THE OMAHA SUNDAY BKE: APRIL 11. 1909. ROOSIYELT AT -PORT SAID Former President and Party Arme on Steamer Admiral. was destroyed by fire Thursday morning, nearly six hour after the time the murder ta believed to have been committed. W. H. Rogrs of Cleveland, state fltc minhil la In Tnterin nrt ia t,ktn - . The Ringing of Easter Bells reminds us Spring is really hereand Spring suggests sonsl charge In the Investigation of this feature or the case. M oftsWm sVsM eeassM GUEST OF CANAL OFFICIALS lrssae et te Antrim reeple A beat f.ond Werk f Tkrlr Krllaw reeatryesea at Ntulat. PORT SAID. April 10. The steamship. Admiral. bearing eg-FTeeldent Theodore r.oosevelt end party, entered the Hue rami rnroute to Mombasa at 7:40 o'clock thle morning. Excellent weather prevailed during the. three daye' voyage from Messina to the Port and the trip was uneventful. Mr. Ttoosevelt and all the membera of hie party are. well. Mr. Roosevelt haa given out for publica tion the following statement regarding the existing situation at Messina, whirh city he visited Tuesday of thla week: "There Is no sadder sight than the dreadful deaolatlon of Messina, and words cannot describe It. It eeeme that there ara Mill 40.000 bodies burlrtB in the ruins. "The American people do not realize the In bora of the relief performed by Lloyd Urlscom, the American ambaasador; Com mander Belknap, the naval attache at Heme, and the men of the gunboat, Scot-lo--., under Lieutenants Buchanan and "Wilcox, as well aa by Wlnthrop Chanter and the ether membera of the volunteer committee. "I waa especially struck by the effi ciency, good humor and all around power shown by the enlisted men." nOOOKVEl.T CAM.8 PARIS FAKKR Ei-Tr-raldee Peales He Girt "Widely (Irceleted Interview. P A HIS. April 10. Theodore Roosevelt, in a cubkgram from Port Said to a Paris uenspaper, drnlcs that he gave any inter, views to French correspondents at Naples. He fays he never saw the correspondent of I.e Journal, whose "Interview" with Mr. Roosevelt was widely published. Le Journal replies that Its correapondent talked for Imlf an hour with Mr. Roose velt Htid de ls res the text of the "Inter view" an published to be strictly accurate. Tailor is Held foriToledo Murder Coroner Accuses Michael Soboleski of Killing Couple Found in Ashes of Home. TOLEDO, O., April 10. Coroner C. J. Hemler today rendered his verdict In the Krueger murder caae. holding Michael Soboleski, a tailor: responsible tor the deHtha of Ludwlg Krueger and his wife, Augusta, whose bodies were found buried In the cellar of their home after it had been destroyed by fire the morning of April 1. Soboltcskl says he had purchased the Krueger farm, west of Toledo, nd that he visited the Kruegera the evening of March 30. The coroner's verdict ts that the farmer and his wife were killed between S and 7 j'clock that night. They had' been atabbed to death. The bodies were buried beneath tho brick floor of the cellar. The house Skin and Blood Diseases Banished The (1 Vuiikly J'urlfled, and the Skin Hoilrd by Stuart's CuMum Wafers. The importance of the blood to the physical system is apparent to every uu. It contains in Itself all the tie mcnts necessary for the nourishment and reconstruction of the tissues of the body, these elements being absorbed from the food In the stomach. The blood la the greatest circulating medium in existence. It la the channel of transportation In the body, not only of nutritive supplies to the tissues, but also of the consumed and worthless may terlala that have fulfilled their purpose, and are to he ejected from the body. It frequently happena that the blood becomes charged with Impurities absorbed from the stomach, Intestines and kidneys, and which, if It Is unable to eliminate through the usual channels, it senda out through the pores of the skin In the form' of pimples, blackheads and various skin eruptions. The skin Is composed of two layer known as the scarf-skin, or cuticle, and the true akin, or derma. The number of pores In the skin Is estimated to be i,S00 to the