rid of "Coffee lIenrt. " The injurious action of Coffee on the heart of many persons is well known by physicians to be caused by caffeine. This Is the drug found by chemists in coffee and tea. A woman suffered a long time with . severe heart trouble and finally her ( doctor told her she must give up coffee. 1. _ ' , as that was the principal cause of the trouble. She writes : " : \Ty \ heart was so weak it could not do its work properly. My husband would sometimes have to carry me from the table , and it would seem that I would never breathe again. "The doctor told me that coffee was causing the weakness of my heart. He said I must stop it , but it seemed I could not give it up until I was down In bed with nervous prostration. "For eleven weeks I lay there and Buffered. Finally Husband brought home some Postum and I quit coffee and started new and right. Slowly I got well. Now I do not have any head aches , nor those spells with weak heart. We know it is Postum that helped me. The Dr. said the other day , 'I never thought you would be what you are. ' I used to weigh 92 pounds and now I weigh 158. "Postum has done much for me and . I would not go ' back to coffee again for any money , for I believe it would klli ± me if I kept at It. Postum must be - " well boiled according to directions on pkg. , thtn ithas a rich flavor and with jf cream is fine. " t' Read "The Road to Wellville , " found In pkgs. "There's a Reason. " Ever read the above letter ? A new one appears from time to time. They aue genuine , true , and full of Jtuman interest . . - - . t ! " . . . . , 't \ ' . . , . , 1 h BANK SHORTAGE IS GROWING. , $800,000 Found to Have Been D < - posited in Mineral Point. The deposits in the First Nationa ; Bank of Mineral Point , Wis. , shoul have been given as $800,036 instead < of 579000. This was the statement made by' R. W. Goodhart , special bank ex : aminer , who discovered the defalca tions of Phil Allen Jr. , and , on the failure of the directors to come to the rescue , closed the bank. Mr. Good hart was on his way Monday to ap ] pear before the grand jury in La Crosse. It is expected soon after his appearance before the jury an indict ment will be found against Allen. I Mr. Goodhart's statement that thei were several hundred thousand dol lars more of deposits in the * bank than was given on the books was based on the discovery of bank receipts given for money deposited with Allen , and for which the bank is liable. They al ready amount to $200,000 and are still coming in. Examiner Goodhart says the defa . cation was discovered when he charj - ed Allen with having two notes with forged signatures. The bank man then admitted , says Mr. : Goodhart , that he was a defaulter and forger. Be- < fore the interview ended Goodhart had disqovered $90,000 in forged pa- ; per that Allen admitted he says , was forged. DECIDES PEARY REACHED POLE. National Geographic Society Will Consider Other Arctic Trips. Commander Robert E. Peary was on Wednesday voted a gold medal by the National Geographic Society for hav- ing reached the north pole. The board of managers of the society accepted unanimously the report of its ' subcon mittee of scientists who had examine the explorer's records and proofs and found them to be corroborative of his claim that he had reached the pole. The society adopted a resolution that the question of "whether or not any explorer reached the north pole prior to 1909 shall be referrei to a subcommittee of experts , with au- thority to send for papers or mak such journeys as may be necessary to inspect original records. " This indi cates that the society proposes as soon as possible to pass upon the records of Dr. Cook. OUST "BIG 4" TREASURER , Deficit of C. L. Warriner of Cincin- nati May Reach $100,000. C. L. Warriner , until last Monda ; treasurer of the Cincinnati offices of the "Big Four" Railroad passenger de- partment , Is accused of being short in his accounts. While the amount is not given , it is believed the shortage % may ; i each $100,000. Warriner made a ; statement in the office of Albert H. Harris , vice president of the Big Four : and general Counsel of the New York Central lines , in the Grand Central station in New York. Warriner ad- mitted taking money : , and it is said declared stock gambling had been his ; ruin. For