TTTTC BKR: OMAITA, RAT TODAY, MARCH 22, 1913. Waists for Easter Wear Milady needs a beautiful waist for her Easter suit and will find that a choice is not hard from our collection of tlressy waists, tailored waists and lingerie styles. The fabrics Voile, Linon, Chiffoh, Crepe, Batiste, Nets, Crepe do (1iine,.Tub Silk and Brocade Silks givo you a vast as sortment of waists from which to choose. A visit to this section Saturday will prove well worth while. AVaists-98c to $10.50. Dresses for All Occasions In our new dress section we givo superior service, Btyle and individuality. Luxurious rooms for your privnto use, experienced salesladies and fitters in attendance. . An unequalled showing of dresses of every stylo, in ovcry fabric such as crepe do chine, in new draped effects $25.00. Crepe Meteor drosses in late colorings $.15.00. Hand embroidered dresses in voile aud crepe $19.50 to $75.00. Wash silk dresses-$7.50 to $8.75. 1 AND SIXTEENTH HOWARD STREETS Silk Hosiery For Easter Nothing more suitable than silk hosiery for Easter wear. Thread Silk Hose $1.00, $1.50 and $1.75 n pair. Black Silk Hose with lisle garter tops and soles $1.00 and $1.50 a pair. Medium weight Black Silk Hoae $2.00, $2.50 and $3.00 a pair. Staple Shades at $1.50 and $2.00 a pair. Toilet Goods Saturday Specials 25c Peroxide Cream, 1212c. 25c Cucumber Hand Lotion, 12M-C a bottle. Popular brands of perfume, regular prico 50c an oz. 135c. Ideal Hair Brushes, the gen uine imported, double bristle kind, regularly $1.15, at 75c. Washable Gloves ' SOc a Pair "Kayser" Silk, Lisle or Chamoisetto glovos, black, white and colors 50c a pair. "Kayser" Silk Gloves, $1 a Pair lG-button length Silk Gloves in black, white and colors $1.00 a pair. 2-clasp Silk Gloves in black, white and colors, nico, heavy quality, good wearing, our best scllors $1.00 a pair. Special Sale of Inexpensive Millinery In Oar Basement Hats Trimmed Free Reserved for tomorrow's cus tomers are one hundred hats which will be placed on sale for the first time Saturday morning. These hats are in the new est styles and colorings, trimmed with fancy feathers, flbw- ' ers and ribbons (see illustrations) at these special prices: $2.95, $3.95 and $4.95 A large assortment of Un trimmed Hats in hemp, pat ent Milans and Azures, all the season's best colors and black $1.45, $1.95 and $4.95 Wide French Ostrich Plumes in two-tones, all fine colors, for $1.95 and $2.95 Saturday. Beautiful line of fancy Wings and Stickups, fifty different styles and colors, 39c, 70c and $1.95. AUSTRIA WRITES ULTIMATUM Answer of Montenegro to Demands is Unsatisfactory. SITUATION BECOMES SERIOUS Lively InterclimiB;e of View Tle twem Austria nnrt Itnly Itf RnrilltiK Joint Action la In Proa-res. They Are Decidedly Different You will appreciate the dif ference when you select your material,' then" havo',your now gown, . skirt . or. suit made just as you want it. DRESS GOODS DEPART MENTMAIN FLOOR. Men's Neckwear and Shirts With that new Spring suit, you should have one of our ties or shirts to complete your Easter attire. We have an unusually beautiful selection of Easter neckwear and can surely please you. Prices start at 50c. Just received, a lino of new striped shirts that will please you. Price, $1.50. Negligee style, with French cuffs, a very good assort ment, $1.50. Special at $1.15 A large line of new spring patterns will be sold at this price Saturday. All sizes. Mon's Department, Main Floor, a step from either entrance. AND SIXTEENTH twrrriL m 1HQM om US, "SI Jffl & HOWARD STREETS VIENNA. Austria, March 21,-The Aug. trla-Hungnry government Is preparing an ultimatum to Montenegro, according to an unofficial statement today. The ulti matum was decldod upon, It Is said, owing to the unsatisfactory nature of the reply to the Austrian remonstrances regarding Scutari. The Montenegrin reply Is considered here as creating a serious situation. A lively exchange of views Is proceeding between the Austro-Hungarlan and the Italian Foreign offices In regard to pos sible Joint action by the two powers. Austria will insist on enforcing the de cision of the European powers that Scu tari shall remain ah Integral part of the future autonomlous state of Albania. Reply of Klnjr Nleholn. LONDON, March 21.