i THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 1903. Telephone 1-M. WE CLOSE SATURDAY AT P. M. Wash Materials : If you are looking for the choicest styles, the latest novelties and the best qualities, visit our Wash Goods department down stairs. Here's where we arcsalways ready to -show you all that is choice, exclusive and desirable in wash goods. Our way of showing goods enables you to see them all in a very short time. There are thousands of styles to select from and the goods are just an. fresh and clean as ever. FOR SPECIAL ON MONDAY We offer the fine Aberfoyle silk nov 'elty kephvrs, tht have' already bwn washed at the mill at 3BC PER YARD. See our north window for these goods. Other desirable materials are . these: LAWNS AND BATISTES, In light or dark eft arte, at ljc a yard. IRISH DIMlTIBS-best grade produced at 25c. Linen colorad fabrics, In plain i ' or fancy weaves, light, medium or : Y. M. C. A. Building,' Corner Inside has been more or less injured. Fur niture In many cases Is ruined, books and .papera rendered useless, windows are all driven In, and loosely constructed out- buildings swept away. Even the main structures themselves are In some danger, ajt .Oie. loose . bottom lands, either made ground or the silt of centuries, have evi dently been cut up to a fearful extent, and the rivers may have even undermined the foundations, . or at least driven out the mortar from between tha bricks. The railways are still without ths slight est means of estimating their losses. A fw of the tracka are indeed above water, and of course the damage to the bridges la ' calculable, but tha hundreds of cars, the scores of engines, the stored freight, must all be examined before even- prellm- lnary figures can be hasarded. The tracks j themselves will have to be practically re built, that much is certain, and It is hoped that the companies will consent to either elevate them or remove them from the bottoms altogether. new f n Ion Depot frged. 'Tor some years ' the people' of Kansas City have been agitating for a new union depot, but the expense, coupled with the difficulty of deciding on 4. common site, has so far postponed any decision. It Is pointed out now that an opportunity has come to grant the boon with the minimum expense and at a time when rival claims to -site recognition will be pressed with less vigor. However this may be, herolo efforts are already being made to care for the multitudes anxious to get in and out of the city. The tiny Milwaukee sta tion, where twelve tralhs are normally operated 1n a day, is caring for 1ST. Its meagre platform is packed all day with a black mass 6f waiting passengers; the ac cumulated baggage has overflowed the bag gag; room and stands In disconsolate pile about $he .yards, where crowds examine it In the hope of finding some article loat in the'early-confusion. ' "'- - At the s&me time It Is remarkable how quickly all concerned have accommodated themselves' to the new conditions'. With only three tracks and one bridge, and that thirty miles away, there Is not the least sign of confusion, and all business Is being handled over indifferent rails with a speed and ease which Is little short of marvellbus. Traffic to the north la less essy, of adjustment, but even here much has now been, accomplished, though the arrsngements for passengers' comfort are faV less complete. The Missouri Pacific is sending Its people over the river to Kan sas City, Kan., by boat and thence over its own lines to all points on toe system. The Burlington and Qrand Island use another ferry to Northern Junction at the north end of the Milwaukee bridge, whence con nection is made with Bt. Joseph and by the Qulncy, Omaha 4 Kansas City to points west and north. - Wade Through Mad to Trains. .It" is perhaps fortunate that the average traveler la a good-humored man, for the ar rangement at Northern Junction are of necessity extremely crude. There Is no proper landing place, the gangplank does ndt touch-ground by three feet and the mud la sstoundlng. It Is necessary for each passenger to scramble ashore, clamber up some ten or more feet to the Wabash tracks, walk along the ties for a hundred yards and then climb mud stairs, crumbling under multitudinous feet for ten yards more. Then when the rails are finally reached there is nothing but a double line o -steel and a little", cubby house whence telegraphic connection Is usually had with the city. Scattered around are two. or three booths where rich harvests are reaped by thoae dispensing food, and on one side a large tent was erected today to act as a temporary depot. All Is being done that raa be but the all is but little. When the trains do finally leave the tracks are hardly fit -to run on. They are undermined - by wateri whloh squirts up In a continuous muddy .stream as the- heavy locomotive plews Its way across, they are wobbly and - A GATEWAY OCR STORK 19 THE GATEWAY TO COMFORT AND STYLISHNESS rOR THE BOYS AND GIRLS. AND ECONOMY AN'D SATISFAC TION FOR THE PARENTS. HERE, IS CONGREGATED THAT WHICH IS NEWEST, BEST AND MOST PRACTICAL IN WEARA BLEH FOR BOY. GIRL AND BABY. " TOTJ ARE WELCOilE TO 8W1NO , ON OCR GATE. YOU'LL KIND IT PLEASANT AND SATISFACTORY. Write for catalogue. ZaJTsTdOM C THORsTa 118 Dtsilti llntl. 