hours the accused treasurer ! was closely questioned by Mr. Harris. OFFICER KILLED BY ROBBER. Carroll City , { . , Marshal Victim of One of Two Men He Had Arrested. Patrick Hatton , city marshal of Car- rol , Iowa , was shot and killed by one of two robbers at 7 o'clock Tuesday morning near Glidden. Hatton had followed the robbers from Carroll , where they entered a house. He had captured the men and while covering them with a revolver turned toward his team. Instantly one of the men shot him in the back. A posse of seventy-five men , with shotguns and rifles formed hour later and - , an cap tured the robbers in a cornfield. r 7t- : " " " " ' Dr. Ileisser , professor political economy : in Berlin University , died in Winnipeg recently while on a mission : to Western Canada. Anarchists are believed to have sto- len an enormous quantity of dynamite from a storehouse at Stockholm. The explosive was for the use of rock blasters. The revolution in Nicaragua has made no appreciable advance. The rev- olutionary forces under Gen. Estrada , which have been increasing daily , now number 400 men. No decisive engage- . . ment has been fought. Two regiments of Cossacks and a battery have been sent from St. Pe tersburg to Finland to . overawe any opposition to the new measures which will be put in force if the situation in , the : duchy justifies it. The Spanish steamer Miguel Saenz I reached San Juan , P. R. , on the way to . South America recently , liaving on board 750 emigrants from the Spanish I colonies , who are seekin'g to escape service in the war in Africa. The attitude of the English Social- sts toward the reported efforts of King Edward to prevent the rejec- tion of the budget was reflected in the Sunderland address of Keir Hardie , whp said : "So long as the king stays outside of party politics he does no harm , and can be tolerated , but the moment he begins to interfere in poli- tics it is not only the peers' coronets that will go into the melting pot. The crown will go along with them. " . ' - - ' , . - - . . . . . . . . DEMANDS ON GOVERNMENT BY WATER \VAY CONGRESS. We demand and direct that a defir ite and vigorous policy of water way improvement , beginning ; with the lakes-to-the-gulf deep water way , be adopted and put in operation by the national government without delay. . . * * * We publicly pledge our personal honor to support no candidate for put - lie office who will not unqualifiedly in- dorse and maintain that policy ( refei ring to immediate water way action ) ) . . . * * * The federal government should , without needless delay , enter upon a ; definite policy of water way develoi . ment. . . * * * We repudiate and cond&tnn that poi tion of the federal board of engineers' report declaring against the commer- cial expediency of the project. . . . * * * The commerce of the interior abso- lutely demands the opening of a water way from the great lakes to the sea. . = * * * We condemn the fallacious theory : that the need for water way develop- ment can be measured either by the < amount or by the absence of water- borne commerce' before the channels : are properly developed. * * * We insist on the development of our water ways as an investment rath- er than a succession of piecemeal ex- periments. * * * We indorse and approve a bond is- sue. JOHN S. KENNEDY IS DEA ] . . Succes.sor to Ku.ssell Sn : , ; e as Wall Street' "Man : witli the Cash. " In the death of aged John S. Ken- nedy , multi-millionaire. Monday of whooping cough , Wall street lost its "man with the cash. " It is said there has not been a time in years : when . he could not command from $50,000,000 to $75,000,000 "spot" cash. Russell Sage held the title before him , and at his death had some $29,000,000 in cash on hand. But even when Sage was the "ready money" man Kennedy was active and had the greater cash bal- ance. For years he has been known to Wall street insiders as the man who carried the biggest bank balances in. America. Time and again it has served him well in times of financial emer- gencies. He did not loan it out at enormous rates and in spectacular fashion and for that reason the public knew as little about him as it did of his enormous charities. He had sev- eral nephews and nieces , all of whom were on the best of terms with him. It . Is believed the bulk