snusre Inch, or a total of about 7.000.000 In the entire system, and If put In one continuous tube, would measure twenty-eight miles In length. About one fifth of the Impurities of the body are eliminated through these pores. If the scarf-skin, which Is constantly being thrown off, should for any reason, collect and block up the pores, skin dis eases, such ss furuncles or bolles, car buncles, acne, lichen, etc., sre certain to occur. Stuart's Calcium Wafers Is the ideal remedy for keeping the blood free from Impurities, and the akin devoid of erup tions, no matter what the cause may be, ss the wafers cleanse the entire system, snd act generally aa well as locally. The principal Ingredient of this remedy is calcium sulphide, which is a standard U. S. P. preparation, and Its powerfully alterative, blood-purifying and skin-healing properties are well-known to all phy sicians and druggists. ' Htuart's Calcium Wafers act mildly upon the liver, kidneys and tnteaii'ies and powerfully upon the blood, and skin, eliminating Impurities of every nature, healing all skin diseases, and building up rich, red blood and rendering the com plexion rosy and healthy. Obtain a box of thla powerful remedy from your druggist. If you are suffering from such diseases as pimples. I lacU heads. boils, carbuncles, tetter, herpes, erythema, urticaria, roseola, nettle rash, hives, ringworm, etc., and you will be sur prised at the alacrity with which the sys tem la rid of these troubles. He will tell you a package for SO centa. or send us your name and addreas and we will aend you a trial package by mall f re. Address K. A. Stuart Co., 176 Stuart Bldg.. Mar shall. Mich. CVX.ABX' cm trigs or "LBAJJIvT is.000 toes, ftae. large, R aaasually steady fl 0UND the UORLl) Krern New Tork. Oct. li, Itot. .icarly four months, mating only Itja AND I I' Including all expenses afloat and ashore' racial, rBanravzg Materia, gn. laeia, Oeylea. Bunst, Java, Borneo, Van. Upalaea. Japaau Aa aaasual caaaoe to visit eassoaUy attractive plaoee. lata Aa'l oJleat Cruise, reb. s-'io. B4m prlag h liaair Tease te Barope $3TO up! v. via.sav. Times Slug, M. T. Tug Crew Lost in Lake Storm Deck Cabin of the George Floss is Washed Ashore Near Cleveland. CHEVELAND. O.. April 10-There is no longer doubt that the tug Georgia Floss, with Its crew of six and three passengers, sank In Lake Erie during Wednesday's big gale. Wreckage from the boat washed ashore today twelve miles cast of Cleveland. The wreckage consisted of part of the cabin with the word "Floes" on it and some bucket racks. Searching parlies are now along the casl shore looking for bodies and other wreck age. Those on board the I'loss when It left Cleveland were Captain William Barry. Captain John Daly, Engineer Fred Qilber, Peck Mackenzie, Frank Wesseheler, Henry Anderson, John O'Donnell, Joe Martin and a IS-yeer-old boy named Campbell. The last three named were passengers on the Floss and had gone fishing w'h the crew the day of the gale. All of tne men but Wesseheler were residents of Cleveland. He lived In Erie, Pa. Shock is Kelt for Thirty Miles Fifty Thousand Pounds of Black Powder Explodes in Plant at Wayne, N. J. WAYNE, N. J., April lO.-More than 50.000 pounds of government powder ex ploded today at the Dupont black powder mills here. Instantly killing one workman, Jerome Marsh: seriously Injuring two other mem and slightly injuring about seventy five other employes. The eight buildings of the plant were destroyed and houses were wrecked even In the surrounding country. The shock was felt In villages thirty miles away. The cause of the disas ter Is unknown. The explosion hurled an eleven-ton grind ing wheel nearly 600 feet through the air and burled it twelve feet deep In a swamp. The loss will reach $160,000. ROME. April 9. A serious explosion oc curred this 'morning In a four-story house on Boigo Pio street, near St. Peters. Twenty persons were wounded, some severely and a portion of the building waa destroyed. All four floors collapsed. It Is thought dynamite stored In the house