-Klng Nicholas of Montenegro today replied to poremptorv demands mado by Austria yesterday In connection with the Montenegrin bom bardment of Scutari. Although the note Is conciliatory In' tone, the king refuses most of Austria's demands. Ho says he lias ordered that the bombardment be directed only against the forts and trmt the rest of tho city shall not bo shelled. Klmr Conntnntlnr Tnke Oath. ATHENS, Murch 21. King Constantino of Qreece took tho constitutional oath of office" of the chamber of Deputies today Under auspicious circumstances In tho presence of the highest official of tho state and the entire Parliament. The metropolitan of Athens, who was surrounded by the members of tho ho'y synod In full canonicals, offered prayer and then read aloud the oath, which the king repeated In a firm voice. The king then signed the oath and all the cabinet ministers and the metropolitan counter signed It amid the hearty cheers of the deputies. A salute of 101 guns was fired when tho royal procession left tho palaec-jfor & Chamber of Deputies. Brilliant weather had brought out great crowdB, who cheered tho king on his way, and the military bands stationed at Intervals played the national anthem. The king wilt start for Salonlkl tonight. -4- f-EIGHT DIE AND HUNDRED AND SEVEN HURT IN STORMS (Continued from Pago One.) ...as 117 Jtitals (inle MovIiik Northward. WASHINGTON, Murch 21.- ternnc storm that raged over the central west ern states throughout tho night was to day moving northwestward, leaving a wako of destruction. Telegraph and tel ephoho communication" wero crippled throughout tho district south of tho Ohio river. Tho storm moved northward and fore daylight, and within four hours had prostrated telegraph lines In all direc tions. All transudation lines were crippled. One young woman was blown under the feet of a team of horses and severely hurt. Tho first effects of the storm were felt south and east of Chicago. Wires routed around tho south end of LakeMIchlgan went dqwn within an hour :of thr tlmo the storm struck, Then the territory west of the oltyfw.itr,4uy oftr and about two hours later tho last of' the above ground wires; along the north shore suc cumbed to the combined1 forces of Ice and wind, The Two Wires enrvlve, only lines which survived were cutarad over Ohlgo and Indiana and! two wires to St. Louis. Over these was carried n very small pari oi me nuns m Intelligence which normally Is received and sent out from Chicago, The only threatened further destruction. .The weather bureau, from the meagor reports compiled over the crlpplod wires predicted a scvore cold wave to follow. crumb of comfort to those charged with Storm warnings wero ordered displayed! transmitting press and commercial telo- Hit along tho Atlantic' coast from Hut teres to Eastport, Mo, Last night's storm swept Arkansas, MiKsUslppi and on north across the Ohio river and today was centered over tho Ureat Lakes. Tho weather forecaster, after examining his reports, said: "The storm U accompanied by severe grams was that the Qood Friday holiday relieved them of the usual burden of brokerage aud market reports. Six hours after the storm broke, the sun forced Its way through tho clouds and tho dleturbnnco ceased almost ns suddenly na It had begun. The damage. however, had been done, and early estl- western