of the fortune , up- ward of $100,000,000 , will go to rela- tives. $14,000 GONE ; CASHIER SLUGGED. Robber Hits Express Agent with Pipe and Disappears > with Money. By the very audacity of their work , two highwaymen got away with a package containing $14,165 from the Canadian Express Company's office in the Grand Trunk station at Niagara Falls , Ont. , at 5 o'clock Thursday morning. The police have thus far been unable to obtain the slightest clew to the robbers. As William Dob- son , cashier of the office , was engaged in doing up a package containing the money stolen , a stranger made inquiry about a package. Dobson could not make out the name , as the man did not enunciate clearly. Dobson asked the name a second time , and , still be ing unable to make it out , he stepped down to the counter to get the receipt book. The robber quickly struck Do - - son a terrific blow over the head with a piece of pipe. The cashier sank to the floor , and the stranger walked lei surely out with the package of money. ALABAMA IS $1,000,000 SHORT. . Personal Liberty Advocate : Blame Prohibitionists for the Deficit. Prohibition is blamed by the per- sonal liberty advocates for a million- dollar deficit in the Alabama State treasury , with ( he urgent necessity of borrowing . $ 30,000 to pay even the November accounts. While the licenses ran but to $100,000 or so a year , this , with the $300,000 the Governor may borrow under the acts , would have tided things over to January , when the new taxes begin to come in. Gov- ernor Comer has just negotiated a * $50,000 loan for the month coming iR and is casting lines for the balance of the allowed total. He says he will carry the State through. - - - - - - - - BLOWN : OUT OF ENGINE CAB. : Fireman Killed : , Engineer Hurt , in Locomotive Explosion. Fireman Crawford of Collinwood , 0. , was instantly killed and Engineer Kramer of Erie , Pa. , was badly in- jured , when a cylinder head on an east- bound freight train blew out at a point 1,000 feet east of the station at Geneva , O. The fireman and engineer were blown through the cab windows when the train was going at a high rate of speed. The train ran Its length before the accident brought it to a standstill. A brakeman standing on the tender was injured. "Hide on Goat" I . Fatal. Fright from "riding the goat" at an inItiation of the Compact Masons , a negro lodge in Kansas City , Kan. , caused the death of Alchis Hunly. Members of the order are silent as to what particular part of the ceremony frightened Hunly. . ' . . " ; . ' . , . . . . : - : 1' " WRECKERS DERAIL A TRAIN. Nickel Plate Fast Passenger Crashes Into Building : Near Cleveland. East-bound passenger train No. 2 ! , from Chicago , on the Nickel Plate read , was wrecked by train wreckei Friday night west of Willoughby sta- tion , a few miles from Cleveland. Two men were fatally hurt and at least a. dozen others suffered serious injury. : Xear the track were found a crow bar and monkey wrench evidently used bJ' the rain : wreckers to accomplish theIr ! purpose. Running at perhaps fifty miles an hour , three of the coaches were derail- ed and the engine overturned and de- < molished. The engineer was probably fatally injured and the fireman serious- ly hurt. One man's back was broken and many others suffered minor inji ries. ries.The The three cars derailed were the smoker and two other coaches imme- diately behind the engine. Nearly ev- ery passenger in these was injured. The baggage car dashed into a hoop ; mill at the side of the track and de- molished it. Portions of the falling ; building landed on the wrecked engine and were set afire. The flames com- : municated to some of the coaches , but the Willoughby fire department re - sponded and quenched the flames. GREEK REVOLT ENDED. Fleet of Four British War Vessels Arrives at Phalerum. Four British war ships have ar- rived at Phalerum , near Piraeus , Greece. The rebellion , for the time being at least , is at an end. The last of the naval vessels in the hands of the mutinous officers has been recov ered , the torpedo boat destroyer Velos ; returning to the arsenal the other evening. Lieutenant Tibaldos , how- ever , who was the leader in the recent movement , is still at large. There is a general belief that the < government will connive in the escape of Tibaldos