3 g l " CO rN qT IN ? wU- Bee, Jun 7, lfvt. heavy weights, at 10c, 15c, lc. 20c, ISe. goc, 40c. 60e. 60c, 65c a yard. German linen ginghams only 25c yard. New flaked suitings at 26c a yard. New piques at 15c a yard. Mercerised sephyrs, in plain and fancy, at 20c a yard. Tissues at 25c and lV a yard. Printed madras for all purposes very popular material, at 15c, SOo, 25c and 80c a yard. Sixteenth and DouglasSts apparently dangerous, but the cara have all got through so far, although yesterday the rails spread under a light engine four miles up and stalled both the Qulncy, Omaha At Kansas City and Grand Island trains for four hours. City as Though Besieged. The enterprise of the railways and the speed with which they have afforded relief Is everywhere a matter of comment. Be cause less spectacular the glgantlo task of relieving the want and suffering among the thousands of homeless refugees and safe guarding the lives and property of other cltisen has not attracted general pub lic attention. It was no light task un trained men were called upon to perform, but they performed It nobly. They were " " encompassed by a hostile army come upon them unawares, with famine threat' enlng, no light, no water and Impoverished internal transportation. They were sur rounded with opportunities for the lawless and the natural protectors of the city wers taken up with other work. Within a few hours the mllltla were guarding the street and managed to prevent even a semblanco of disorder, a relief committee had been organised which managed to feed the hun gry and clothe most of, the naked, and within a few lays light and water and transportation were provided from some where and the crippled city supplied with criltcheS, so perfect as to almost take the place of genuine limbs. Much baa . been said before of the "Kansas City spirit" and those outside the limits have been wont to scoff at It, but this week has demonstrated Its very real, existence and given the people the right to be proud of their corporate enterprise, .and genuine public spirit. . , With, what has been, done already there seems to be no doubt that what remains to be done will be done expeditiously and In a short time all visible, signs of the flood will have been removed forever. - loss Falls oa Maay. Ths most serious matter is the heavy In dividual losses sustained by those little able to meet them. The freight loss Is be yond computation and must be paid for by the shippers or commission men di rectly Interested, as the disaster Is classed in law as "the act of God" and conse quently not chargeable to the transporta tion companies. At the- same time In Isolated cases It is possible an effort will be made to recover some part of the cash value. One shipper, for example, is al ready preparing for a possible legal fight. He had a car of sugar In the yards. It was drawn up as high as possible and was never completely under water. Still the lower bags, were wet, the contents dis solved and escaped; the higher bags sank down and were In turn affected till all were gone. The om-ner claims negligence and will try to convince a Jury that he Is right. Still, most of the litigation, which Is expected to provoke a torrent of words little less costly 'than the torrent of waters, will undoubtedly be between the commis sion men and tha shippers, each of whom will claim that the damaged property was In the hands and under the care of the other. The host of farmers and small property owners along tha rivers will have no redress and will have to make good their own losses, while yet another multi tude whose household goods have been de stroyed will have to rely on charity or their own efforts to re-establish tha little homes which, poor enough before, are now mere roofs to shield them from the ele ments. t'rulslaa- Pis; Browses oa Trees. The river today Is filled with drift. There Is more coming down than aver since Sun day, the falling waters catching that which was once stranded and carrying It further down. This Is lodging In the trees and against the trestle work which constitutes the approaches to those bridges which still stand. It is curious debris, some of It Among It is a pig, which browses con tentedly a It cruises along in ten feet of water; a cat and her family of kittens. which mews with dismay as she views the waters spreading all around her; a dead cow, or sheep, half a house, with the fur niture still In place In the rooms, little knick-knacks, deserted In the hour of trib ulation, goods and chattela of all shapes, all dies and all values, but It tells the story. It tells more graphically than men can paint the true nature of that terrible affliction from which the city Is Just re covering. . " . River Way C'haage. This drift points out a new danger; It provides evidence of the probable change In the course of the two streams. Nor mally the Missouri flows round the bluffs st the foot of Main street after emerging from the Hannibal bridge and then cuts across to the opposite shore, which It hugs- for miles. Today the chief current seems to be to the north of the Hannibal bridge and