sectlonjbt Madison county at 2 o'clock this morning, killing two children of Jonafl RoberisT whoso house was blown awny. A third child was badly Injured. Tho gale waa followed by a terrltlf'lc nail and rain storm. .SOMERSET, Ky., March 21. Thirty five frame buildings were blown down. None of the occupants was badly Injured. Other, points In. the same, sectlpi..rjBported damage, DI3AU) FIFTY INflUnBD FIYJS Wind PUTDTV UTPUW MP l'ore daylight, and within four hours had Hallna, La., a town of about 300 lnhabl- lnllll 1-JJlUIll JJ1JJ prostrated telegraph lines In all dlrcc- tants In nienvillo Parish, by last night's severo wind storm, according to a report received hero today, Several houses were blown down in Qlbbsland, a town In Bienville Parish, and several thousand dollars property damoKe was done. Tho house of Joe Randall In Olbbsland, was blown from lti, foundation, carried through tho nlr I several hundred yards and deposited out side the town 31 mi Killed at Tiffin. COLUMBUS, O., March, 21. At Tiffin, O., William Wick, 75 years of age, was Instantly killed and six or eight othors aro believed to havq been burled in tho debris of a smoko stack of a country in flrmnry, which was wrecked by tho high winds. Three others are known to be Injured Luke Erie limit Aliasing. SANDUHICY, O., Morach 21,-Two boats are missing, one Is on tho rocks and another In distress In the soventh mile galo that Is sweeping Sandusky bay today. It Is thought that six or more men may have been drowned. Life sav ers have gone to the resctle of six others who are In extreme peril JHFFBRSON, Tex., March 21,-FKty to sixty thouvuud dollars' damage whs done, but no lives were lost 'in a tornado which Inst two minutes hero last night. ... Vb II....... i I.IKIII1III1V niriKfH .11111. . . . 1 .. ..nnr,.,i ii t r. , v iviu. ... a i v-n jiiv v . ' ' -. - - - many ,hZu l tl"o north cent a tat ' the west were severed today as et.ecf "truck the county Jail at Covington. Ky, many points in mo norm ccnirai ",.. .. ...... .,., today, hurl nir the firtin.fnnt rhimnnv stornl cutting off cow-' up over night In the Mississippi ar,d Ohio to the ground and bouncing the sixty! At Hoxto a hotel In the course of con siorm cuiiiiiK tu"' .. . . . ... . . .. nri. ,.n . r. i ..n. wnu h nwn Mown, tho rallroua tlver valleys, wina, rain, sieei anu nu- c'"oi num nun .......... - - ,( storms which raged last night and con- co"- prisoners were thrown into a siauon ucsiroyeu, an tlnued this morning caused tho worst Pl- entirely flattened, three brick store ouiiu. wlro blockade tho telegraph and telo- Wind Velocity llluheM mi itecord. ! la Partly ",own aown Bna lnB DV- I phono compunies have known In years. LOUISVILLE, Ky.. March 21. At I building wrocKea. Tho farthest west that could bo rooched Loulsvillo tho weather bureau gauge rig- ccoraing io me i.'";iib'i from New York for a time today waJ iHtorcd a velocity of seventy-live miles, i "ow t"0 storm """P1 a P"1" AOOUl "" Mpmnhls. and communication with At- the highest on record at this station. I " mllo wide as rar as coum oe cui lanta was pohsiDio oniy ny rounaaouui in.- b.... , ------. , ,.,,.,.. ,,., nud shifting gales and widespread pre- !V , . " " T , .irAftv. cmuatlon. fallowed by a t-old wave ot tlon placed, the figures as high as 1150.000. unusual severity for this season ot tha Works Orent Havoo In MIs- otirl mid Arknnsn. MEMPHIS. Tenn., March 21. Five per sons wero killed and more than Otty in jured by the storm last night at Poplar Bluff, Mo., according to members of tho crew of the St. Louis & San Francisoo railroad passenger train, which arrived here today. They also reported one dead and twenty-five Injured at Hoxle, Ark., and tho town practically destroyod. Great darrtago was dono at Poplar Blutf and the country botweon