and his companions in order to avoid the embarrassment their capture would entail , since the government would not venture to ex- ecute them because they are connected with the highest families In Greece. The cabinet council has decided to try the other mutineers in the ordinary courts. All the newspapers condemn the mu- tiny and demand exemplary punish- ment of the ringleaders. Several of those closely identified with the polit- ical situation did not attempt to con- ceal their apprehensions concerning the future. Some think the only solu- tion of the crisis is for the king to invite the military league to form a cabinet. NEW HEAD OF PHILIPPINES. W. Cameron Forties Named Gov- ernor General of Islands. W. Cameron Forbes , of Massachu setts , vice governor general of the Philippines , has been named by Presi- dent * Paft as governor general to suc- ceed the present governor general , James Smith , whose resignation has been accepted to take effect Nov. 11 , at the expiration of his leave of ab sence. The reason for Mr. : Smith's resigna 1 tion lies in , his desire to resume the practice of law. Mr. : Forbes is a grand- son of Ralph ' Waldo Emerson. He was appointed , by President Roosevelt in 1904 a member of the Philippine com- mission and secretary of commerce and police. This appointment was made upon the recommendation of President Taft , who had high regard for Mr. \ Forbes' ability. As an official in the Philippines Mr. Forbes showed judg- ment and tact , and the President is i confident that his administration as governor general will be a success. , ci5porting a. _ The guideless trotter Sureno made an exhibition mile in 2:16 % at Phila- ielphia recently. He took the long route from the start going almost the entire mile in the middle of the track. Fauntleroy easily won the $1,500 Champagne stakes at Belmont Park , New York , gaining by three lengths over Grasmere , who kept the lead well until the final furlong pole was reach- ed. The Turk , backed from 12 to 1 to 6 to 1 , won the Lynnbrook handicap for 2-year-olds , at Jamaica , N. Y. He caught : Cherryola , the favorite , at the sixteenth pole , and won by a nose in a hard drive. L. C. Hull , of Michigan , a Rhodes scholar , was to-day elected president of the Oxford University Athletic Club. Hull is a sprinter and quarter- niler. President of the athletic club corresponds to captain of the track team in American universities. To make the horse as good as cash in the bank and a dividend earner as reliable as any gilt edge bonds is the object of the men who are now di- recting the national horse show at New York. To cause the horse owners of the United States , particularly those in a position to breed and raise live stock , to regard horse-breeding the proper lines as , a safe Investment , in- stead of considering all horses , except - those of excessive speed as mere beasts of burden , is the text of the present directors. ' - " - - . . ' . . . . ' : : . , - - - > > . - - - - - JOHN M. SMYTH DIES. Prominent in Mercantile and Polit cal Life of Chicago. John M. Smyth , one of the pione merchants of Chicago , died Thursday . after a brief Illness from bronchial wm ? 'v 7 < / / * , . * . ' , - U . . . : .f < : . t i y , , . > \ 1 + t f. ay pneumonia. His death is declared to be one of the tragedies which have followed in the tangled affairs of John R. Walsh , the former banker and a close busi ness and personal associate of the merchant. M r . . . . . 4. . . . . ' . . "M smvth was one < )1 ! JUAN M. SMYilI. . " i , , - , 1 the men who made commercial and political history in the early days of Chicago. , Mr. Smyth lived nearly all his life , on the West Side of Chicago , moving from the old homestead on West Ad . He ams street , only a few years ago. " was born July 6 , 1S43 , in the steerage of an emigrant vessel while ten daya : from the shores of America. His par- ents , Michael K. Smyth and Bridg' t McDonnell Smyth , were coming from Ballina , County Mayo. \ They settled at Quebec , moved to Montreal and in 5 1848 came to Chicago. At the time or his death the elder Smyth was cler of the North Town , but not in prcspe ous circumstances. John , who had ' been attending school , was obliged to start work to help support the famil : His first employment was selling new ; ' papers. Later he was in the compo : : ; . ing room advertising solicitor amI circulation manager of different paper which were influential in Chicago ! In ' those days. In 1867 he believed his savings sui : ficient to start business for himself. 