thence to the south of the Milwaukee structure Should- this re main unaltered neither bridge will be of any real service and the compare' tlvely eaay taak of rebuilding broken trestle work will have to be supplanted by the far greater one of constructing new spans to the old crossing. The Raw, too, la ap parently Intent on remaining to the weat of the Missouri Pad ft o bridge, saved alone among seventeen companions by the pluck of the men who weighted It down with Its value In locomotives and then wired Mr. Gould for permission.. Here, too. If present Indications fail not, a new structure will be necessary and the present Imperfect ferry arrangements have to be continued Indefinitely. For this man It would not be sarprtaing if. wtth an their energy, the railroads are unable to rteom oid-rirae . convenient" tin well on hi the year. However, evun this may turn to the ultimate advantage of Che dry, aa It may mean a greater willingness on ths i pact o. tha read La armada to. that pamilar clamor and remove all tracks possible from the dangerous bottoms. SAMPLE OF RAILROAD HUSTLE Barjlasrtea Practically RtkilUi Road t t. Joe Dambfeaad Evil Freshets. "Whatever you do, keep clear of tht Burlington direct," said a prominent rail road man to a would-be traveler at St. Joseph last night. "Trains are running. 'but they are liable to break down at any moment and stall you on tha way. You have no Idea," ha continued, "how bad the tracks are. It Isn't safe to -travel over them." Warned by this, the psssenger, who ar rived in Omaha yesterday, was chary of tha undertaking, but It had to be and he went. All along tha road at almost every yard evidences were plalu of speedy but effective work. In several plaoea the en tire bed had. been washed tmt and replaced. by trestles erected over Innocent looking creeks which earlier wera raging torrenta; ballast had been replaced, ties laid and rails put In place. It looked as If ths whole road had been built over again since the flood, but It was all In place and the waters, which still lave the sides of ths embankments, are apparently Impotent to harm. So far from the St. Joseph warning prov ing well grounded, It appeared to have no foundation whatsoever, although It was very patent that a day or so ago there was practically no track at all between the two cities. The task was not, however, ac complished without much effort, as section men were brought In from all directions, even as far oft as Wyoming, to do In a week what looked like the work of months. GET-TO WORK WITH BROOMS Amy of Workpeople Start to Work coarlna- Kansas City Bottoms. KANSAS CITY, Mo., June .-Thousands of men and women,' armed with shovels and brooms, are Invading the west bottoms, following closely the receding waters, and by nightfall much will have been done to ward restoring the wholesale and stock yards districts to their former condition of activity. The Missouri had fallen slightly over two feet during the past twenty-four hours st 7 o'clock this morning, and a still greater district was uncovered. The Kaw also continues to recede at an Increased rate. Today hundreds of flat cars loaded with sand and construction material pushed the work of reconstructing the miles of washed out or damaged tracks In the yards from here to Armourdale and Argentine. The railroad alono will but several thou sand men to work immediately and all lines are making preparations to resume busi ness. Today it was possible to reach and clean out to a great degree the wreckage at the stock yards and at the live stock exchange, where the water at Its height stood fifteen feet deep. Three shifts of men are working night and day at the pumping stations to restore the water supply to Its normal condition, and as thla service Improve the likelihood of an epidemic of sickness is disappearing. But few cases of sickness are reported. The first train to enter the Union sta tion since Saturday rolled Into the station tonight with whistles blowing. It was the CarthagV ft Joplln express of the 'Frisco railroad. All the looomotlves In the- yarJs that had steam up shrieked a welcome and crowds on' the bluff cheered. The. Santa Fe. Alton and Missouri Pacific will re sume us of the station tomorrow. The Rock Island, Burlington, Chicago Great Western and Alton line are now oper ating to Chicago, but not entirely on their own track. The Missouri Pacific still has the only direct line between Kansas City and Bt. Louis. The Wabash has abandon'! service between Kansas City and St. Louis. The Santa Fe has nearly complete oper ation on Its west lines by using a round about route to Lawrence and a lengthy circuit by way of Emporia to Topeka. The Union Pacific Is operating by way of Grand Island, Neb., and Ellsworth, Kan. The Missouri, Kansas & Texas, the 'Frisco, the Kansas City Southern and the Missouri Pacific are in complete operation from Kan sas City. Crest Passes Booaevllle, BOONEVILLE, Mo., June 6. The waters In the Missouri river have begun to re cede. The flood crest passed here yesterday and remained stationary until this morn ing, when it began to go back. The gauge on the Boonvllle bridge shows a fall of four Inches today. The heaviest damage