that point and Jloxle. Walnut RIdgo Is reported to have been greatly damaged and two negroes killed and ten Injured. The country between Hoxle, Black Rock and Walnut Ridge, Ark., is strewn with wreckago of all kinds. Bedquilts, shceU and clothing wavpd from treetops, and tho ground Is covered with timber, & St. Louis, due hero at 2:55 a. m., was nearly six hours late, being caught be tween Murfrcesboro and Wlnstead In a maze of tangled wires. FIFTEEN DEAD IN ALABAMA Town of Lower Ucnch Tree Prac tically Wiped Ont. MOBILE, Ala,, March 21. The town ot Lower Peach Tree, Ala., was practically wiped out by a tornado last- night ahd at least fifteen persons were killed, ac cording to word received from Pine Hill this afternoon. The tornado passed di rectly through tho town and only a few houses escaped destruction. News of tho disaster was confirmed when an appeal reached the mayor ot Pino Hill asking for doctors and nurses. A message asking assistance was also sent to Governor O'Neal. Among the dead aro the following prominent citizens: FAMILY OF L. D. BRYANT. MR. AND MRS. JAMES CLARK. MRS. COOPER. MRS. G. E. WILLIAMSON AND SON. a. E. Williamson Is seriously but nut fatally injured. SENATE RUSHES MEASURE Makes Record in Iowa for Passing Twenty-Two Bills. INITIATIVE IS UP IN HOUSE Flnnllr Adopta Resolution to .Make It - Apply- to Laws Direct and Also to CliniiReft In the Constitution. TWO FATALITIES IN INDIANA and great damage haR been dono o olec- "ally as trie wires, the munlcatlon throughout tho mlddlewcst.' Property Dnuinfte In Many Parts of State Is Heavy. INDIANAPOLIS, Ind.. March 21. Two persons were killed and several fatally pieces of Iron and parts of wagons ana Injured today by the windstorm which wrougnt navoc mrougnoui me muic. buggies. (From a Staff Correspondent.) DES MOINES, la., March 21. (Special Telegram.) The state senate made a record today of passing twenty-two bills, ono of them of great Importance. Ono of the bills passed was to make It a crime for anyone to carry any opium Into a prison or reformatory or, take Into the prison walls any weapon or de vice to be used for aiding In escape. The house this afternoon devoted a great deal of time to a proposal to put the Initiative and referendum Into the state constitution and finally adoped tho resolution to make this apply to laws direct, but also to tho amendment of the constitution Itself In case1 of passage by the people two times of an amendment h Ifii K rrnrtlfnll)- Isolated. fHU'AC-O, March !l.-Only two telc eraph wires connected Chicago with tho outside world for several hours today. Tiio only practical relief from this situa tion was by way of an underground tele phone cable to Milwaukee. Klec-t. wet snow and occasional dashes of rain, driven by" aforty-mlle gale" from the west, struck tho tlty and environs bo- 1 Candy BeliTcred Easter Day If you want to send a box of candy no an Eustor gift, wo'll 'dellvor It for you Easter morning. IMaco your order early. We have tho choicest mukeB Huyler's, Park & Tilford's, liownoy's, w o o d w a r d'a and O'Brlon's. Kuturtluy SpeclaN. 25c Prophylactic Tooth Brushes U5c Johnson's Papold Tab lets -ISo and 80c 25c Sanitol Tooth Pow der ...... 12o 25c Sanitol Tooth Pasto at 12c 25p .Porpxldfr wof Hydro gen. lo 50c JUnuV-. llonoy- and Almond Cream . . . .sue 1 pint Household Am monia .' IOC 1 lb. Flako Camphor 10c 7Dc ilubber Uloves . .itOc SOc anil . 60c Celluloid Mirrors,' special lot at 25c SOc Heaton's Cold Cream at 4Uo SSc Beaton's Cold Oruam af SOc Follow the Beaton Path" Beaton Drug Co. Farnam and Fifteenth. routes. i ja&.ww and In tho several states Chat sut- llecause the stock markets of the world fered from tho storm the damage Is cj were closed on account of Good Frld iy tlmated ut from J 2, 000.000 to t3,KW,0uo. ie mgnesi on recora at tnis station. 