by by fishermen for illegal fishing exploded accidentally. Takes Revenge on Enemy's Brother Unable to Find Man that He Hated Italian Kills the Next of Kin. ST. LOUIS. April -Unable to find Liuli Macaluso, against whom he cherished a bitter hatred, Salvatore Ferlossa wreaked his vengeance upon the next of kin in true Sicilian style last night, waylaying and shooting Sam Macaluso In the hallway of their home at 5048 Daggett avenue. The victim received three bullet wounds and died early today. Ferlossa Is a fugitive. All their acquaintances had thought Fer lossa and Sam Macaluso to be friends. The former had been wounded by Louis Mac aluso five weeks ago after a quarrel but when he had recovered from the hurt he evinced no resentment against Sam. The men lived in the same boarding house and last evening ate and drank together. But when Macaluso climbed the stairs to his room, Kerlossa's door waa thrown open and the shots rang out. "I take my revenge," exclaimed the slayer, as he dashed past the other mem bers of the household. UNCLE SAM ASKED TO HELP MISSISSIPPTFLOCD VICTIMS Hepresentattve "Wallace Aeke Appro prlatlea of tBO.OOO for Construe tloa of lllsuluds. WASHINGTON, April 10. The construc tion of fifty experimental grounds on which the people living along the banks of the Mississippi river may take refuge to gether with their live stock during sea sons of flood Is the proposal that Repre sentative Wallace la preparing to urge upon congress. He has Introduced a bill for tho appropriation of $50.0uv for this purpose. "The government has constructed levees along the Mississippi river," explained Mr. Wallace today, "from the mouth of the Ohio to the head of the passes, sometimes fifteen miles back from the river. Be tween the levees and the river are more than l.oon.oon acres of valuable farming land. As a result of the levee building policy of the government the lives and property of the Inhabitants on the 1,000.000 acres of land are threatened every time there la a flood. The levees tend to back the water up over the land. The abo rlglnees constructed mounds along the, liver on which they might take refuge and. I believe, that, owing to the policy of the government, long since adopted. It ought to construct new mounds for the present Inhabitants." FINDS LOST BROTHER AFTER SEARCHJ3F MANY YEARS Kaaaaa (III Mia Discovered Rela tive Had Beea .Neighbor for Years. KANSAS CITY, Mo., April 10-John Alfred Kohler, known to his comrades as Johnny Alfred, a soldier stationed at Jef ferson barracks near St. Ixiula, met his long-sought brother. Kit Kohler, a brewery solicitor, In the latter a home hers last night after twenty-four vears of search ing. Johnny Alfred ran away from home when 4 years old, was taken up and sent to an orphan's home. He forgot his full name. Recently his comrades urged him to endeavor to find his relatives. Kohler did ao, writing a letter to the Kansas City Star detailing his history, and it was read by Kit. After the reunion It developed that the lost boy had lived for several years next door to Fred Kohler. another brother. In St. Joseph, Mo., without dis covering their relationship. Moat Food Is I'olsoa lo the d sceptic. Electric Hitters cure dvspepsia. liver snd kidney complaints and debility. True inc. For sale by Beaton Drug Co. Effl FOR THE NEST Don't say YOU CANNOT AFFORD new homeFOR YOU CAN. In fact you CAN'T ALONG WITHOUT THEM. Say to yourself that you're going to have your home FURNISHED COMPLETELY for once in your life and then come here and make your selections. We'll charge the amount of your pur chase and you can settle the bill In small payments from month new nest you need, then get our price on complete outfits. splendid quality. We'd like to show you these beautiful save you on the cost. it LET Furnish- i Inns I Rooms $ 5.00 Cash 4.00 M.nlhly CHIFFONIER Made of solid oak, five large drawers, brass neatly carved, well made and thoroughly guaranteed. drawer pulls, exceptionally special, at CHINA CLOSET Made of solid oak, bent end de sign, double strength glass, ad- tucket lustable shelves. 