has occurred in the Howard county bottoms for eight miles above the Boonevllle bridge, due to the breaking of the Cooper levee. The loss of live stock has been large, as the people ependlng on this levee did not remove their stock out of the bottoms. After the levee broke It was too late. The water plant will be able to reopen by Tuesday. TOPEKA GRADUALLY EMERGING Waters Bid Fair to Leave nansas Town Dry by To day. TOPEKA. June . The Kaw river fell two inches an hour throughout Friday night and today the south side of Kansas avenue was uncovered clear to the bridge. In some residence portions of North Topeka, however, the water still stands in eddying pools and rushes down cross streets In a whirling channel at an average aeptn of three feet. At the present rate the en tire townslte will b free from water by Sunday. The Rock Island and Union pacific are till unable to resume traffic In or out of the city. The Santa Fe and Missouri t-a- clflo are getting over their tracks west and south, but not to the east. The bodies of Mrs. Stout snd her four children and Mrs. Shunaweller ana ner son George were found today In the Shurk- weller home In North Topeka. They fere reported last evening among the dead. The body of a colored woman, uniaenu fled, was found today along the r.ock Island tracks In the west part or town One foot stuck out from a sand pile under which the body waa buriej. Money contlnuee to come In from out side sources In amounts sufficient to keep up with the demand and lay a little aside fcr the expenditures which will pile up as the time goes on. Tonight the total amount is 123.000. including that from Phil adelphla, and 16.000 and $10,000 each from Bt. Louis and Chicago. Stalls Train Collides. PLEASANT HILL, Mo., June (.An east bound Santa Fe through passenger train from the west, which had been delayed four day in Kansas by ths floods, met head-on with a westbound Missouri Pacific freight. Both engines and tha pilot on the Santa Fe were badly damaged. One passenger waa slightly hurt. The crews escaped by Jumping. Another engine was secured and Lhs Santa Fe train continued east. BarUaatoa 6ttar ta Wnk, CHICAGO. Jline t The Burlington an nounces It will operate all trains on regu lar schedule hereafter to Omaha, Peuvar and all points In the west and northwest, also to St. Joseph by way of Quiny. No trains will he run into Kansas Cit until tha-waU. tULitcthac wUtdng, ST. LOCIS STANDS READY Wafers Still lm, bat Find Little Loft to Destroy. THREE SMALLER TOWNS ARE INUNDATED Twenty-Five Tboaaaad Driven from Home, While Twe Mandrel Thon aand Acres of Farm Land Is Babmerged. ST. LOUIS, June . Like an Inland sea the swollen Mississippi has spread out over the Illinois shore about St Louis. A mag nificent vie 'of the nngry waters Is ob tained from Eades bridge by the thousands of spectators who throng the structure. Far away to the southeast the water covers lower East St. Louis and a big grain elevator that at normal stages stands high above the water line is now Isolated with a heavy current pouring past Its In land side. Half submerged freight cars stand on the siding and tree tops sppear above the surface like small bushes. The shipping district presents a small peninsula on which freight bouses stand a short dis tance above tho flood, but beyond these ex tends a lake half a mile wide, while the water at the eastern edg laps at ths foundations ef tall business blocks. The Bt. Louis Hay Warehouse company's build ing, situated on the levee near Eades bridge, Is half submerged and as th water creeps higher bales of hsy float out and are carried away by the current. North of East St. Louis the esstern boundsry of the floods cannot be discovered. Here and there the tops of freight cars and of houses appear above the surface, and grain elevators surrounded and flooded present a. scene of desolation indicative of the flood' advancing energy. Hani Freight Through Water Along the St. Louis shore wharf boats are drawn in almost to the foundations of buildings, and in an endeavor to continue business freight! companies hauled their loads with their wagon beds touching the water and the horses all but swimming. Freight traffic will probably have to be discontinued on Monday. At 1 tonight the stage registered 35.4 feet, a rise of seven-tenth of a foot since this morning The stage of the Mississippi has not changed materially north of the mouth of the Missouri, but below the rise continues. Government Forecaster Bowie tonight Issued a statement that the rise will continue rapidly for the next forty-. eight hour and a stage of 37.8 feet will be registered by Monday. He says this stage will certainly be reached and It is probable that the water will go to thirty-eight feet. Two lives have been lost In the flood. but In both cases the fatalities were the result of accidents, both being boys who ventured too near the treacherous waters, clipped In and were swept away. The victim were Jamea Linton, Jr., and John Clark. The body Of the latter was re covered late today. ' For a time today train service to the west was cut off. The Missouri Pacific track had been used since the flood began by all the western roads