1 " "",u -- Tho loss In Louisville amounts to about ! Poplar Bluff toword Little Hock. Tneve the wire blockade did not cause as union luconvenlonco as It might have on other week days. The wlro chiefs spent five hours and trlrd various combinations before thev found a route between New York ana Chicago, and thet) they succeeded only was no damago cast of Hoxle, Couriers from Poplar Hluff to Hoxle reported that few farm houses were left stundlng In that vicinity. Fear is expressed that tho death list would be greater man ai urwin. m l'ltUlmruli Nr'it hj- Tormiiln. PITTSUUnail. pa., Murch 51,-A ter rific windstorm swept over western Penn sylvania today. At East Pittsburgh a hnuso was wrecked und three rersons seriously hurt, In Mount Plcusu.ut, Pa., windows wero blown In. tho stconlo of a after thoV nd given up trying to put a church toppled and telegraph and tele- wlro through tho area of the storms and phono wires wero prostrated. At gon Bround It with u sweep th.it Jjurobe. Fua., a horse and wagon were touched the Gulf of Mexico, the eastern ,,inki.ii mi iv iii. enin hintv., Hookies and the Canadian borlr, a clr- t gtreet. The damago will amount tj!down north and caRt of Utt,e Uook cult of nearly 5.000 miles. muny thousands of dollars. The Associated Press, which ordmonly Bnstern and central West Virginia wer0 readies Chicago rrom jsew xorn vm -u- stormswept, with heavy property loss, Imnbus, O.. with a wire only 900 miles but no ,088 of 11o ,g roportcj, long, hitched up Its various circuits to k. ..nnnonllon wlfn rolnvs nt the .""."' "' ...v -v - nmnin&v in-. -i..i. w. t ........ , nura,, .,,., u, ai. vvcmi negroes are reported killed and a num causing thousands ot dollars of damage to property. Omer A. Kite, a cab driver at Frank fort, was killed when the roof of a build ing struck him. Henry Wallers, a workman of Lafay ette, was crushed to douth underneath a falling sign. Several churches and school houses wero wrecked over the stato and one of tho buildings of tho Indiana university at nioomington was damaged. Wire service all over the state was demoralized. Tho wind. It was said, reached a ve locity of sixty miles an hour at 0 o'clock. Tho streets here are littered with wrecked Notek from Harvard. HARVARD. Neb., March 20.-(8pecial.) Harvard High school gave Its annual declamatory contest at Stokes' onra house last evening, the room being filled to Its utmost capacity. The Judges ave first place to Bernard Townsend of the dramatic class, who recited "Swore Off," anonymous, and second to Morna Wil son, who recited "Have the Party." H. Alice Howell, head professor of dramatic art, University of Nebraska, was referi'4. Prof. It. M. Eaton, Fremont Normal col lege, Anna V. Day, assistant state su perintendent of schools,, and Prof. Charles W. Taylor, principal Teachers' College High school, University of Nebrasua, were Judges. Tuesday afternoon a patrons' meeting was held In Stokes opera house under the auspices of the Harvard schools, WYOMING COAL COMPANIES SECURE ANOTHER DELAY CHEYENNE, Wyo., March 21.-Counsel for the Owl Creek and Northwestern Coal companies, defendants In the suit brought by the government to recover land in tho Dig Horn basin, appeared in the United States district court hero tod.iy and asked a continuance until next week, promising that at that tlmo tho Indi vidual defendants would appear In per son. The government charges, ;that ori ginal entries to the land In question were fraudulently made. Judgo Rlner granted the request of the defendants,, remarking as he did so, - he would Instst on final disposition of tho case cither by sottlcment or by trial without more delays. DARR0W WILL DEFEND BOY CHARQEDWITH MURDER LOS ANGELES, Cal., March 21.