13.58 French plate mir ror, neatly carv ed. Special 1 WrM 5.49 , Ill I If ""I" 1"" II- l lsl I gj iLpTWlijB j COX.XWLFBIBX.B Gsimous Credit, with no interest charged for this Accomodation 1414 Colorado Prison Claims Omahan Frank Dunlop, Sullar Performer Here a Short Time Ago, Turns Out Forger. Frank Uunlop, club man. "good fellow" and erstwhile cltisen of Omaha, landed In tlie' Colorado atate penitentiary at Canon City yesterday aa the result of a persistent tendency to sign other men's names to checks. Punlop was brought Into court and ad mitted his guilt. He plead that he would make ihe checks good and aas let go on this condition. Hut he resumed his forg Ings and when before the court again a plea for mercy availed not. Incidentally he bad broken hia parole and this did not help him much. A sentence of from three lu five years was imposed. Dunlop anl Krank Ehercliffe are now "detained" by the same prison authorities. Dunlop made Onitn his home from I VsaMsW ttMsMsf MMMi WHHMlP EOT HART MAN FEATHER YOUR NEST" 49 4 Rooms 7.00 Cash .00 Monthly DRESSER Made of highly poliahed solid oak. fancy shape French plate mirror, carved standards, three jaras, tnree 7.90 roomy arawera. workmanship In this dresser, tin- comparable. Special. EXTENSION TABLES Handsome Colonial de sign, of superior con struction and finish throughout. Made of solid quarter sawed oak In Early English or golden finish. Hand some platform base and large carved claw feet. Spe cially re duced to. 19.50 ARTISTIC ROCKER All Goods go-cart aenv 1 a t eredinii The lightest, yet strongest, Go Cart of Its kind on the markot. Folds up compactly and is easy to carry. All wheels double un der. Hood and body of Nan Unlet leather, In brown, green. tered black or blue. Com plete with hood. An extraordinary- bar gain. Sale price. . . 6.75 1 hese are rugs ana win ne r a special lot - 16 - 18 nmim aq r STREET Hill: January, I!, to July, 1907, and was in and out of town after the latter date. He was for most of that time engaged in the pas time of impersonation more than any oilier one thing, but not criminal Impersonation Impersonation for the entertainment of the pi hi c. One of his chief stunts was taking off Billy Nye. He managed to Ingratiate himself into the confidence of many people, most of whom later discovered their mis take. Mr. 8ti kney picked him up and put him In the railmad business, in the city office of the Great Western and when he ter minated hia services there it was at the request of the compaiy, which had found out that other men were more aatisfactory custodians of funds. Dunlop'a pretent situation Is no surprise to Omaha people; in fact it has been antic ipated for montha. It has been generally kmwn here that he ass in serious trouble In Colorado. One of h'.s tricks has been to falsely represent hlmtelf ss a cousin of W. J. Bryan. U A eta (.ollllalaa means many bad brulaea, which Bucklen's Arnica Salve heal quickly, ss it does ores and burns Zoc. "or sale by Beaton Drug Co. ESI furnishings in your RFF0RD TO WORRY to month as you earn the money. They're strikingly low prices home outfits and demonstrate Rooms 9.00 Cash 7.00 Monthly UPHOLSTERED '63 5 IlftalBK . -juT l Just glance at the Illustration and ask yourself If you ever knew of such a massive, handsome Rocker being offered at this price before. We're confident you never did. The rockers are made In American quartered oak, nicely polished. Is upholstred through out In guaranteed Nantucket leather, which has the wearing quality of genuine leather. Has best oil tempered steel springs In the seat, and two broad, large, comfortable arms at the back. Look where you will and you cannot find the equal of this splen did rocker value. IlSk ft .:iSte JIM - ..rnwTrai -i"WHa nM.i. MSffi' " 'iiAiM "lie hiiiTr t it a ' is-iiiii nr - .'Ji A. 9x12 WILTON VELVET RUGS of th highest character, made of extra rounrj to give extraordinary service. Tiiey are or 4,6 rugs, especially priced for this sale. j ne pauern is new ana tne colorings are