1 With Ulick Bourke he purchased a r.mall furniture store at what was then 62 West Madison street. For several years it was little more than a modes second-hand establishment. Eventua ' ly he bought out his partner and :11 : 1880 moved to the present location of the big store , , of which he was the head , 703 to 721 West Madison street. ! He held the school section lease on the entire block on which his estab- lishment stands , in addition to own- ing considerable valuable real estate on the West Side. Business prospered steadily at this spot until general mer , chandise was added to the furniture. ; a mail order branch established and the store became one of the largest in th city. In April , 1891 , It was destroyed by fire , but rebuilt and open for bus ! - ness again in November of that year. Mr. Smyth married Miss Jane A. Hand June 14 , 1871 , and they ba ( eight children. He early took up his ; father's interest in politics. From 1878 to 1882 he was alderman from the old Ninth Ward. For several years : he was chairman of the Republican County Central Committee. In 1SS i he managed the Blaine campaign ill Chicago. WIDOW FREED IN MURDER CASE. St. Paul Jury Decide. ' "Woman Did Not Kill Wealthy Husband. Mrs. Mina Arbogast , who for two weeks has been on trial in the Dis- trict Court in St. Paul on a charge of having murdered her husband , Louis Arbogast , a wealthy butcher , on the morning of May 13 last , was acquitted by the jury which heard the testi- mony. Louis Arbogast was murdered while asleep in bed about 4 o'clock in the morning. His head was crushed with an ax , and the bed was soaked with gasoline and set on fire. Mrs , Arbogast was badly burned at the time and was in the hospital for many weeks on that account. Louise Arbo gast , the eldest of four daughters , is under indictment on the same charge as that preferred against her mother , and will be tried in a week or two. She is out on a $20,000 bond. TYPHOON 135 MILES AN HOUR. Keeord : of AVJnd in Philippine Ke- eeived - Strain on Anemometer. Xo anemometer could stand a pres sure much greater than that imposed on the instruments of the Philippine weather . bureau in the typhoon which : swept over the islands recently , when according to cable reports , the wind reached 135 miles an hour. The rec- ord storm in the United States was that : which caused death and destrue- tion at Galveston , Sept. 8 , ] 900.t that : time , after the anemometer had marked 135 miles an hour , the instni- I ment was blown to pieces. Prof. Willis L. Moore , chief of the weather bureau , has turned his attention to the con- struction of a machine on a new : prin- iple. : . designed to withstand any storm. BUDGET BILL PASSES COMMONS. - - Great Rejoicing : Among : l.iherJll'i ! of Britain ut the R < vnli. The budget passed the House of : Commons in London Thursday night on > the third and final reading , hacked by a vote of 379 to 149 , and represent- ing the whole strength of the party. ! . including the labor members and . . there is great rejoicing among the Lib- erals. The bill was passed formally on its first reading in the House of Lords Friday , the debate on the second read- ing , which will determine its fate be- ginning Nov. 22. Four Children See Tragedy. Frank Miller , of New York , shot and ] ille.i : his father-in-law , John Sceain , in the yard of the latter's house in South Brooklyn , and then r hot and ' probably fatally wounde'd his wife , Amelia Miller. He was arrested. The four children of the couple witnessed the shooting. , I - . ' > - _ , * , , > _ i > , . . YERDICTOFVUTERS THECOUNTRYOVER Results of State and City Gleo v of the . . tions in All Parts * Country. . . . . GAYNOR WINNER IN NEW YORK : , . - Traction Matters Cause Der 3.t.or . Johnson in Cleveland-San Fran : cisco Retires Hcney. . . . . Important State and municipal elec- tions were held In many sections of the . country on Tuesday : , early reports- on the results of which are hrietly4 - . stated thus : William J. Gaynor. Democrat , was- elected mayor of New York City Tues day by a plurality of -more