-Clar-ence Darrow will shortly appear In the defense of another for the first time since he became Implicated In bribery charges growing out of hla defense of the McNamara brothers. Darrow has become Interested In the case of Martin Rlckert, a lad of 15, who is charged with the murder of his father, whom he killed because of the continued cruelty to whloh he and his mother were subjected. If the boy's defense does not Interfere with Darrow'e own third trial, which Is set for March 31, he will net as assistant counsel upder one "of tho attorneys who defended him 1n his bwn first ahd' second trials on charges of bribery. ported, ns the heaviest blow camo at the' signs, parts of roofs, broken windows, , wnCn wa8 weH attended .President ot tho time when tho people were In their home The St. Louis, Iron Mountain Ut South ern railroad station at Mlnturna. Ark.. south of Hoxlewas blown awB". It can not be learned how much other damage resulted from the storm In that section as tho railroad and commercial wires aro following points: The building of the Bradley Mercantile company at Bradley, Ark., was blown down and other damago dono in that vicinity. NASHVILLE. Tenn., March 21. Fol- 8T. IX)UIB, March 20. Colonel Theo dore Roosevelt In R letter made puollc here today, endorses the candidacy of wink if. Qerhart. progressive candidate l lowing hard In the wake of the rm.for mByor 0f at. Louis, at the April eUc .'last week, which cost twenty lives In .l0IJi jjr. Qerhart in 'national politics is bricks from chimneys and branches or trees. The wlro servlco throughout the state was demoralised, some points being out off completely. Interurban lines also were hard hit by tho wind. ROOSEVELT DIPS INTO ST. LOUIS ELECTION Washington. Atlanta. Now Orleans, , , ' T.a nH ma nntniri dumnr. the Dallas. Denver. Omaha, Des Moines and y w,IMtatormg whloh Btruck a 8mall state was visited early this morning by Minneapolis to Chicago. settlement five miles north of Macon, another, swept up from the southwest llluh Vlnd tu Southwest. Miss. It Is said that severe damago was through tho heart of middle Tennessee. KANSAS OITV, March Jl.-Snow and wrought by the storm In the northern! concentrating Its fury on Murfreesboro, sleet and a drop In temperature weie ) part of the stute. but communication Injuring one man, Hall James, fatally, general over tho Missouri valley and the southwest last night and early today. In Buino section the storm was uocwu panled by a strong wind. Heavy rains preceded snows, in soutu Colonel Roosevelt In ris with this section Is impossible on account! und doing tfOO.OOO worth of damage. ot tho demoralised condition ot telegraph and telephone linen. Neurit Wummi Killed li- Storm. TYLER, Tex., March 31.-A negro aud east Missouri. At Oklahoma City woman was killed near here and a white the wind ros to forty-stx miles an hour. cnu,i was injured nt Winona in a severe .... ' . ... t IA 19 ' . . ... . . .... uje mercury m; inuiunin , storm wnicn visiico pmiiii county last here. IS In St. Joseph, 10 at wianua ana Concordia. Kan.; XI at Springfield, Mo.; I at Oklahoma City; 2 at benver and lv at Amarlllo. Tex. Louisiana Towns Wrecked. 8HKHVUPOHT. La-, March 2L-One man killed, severul persons Injured and heavy property damage wu done at ALLEN'S FOOT-EASE ThcAntUentlcpowdtr tbskrn lata the ihon The Standard Kein- edy for the led ior a quitter I century. 