and today the swift current of the Missouri undermined a portion of the track' bed between St. Louis and Jefferson City. Workmen and carload' of filling were rushed to the spot and the track bed waa' speedily rebuilt strongly and substantially and service was resumed this afternoon. . . . i Take Warning; Betimes. - There is so much, flooded territory In the vicinity. jthat RIs difficult to say Just where tha greatest, amount of damage 1 belng done. The disastrous Inundation of To peka and Kansas City Served aa a warn ing for St. Louis and vicinity and know ing that the high water must later pour down through this section every effort was expended to remove property to safety nnd secure buildings that might float away. Despite all these precautions, however, the flood has wrought great damage, as levees expected to withstand the rush have been Washed away and vaat tracts of grain that was deemed beyond the reach of water Is overflowed. Missouri Point, Just north of the con fluence of the Missouri and Mississippi rivers, a fertile section beyond the reach of ordinary high water, has been covered to a considerable depth. Twenty miles west of St. Louis the miles of farming bottoms. In the center Of which Is located the summering place, Creve Couer lake. has been deluged by the breaking of the levee, which formed a 'barrier to the Mis souri river. South of St. Louis the water has backed into the River Desperes, which Is several miles wide, and families have been driven from their homes. North of St. Louis, across the river, the three towns of Madison, Venice and Gran ite City, are now, for their greater por tions, under water by reason of the break ing of levees yesterday and last night. At Mitchell, 111., twelve miles north, a "cross" levee broke this afternoon and parts of Mitchell and hundreds of acres of additional farming land were flooded. Ganga of men, with loads of sacks of sand were hurried to the latest levee break this afternoon. If this gap 1 not closed the flood will pour down upon Granite City, Madison and East St. Louts and unless topped by the Chicago & Alton, Wabash and Burlington embankment will cause more destruction. Postofllee Is Abandoned. The postofflces at West Alton and Falcon, 111., were abandoned today. There are but eight or ten families In that vlnlcity now, all sheltered In one dwelling on an Indian mound which Is about eight feet above the water. So far aa St. Louis Is concerned, the city Is built upon a hill and is safe, though some portions extend down upon the low lands which are flood-swept, but these dis tricts comprise warehouses, shipping yards, small .dwellings and structures of minor value, and as most of the movable prop erty liad been taken to higher ground tha damage will be heaviest in the small ad Joining towns and East St. Louis. It is estimated that within a radius of twenty miles from St. Louis ths flood has rendered 28.00) people homeless and Sub merged 200,000 acres of fertile farming landa. The flood Is already almost to ths tops of some of the levees on the Illinois side that are protecting additional large areas. If the predicted crest rise of 17.6 feet is realised the flood . must necessarily pour over these levees, If Indeed they are not demolished by the Increased strain, and the devastation will be greatly In creased. Martial law has been proclaimed In Eaat St. Louis. Men with riot guns are pa trolling the levee and have order to shoot down thieve and levee breakers. The men will patrol every section of the city In which possible danger exist from the flood. Word was received tonight that West Alton la completely Inundated and that the Missouri river appear to be shifting Its channel to the principal streets of the vll lags. The current Is apparently strong and Increasing in strength and it la feared by morning many house may be floating to ward the gulf. Tot Rnattrwel In Rangier. Two hundred people In Black Walnut, on tha north bank of the Missouri, twenty-five miles north weat of St. . Louis, are sur rounded by rapidly rising water and all I moans of escape are cut off. I Their condition wa learned at St. Charles Ueuuritl gad . BoariS- Ierkaa 4 thaa-ctty Malaria and Liver Troublo CURED BY Warner's S,afe Cure Miss Rydeen Suffered with Malaria and Liver Trouble--Seven Bottles ol Warner's Safe Cure Cure i Her. i re bilious. You psy no t .Hows another, until sll yo t take Warner's Safe Cure At first vou a One symptom foil loxe no time, but forms of kidney and liver diseases, ."pant to , iy -Safe Cure " at any dru f so-called kidney enres it Is purely You can buy Revraro af is a . , ... WARNER'S SAFE P1I-LS move the Write Warner's Safe Cure Co.. Roches telephoned to the St. Louis police for aid In rescuing the Imperiled villagers. The sheriff stated that only light boats are available at St. Charles and that the heavy current makes it Impossible to reach the people. Immediately Harbor Commissioner Whyte was notified and requested to rush the harbor boat to Black Walnut. The appeal was futile, however, because the high water will not permit a river steamer to pass up stream under Eades bridge. Word was telephoned to Alton, where the Steamer Spread Eagle Is