than 70.000 over his nearest competitor Otto T. Bannard , Republican. He will be in complete isolation , however , in the- board of estimate and apportionment. The borough presidents on Ga > nor's V ticket in : Manhattan \ the Bronx. Queens de , Kings , and Richmond were feated. His associates on the Tam many city ballot Moore for controller . and Galvin for president of the board of aldermen-lost by probably : "lO.uOt votes. The Chronicle and Call concede the > election of P. H. McCarthy , Union La ' bor candidate , as mayor of San Fran- cisco the Chronicle estimating his ma- jority at 5.000 to 7,500 and the Call . estimating it at 10,000. They both : : concede Flckcrt's election by 15,000 . majority over Heney. The large ma- jority by which Heney , graft prosecu : tor , was snowed under shows that there has been widespread revolt against the present administration , which Is in the hands of civic reform- , ers. These men have thrown out slot machines from cigar stores and sa- loons , have been largely instrumental in killing betting on the racetrack have shut poolrooms and put the lid on a town that for years had been wide . open. open.Herman C. Baehr , Republican has been elected mayor of Cleveland over Tom L. Johnson. The indications point to 4,600 plurality for Baehr , with a tendency toward an increase in these figures. Johnson admitted his defeat by a plurality of 1,500 , but declared that he would push the traction peace- plans before he leaves office. He also said he would run again. Charles Sa- len , manager of many of the Johnson- battles , conceded a Democratic defeat. Election results In other sections- . may te ; summarized , as follows : Philadelphia - Reform ticket defeat ed. S. P. Rotan ( Rep. ) re-elected over D. C. Gibboney for District Attorney. Estimated plurality , 45,000. Rest of city Republican. Pennsylvania - State Republican ticket , headed by State Treasurer wins by 150,000 estimated plurality. Cincinnati-Dr. Louis Schwab ( Rep. > elected Mayor by 10,000 plurality. Indianapolis-S. L. Shank ( Rep. won over Charles A. Gauss ( Dem. ) by . 1,468 plurality. Republicans had claim- ed Democrats were aided by liquor In- terests. Black eye for Tom Taggart. Indiana ( cities and towns ) - Mixed , results between parties. Terre Haute . 2vansville , Muncie and Lafayette wet ; Kokomo dry ; South Bend for regula- I tion. : Illinois Towns-Jacksonville remains dry. In small southern towns of" State , where liquor was issue , the changes from dry to wet were 8 ; from- wet to dry 8 ; unchanged. 20. Toledo-Mayor Brand Whitlock re- elected by about 3,500 plurality. Massachusetts : - Republicans re- elected Gov. Draper by a plurality of . 8,000. One year ago Draper received a pluralityof over 60,000. Fight was made by Democrats along tariff : reform Ines and the shrinkage of over 50,000 Is attributed to dissatisfaction with the tariff. Virginia-Democrats elected State ticket headed by William H. Mann by 23,000 : majority. farylanDisfranchisement , which would have depri-ed 50,000 negroes of , ote , probably beaten. Democrats win State ticket and Legislature insuring Rayner's return to Senate. Majorities , , lowever. . are reduced. Rhode Island-Gov. Pothier ( Rep. ) , re-elected over Olney Arnold ( Dem. ) _ by substantial majority. Fair Will Mark Panama Opening- . At a meeting of the Panama-Cali- ornia exposition directors in San Diego , Cal. , it was decided to raise $1,000,000 as the nucleus of a fund which will be required to hold the ex- position to celebrate the opening of the canal in 1915. Stock subscriptions. to that amount will be sold in San ' Diego County. Steal , Blaek for Rnneral. Because she is alleged to have taken a quantity of black silk goods with \ which to make a dress of mourning colors to wear at the funeral of her father in Covington : Ky. , Miss : Mamie Jchmidz , 26 years old , was arrested in a department store in Cincinnati. She wept bitterly baying it was her fir : t offense. > > aBY Hurt In lotva Car V.rel.k. . Twenty-five persons were hurt one- ' probably fatally , when a car on liie- I . University line left the track ! at ! che > . bottom of the 19th street hill in hlcs I ' . Moines , while headed for the , . ) . .rn-- : J town section. The car was oivr ; r . .1 :1. _ " _ . . ' I ' : . ' - . . ' - . . . . ' ' J - I