most de pendable. Special, at i r i a i m m i i v ' S i. i ri t "'SIX , r nVf P? nM V AJlwillMxy) Mrs. Sampson is Acquitted Jury Finds Woman Not Guilty of Murder of Husband After Brkf Deliberation. LVONS, N. Y.. April 10-Mrs. Georgia Allyn Sampson, who has been on trial since Monday on the charge that Rhe bud shot and killed her husband. Harry Samp son, waa acquitted shortly after 10 o'clock tonight. Mrs. Sampson wss trembling when the jury announced Its verdict, but she re covered her composure and smilingly re ceived the embraces of her father snd other relatlvs and the congratulates of her friends. She thanked and shook uands with her lawyers, the Jurors snd report ers, but declined to make any statement for publication. Mr. (jilbert, though a cousin of Mrs. Sampson by marriage, prosecuted the caae vigorously and said tonight he waa satisfied. The testimony of the defense today vva.t If it's a complete tor goods of such how much we can Rooms 10.00 Cash 8.00 Monthly SIDEBOARD Massive and pleasing solid oak, beautifully and finished, profusely large drawers, one NIB III 10.00 Cash BIO PRICES "V 14.25 lined for silver ware, an un matchable value., ALIj brass BEDS You never suw anything In a brass bed offer ing that would measurf up to this positively never. These sro massive beds, heavily lacquer ed and guaran teed for ten years. Made In full sixes. It's a world beater at tho price. Special, at 15.25 Bountiful Bargains Credit $ o GO-CART of seamless bicycle tubing handles, has rubber tired wheels very strong, yet ex ceedingly light. Fold com pactly, step and a:l Special at 2.90 Every Article fine material ri n' in h t pt in i 18.75 1414-16-18 DOUGLAS STREET brief, confined chiefly to rebiitilng tha testimony of a gun expert. Hint the hole made in Sampson's outer shiil waa made by a bullet fired from a Uiatanue in4 that Harry Sampson could not. therefore, have committed suicide as the detente alleged. It was S.JO tonight when Judge ltirli completed his chargo to the jury and au hour later the Jurors retired to deliberate. At 10 o'clock they reported having reached an agreement, went to their places In court and in answer to the clerk's formal question theln foreman answered, strongly, "Not guilty." and Mrs. Sampson was told she was free. Woman Recluse Quite Wealthy Over Sixteen Thousand Dollars Found in Home of Supposed Pauper at Maiden, Mass. BOSTON, Mass., Ap'il lo.-A search to day of Ihe liumhln uparlments of Mrs. Adeha Lombard, a Maiden recluse, who LOWEST PRICES ALWAYS CaK- BOOK CASiSS ATIOK A very handsome design and a thorouphly well mad buok rase. Has glass front to book rm sbsj n . a . -avM mm rVWVWVWW I design, polished carved. case door, large French beveled r"nrri neveieii 10.85 mirror, iiaml sonie, carved ornamentations Special sale price. REFRIGERATORS Made of hardwood. gHlvHnlx"d iron lined, wall of mineral wont, equipped with hyuletih' drip Kienif orip 6.50 cups ami other Improved fu tures, very eco nomical. Price. . Guaranteed, no matter how Low fha Price was found dead under a bundle of rags yesterday, revealed J10.IM in gold, sliver. Lank notes, stock certificates and bank hook credlls. When the IhxIv was found the police found ll.CIll in the wnmun a clothing. The city of M.ild'ii has been supporting her son for a 'i.n. and it wus supposed that she waa xi r SUTTON ON CRIMINAL BENCH He Will I'rralde IHirlna the May Term of Hlafrtrl t oarl, Mar irrdlnv Xears. Judge A. U Sutton will preaide over Ihe criminal branch of clixtiict court during Ihe May term. Judge Sears slated H.itui day that an ugrecnient to Hila l 'feet hud be-n reached in January ul a meeting of all the Judges of the dUtrlct court. The calling of a grand jury will accotdlMKly I.,, largely up to Jude bin Ion. whoi) place on the law sid'- wdl be taken by -Judy Hoars. The latter ha" pividd'M over crim inal cases for a yur and one lerni. Cruel Mliake la to n'glect a i old or i oiikIi. rr. King s New lii.-icovciy cures I hem and n ii'Ul. consumption. "' and 11. w. or saie by Beaton Lnug C in IB i - wuu i' 1 4