moored, and it is probable It will at once start on a rescue trip. Sheriff Dlerkes at St. Charles telephones that the water Is rising rapidly and unless the people are rescued speedily there will be great loss of life before morning. The Conlogue levee. Just south of East St. Louis, broke at midnight and the 200 colored families Inhabiting that district were driven from their homes. Many had narrow escapes from drowning. The levee gave way and the water poured through in a torrent, but the people had been warned and were on the alert, and all escaped. MISSOURI SHIFTS CHANNEL Boone Connty Loses Nearly Two Hun dred Tbonaand Dollars by Blgt Moddy'a Ravages. COLUMBIA, Mo., June . In Boone county over 10.000 acres of farm land In cultivation Is under water and the loss In the county Is estimated at $100,900 to $200,000. The first loss of life occurred today. Ed Thornton, a 12-year-old boy, being drowned near Coluir bus. At Huntsdale the current ha turne-1 northward and Is now running1 one to three mile north of the old channel. Old river men predict that unless the ftoodsoon Sub-' sides that channel of the" river will be changed and Hartsburg will be on the bank of the river. Hannibal In the Throes. HANNIBAL. Mo., June 6. The Missis sippi river tonight register 21 9 feet and a 22-foot stage by morning Is predicted In thla vicinity the area of fertile land under water comprises 100,000 acres. As the growing crops have been washed out, the aggregate toss will amount to at least $2,000,000. Tents Bent to Aid Salary. SPRINGFIELD, 111., June 6. In response to an urgent telegram sent by Mayor Stelnbach of Qulncy this afternoon, asking state aid In the way of tents for the use of sufferers from the flood along the re gion where the Sny levee hus broken. Ad jutant General Smith this evening shipped twenty-five army tents to Mayor Steln bach. Mall Service Crippled. WASHINGTON. June . Official dis patches to the Postofllee department Indi cate that the situation Is growing more serious in the neighborhood of St. Louis. The main line between St. Louis and Kansas City Is Impassable near Hermann and trains are tied up. That line has for several days been the main dependence of Vi nostat authorities for the dlsnatrh nf the malls or the east from Kansas City, and the Only outlet now is via the Omaha Kansas City or over the Memphis road via Springfield. HANNA NUPTIALS JEOPARDIZED Lightning; Wrecks C'hnreh In Which the Wedding; Is to Be Solemnise'). CLEVELAND, O., June e.-I.lghtnlng struck the spire of St. Paul's Episcopal church at the corner of Euclid and Cass avenues during a heavy storm this after noon. Ths spire was practically demolished, while two immense blocks of stone crashed through the roof of the church, causing damage to the extent' of several thousand dollars. The Hanna-McCormlck wedding Is sched uled to take place at the church next Wednesday and for a time It was thought other arrangements would have to be made. Investigation by a representative of the Hanna family later ahowed, however, that temporary repairs could be made and no changs'ln the wedding arrangements would be necessary. CAR PLANES MEN OFF TROLLEY Passing- Vehicle Scrunea Passeagers from Footboard of Pitts bars; Train. PITTSBURG, June . One man wa fa tally injured, another seriously and four slightly In a wreck on the Wllmerdlnrbl branch of the Pittsburg Railway company today. Two summer csrs collided on a curve on Braddsck avenue, East Pittsburg. All the Injured were on the running board of a crowded car coming from the West lnghouse Works In Eaat Pittsburg, and when the two car going In opposite di rections tried to pass on the curve were knocked off. SOLDIERS ARRIVE TOO SOON Traaspnrt Beaehes Pert . Two Day Abend ef Sebedated BAN FRANCISCO. Jun C The VnlteU States tranapurt Sheridan arrived today from Mknlla, via Nagatkl. whitm It hft on May ZL and was not xpeoted until M in day. It brings 653 men of the Keriond In fautry. nlnety-enht men of the Twenty, fifth Infantry, a battery of field artillery amt-iri rnaa U ta JTlnrKaaU7. Malaria Is caused by a sluggish liver. If the liver and Its ducts are kept In good con dition there Is no danger of malaria. In diseases of the liver the bowels are consti pated and this condition must be remedied If a cure Is expected. "I have been using Warner's Safe Cure for the past four months tor malaria and liver trouble. My whole system was per meated with the poison and my blood was In a very bed condition. Father had used the medicine for kidney trouble and had been cured, so he thought It might help me, Although I did not take it regularly. I felt 1 wns slowly Improving: then I haa more faith In It and took It according to direc tions. Seven bottles completely cured me and I am most grateful to you." SALLlhl RYDEEN, Secretary Young Women's Christian Union, Ottawa, HI. Whatever tends to obstruct the bowels and the kidneys affects the liver. Is your appetite good? Do you sleep wU? Do you lose flesh or tire easily T Are you bilious? These are symptoms of liver disease. tentlon. but keep oir burning nerve ur machinery Is out of ..rdr. You at onoe. It Is an absolute cure force, should for all ke and contains no harmful dnjga. g store or direct. sno and $1 a bot tie which are fall of sediment ana nf bad d do net core-. bwwels neatly nn aid Im ter. N. T- for free medial book. POPE SLOWLY WASTING AWAY Lives Practically on Milk, Boullion had Egg and in Vitiated Atmosphere. ONLY CELEBRATES MAIS ON SUNDAYS Aodlences Granted Pilgrim Prove Most Distressing; to Holy Father, Who to Rest Lone After Each Ordeal. VENICE. June C.-The Gazetta dl Venetla asserts that the pope Is suffering from in testinal Inflammation, that he eat prac tically nothing, and that his strength is di minishing. The paper adds: Though there I no im mediate danger, there will be room for ap prehension unless an improvement Is soon manifested. ROME, June 6. Several high ecclesias tical personages say that during the last few day the pope suffered from a slight hemorrhoidal indisposition, which entirely disappeared today. Takes Little Foos or Air. PARIS, June 6. The Temps today printed the following dispatch from Rome: Leo XIII continues to receive, but those who see him notice the gradual decline which, without exciting apprehension that any serious mnoss is imminent does not warrant a continuance of confident op tlmlam. Hi recent audience were ex tremely fatiguing. Each time he received pilgrims he was obliged to rest, sometimes lor two or three diva. During the last few days his diet haa Deen restricted to milK. boullion and eggs, and but little fresh air is admitted to his apartments. His valet, Centra, opens the windows of the pontiff's sleeping room momentarily night and morning, but the air la more ' or less vitiated and there I a lack of sufficient oxygen. The correspondent of the Teoipe adds; I have had occasion during the laat few day to see a number of persons on Inti mate terms with the entourage of the holy father, and I find their opinion is almost unanimous that Pope Leo has been slowly wsstlng away for some time. The pope rise late and does not celebrate mass ex cept on Sunday, when no one assists him except the faithful Centra. The pontiff appear not to desire that others should see his Infirmities. The trembling of his hands hss become noticeable. I do not n-lsh to unduly alarm the de voted friends of Leo XIII. hut nevertheless I am compelled to state that the condition of his health actually is far from satisfac tory. DEATH WATCH SLAININ JAIL Murderer Kills Guard and Makes His Escape with Only Other Prisoner. , ANACONDA. Mont., June 6 William Hardee, a condemned murderer, awaiting execution (n the Glaagow Jail, killed Charles Williams, his death watch, with a rifle which he secured In the Jail kltc'hen to night. He nnd the only other prisoner In the Jail then took the keys and escaped. Both men are well armed. They swam the Missouri river and are now surrounded In a bend of that stream by a big posse. Hardee Is expected to fight to the death, as ha lias no hope, the supreme court having refused him a new trial. HOLDS JIM CROW LAW INVALID Tennessee Coart Declarea Sew Act Passed by I.eglslatare to be l'nr oust national. JACKSON, Tcnn., June 6. The Jim Crow law providing for separate compartment for whites and blacks In street cars, which was passed by the recent legislature, waa declared unconstitutional by the state su preme court today. The court did not go Into the merits of the law Itself, but declared the act un constitutional because Its caption waa not explicit enough and did not state what portion of the law It waa (ought to amend. FORECAST 0FTHE WEATHER Showers Promised for Today, with Fair Tomorrow in Omaha Territory. WASHINGTON, June l-Forecast: For Nebraska Partly cloudy Sunday, probably showers In east portion; Monday, fair and warmer. For Iowa Partly cloudy and shower In western portion fcunday; Monday, fair. For Mlssourt-Oenerally fair Sunday and Monday. For South Dakota Fair Sunday and Mon day.' For Illinois Fair Sunday and Monday: warmer Sunday In northeast portion; varl- gble winds. For Kansas Partly cloudy Sunday, prob ably showers; Monday, fair and warmer. For Montana Fair Bunday and Monday. For Colorado Partly cloudy . Sunday, probably showers; Monday, fair and warmer in east portion. Lneal Heoord. OFFICE OF THE WEATHER BUREAU. OMAHA. June . Official record of tem perature and precipitation compared with the corresponding day of the last three years; UOt. 1J0!. 1KH. Maximum temperature .. 7 7 n M Minimum temperature ... IT (3 El Cs Mean temperature ....... S 7) t2 1 rrecipiiauon u 1.0 M jdi Record ef temperature and precipitation i t-imaua wj klAi ui aiiu ""'e M 4 Tl h I 1DU3: Normal temperature , g Total exceaa sinus March L mil... itB normal precnpiiauon .jj inch Dettctrnuy for the dHT .tg inch P.ertpttatlon Sftnoe March 1 11. to Inches Kxca slnoe March I 1 M tnchxa Iettciency for cor. period, 1"?.. 3 4 inuliee Dtniiducy for cor. perUxl, Itul.. t o in, hae . 1- A.. WHIi. FREE TO WEAK HEM A niwevery nf a Remedy Has Been Made That Reetnren Lost Maahnod and Gives Man the Vitality of a Lie a. One Week's Trial Package Sent Froe to All Men Who Write for it T.egeneraUve Tablets Is the only rrf"''J i , rnr T smi Manho ir 1 1 1 I IT "i III. linn i - ' . In smy form. It Is scientifically prepare,! 4p r ifcrV by some of the best rhemt.-Us In the world This firm gives a legal guarantee that Rogeneratlvp Tablets will cure every cs' of Lost Miinhood, Spermatorrhoea, Vari cocele or weakness of any nature of the nerve or sexual grgnns. 'there Is but one test of a genuine meillclne and that is th results which are obtained by its use: If It cures the disease for which It Is pre pared It Is a true rtindv. This Is the test by which the Fallopla Lynn Co. wlnh. their remedy to be tried, therefore they give one week's treatment free. After using It the sufferer will fluri new vigor In his organs; new force In his muscles; new blood In his veins; new ambition; a nvvf man In vitality, health and appearance. Regenerative Tablets nas a pocullarl grateful effect and the patient Icels the benefit after Its lirst lay's use. It goes direct to the seat of the trouble, no mat ter the age of the suffrer nor of how long standing his aflir.'tl m; unless Kpl lepsy or Insnnlty has been reached, giving strength and development where It Is needed. This marvelous temedy banishes all feelings of bashful'ies or blushing; cures all the Ills and troubles that come from early abuse, excess or overwork and business cares, all of which result In pre mature loss of strength and memory, emis sions, Impotency and varicocele. Kallnpia Lynn Co. makes no restrictions, every person who writes will be ent postpaid a week's treatment absolutely free, care fully wrapped In a plain package with no advertising on it to Indicate what It contains. Write today to the Fallopla Lynn Co, 746 Pozxonl Building. St. lu s, Mo., and receive the week's treatment absolutely free, also their book which Is free and sent with the free treatment which explains how to take the treatment In private and cure yourself at home. are serioai, e a a m nnnli pain and dis-1 vtnaiori, ana ' eonetl Jmea so-1 tual disability V I HI I IVMVI ing, then again pala. soieoani and hlfllMlln TlimAM r.M. 1 . bleeding nrotrode. and if oeaWted. nlntrmta. Ixmnm. las vetTserlouf and oalnfnl. Tomuatham1 I quickly and painlessly dm INJECTION MALYD0R. Intant relief. Cares la several dsya i onui wna syringe, ror 3I.OO Sherman & McConnell, Omaha, Neb. i.iroor Mi. Co., Luauur. O. THE OLD-FASHIONED MOTHER She s Still With Us ancf Ifas Come to Stay. To the old-fashioned mother the mighty manhood of American doffs Its hat the old-fashioned mother who found time from her Innumerable duties to look after her children, feeling that they were Intrusted to her for a short time only; that they In turn were to become history makers, nnd that she whi responsible for their early training. Millions of noble mothers are to duy teaching their children that Dr. Burk hart's Vegetable Compound cures and pre vents disease and makes strong, healthy men and women. Thirty days' treatment can be had from any drug store for twenty-five cents. Mrs. Retina Watstn's School FOR THE HIGHER ART OF PIANO PLAYH 27 E. Indlssi Strtrt. Chkar. id. Announces the beginning of its SUMMER TERM for JUNE 22nd. Mrs. Watson makes a specialty of tha training of teachers and concert pianists In repertoire, etc. Among prominent musicians trained by her, the following names may be men tioned: Prof. A pel, Detroit, Mich.; Prof. Lutktn, Dean Northwestern Music School Evanston; MJss Parsons, Director Rockfor.4 Musical College: Miss Shlbiey, Director Piano Classes of Olrton School: Wlnnetkv 111.; Mr. Walter Spry, Miss May Allport, Miss Eleanor Schelb and others of Chloago. Applications for tuition may be made at any time. For particulars address MIS. IE0INA WATSO h, W t. Iff n St.. (kcir. MAYOR'S WALNUT OIL RESTORES GRAY HAIR OR BEARD. TO 0RIQINAL COLOR AND IEAUTT. Nature's Simplest ana Only Reliable Vegetable Oil flemwly Guaranteed bMitiilr barmieM Eesnlta aulrk. Utllntf. eleanlf Ixm not tmln the tkln. wash r rnboffoo pillow. JSnpeclally adapted for ladle who curl I heir hdbalr. Its merit la univers&HT acknowleayixl. Atk rourdnunrlat for It. ! Imitations. Prloebr malic rxwt paid (trial iImWV Large treble ! 11. 111. Write for booklet con Lai ulna utallmonlala aod Information. Ariclrei MAYOR WAINUTOH 00.0ml I. k.mmCJtv a. DR. McCREW SPECIALIST Treats all forms of DISEASES AND DISORDERS OF MEN ONLY 17 Tears Experience. 17 Years In Omaha His remsrkable iuc- equaled and every day brings many flatter- "n IT"" ol ,ns good ne Is doing or tn relief be baa given. Hot Serines Treatment for Svnhills B'ood Poisons. NO "DREAKIN'O OUT on the skin or face and all esternal igna of the disease disappear at once. HLUUU sJISFfiSF f'""' rAi" VARICOCELE r;. rvi.1 o.nnn c""d ; nfv; rs.-rr, - www"" um aeDiuiy, loss oi vitality, unnatural di.ch.r-.. atri, mrr. Soce'l. nd B1'dd,r i'laeases, llv VlL'ICK CURES-LOW CHARGES JEi0 by m11- p O. Box 768. Office ever n a. lh street, between Farnam ar.J Douglas street. OMAHA. NEB. fPVBPVALPILt ra, ii.,p,r,ii,w unVtWiv'T'. Of HICMtal .H'I &NOLISM la ltla a4 a. '" .ua lltfuuMM. l iklMM.. Bf tikulMiini aa 1" alias. Sf f broaaUl. at 4c ft a ParaUaWn, TaaatasaaiaU a4 all Ft. I 1 i. ki. tor r- iff PAY Tare year il' book late mom' Teleebeae B tti7 Dd our represen tative will sail. OLD . V."t 'KthMSr. tea, srv u iwvr x3 "Ye Old llooko Shop," Wk faaaaaWsVM iftll