30,000 testimooUU. Bold InuU-Xuk. everywhere, ISC Mmple I'Klitt. Address, Allen 8. Olouitd. Le Rov. N Y. TtecMaawkopattb" EEs U FEET. night. Many Inusen were damaged and telephone aud telephone wires were blown down. The city of Lyter was not In the storm sone. One Killed lit Colnmbua. COLUMBUS, O., March 31. A terrific 'windstorm swept over central Ohio today, causing ono death, probably a score ot person Injured, numerous small fires and thousands of dollars damage to prop erty. Tho gale reached a velocity of ftlty miles an hour. luclwrd rummer, a contractor, was killKl and three other men seriously in jured when a brick bulldlug rollHsd. Ttro Die nt Hunlavlllr. Ht'N'PSVILLE, Ala Marth 21 A tur nado swept a belt of destruction a quar tcr of a mile wide through the uorttv The storm struok Murfreesboro about S oclock, ripping a path through the public square. Nearly every building there was leveled or practically destroyed. The Presbyterian church was completely wrecked. One corner of the court house Mas unroofed. The people were aroused from their beds by the terrific wind and the early morning hours were to them houra of terror. Between Murfreesboro and Wlnstead, a station on the Nashville, Chattanooga & St. Iouls railroad to tho south, train con ductors report that houses were lifted bodily and some of them deposited across the track. At Alexandria every residence waa damaged, but no lives were lost. Wire service In nearly every direction was par alysed. Weet of McKenxle all wires were out and the extent ot the storm In west Ten nessee is not known, but trains report a heavy gale west ot McKenxle. The At lanta train on the Nashville. Chattanooga Board James Whlssnand presided. The speakers on this occasion were Prof Charles W. Taylor of the State uni versity, Miss Lena Friday of tho Har vard schools, Anna V. Day ot the state superintendent's office, Rev. J. A . Rousey, Rev. E. C. Davis and Rev. D. J. Cronln, local ministers. Monday afternoon Harry Thomas, lxte secretary of the State Printing board and who has been appointed private secretary to Congressman Barton, left with his family for Washington to take up his work with the convening of the special session of congress. PERSONAL PARAGRAPHS Mr. snd Mrs. P. J. Creedon are home after passing the winter at Miami. Fla.. where they visited Mr. Bryan In his new winter home at "The Punchbowl," and diw, among other Omahans. Mrs. Eliza beth Dufrene and her son, Fred Dufrene. PETITION IN PETTICOATS WILL WAIT ON CONGRESS WASHINGTON, March 21. Pettlcoated "messengers from home" In the shape of suffragettes will descend on congress when It reconvenes on April 7. One dele- gate from each district will march in the procession today from a mass meeting In a down-town theater to the caplto), each delegate to buttonhole her own par ticular representative and Insist on his Influence toward getting a ballot for women. The senate will also be invaded. It was announced today that these "messengers from home" will rc.new tha charges of Incompetency against the local police for their alleged . failure to pro tect the women In the suffrage parade of March 6. DEATH RECORD Mrs. W. J. Wllhnr. Word has been received from Los An geles of the sudden death or Mrs. M. J. Wilbur after an attack ot heart trouble. Mrs. Wilbur was traveling with her sis ter, Mrs. Mary Green, ut the time of her death, and there was no forewarning ot its Went. Sho Is survived here by ono daughter. Mrs. Jphn B. Sheldon, with whom eho resided, at 2532 Cass street, and a brother. George P. Anderson, ot the local fire department. The body will be brought to Omaha for burial. Only One "IlltOMO O.IJININE." That is LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE, Look for the signature of E. W. GROVE Cures a Cold In One Day. Cures Grip m Two Days. 25c Advertisement. ' Roots, Barks, Herbs n democrat letter says: "In these municipal contests It "ttor. Is necessary In order to carry out tne declared, purposes and principles of the progressive party to put at the head of our ticket good men who have not stood with us on national Issues. We are not merely trying to put our own men In office; primarily what we are seeking to do la to apply the fundamental omi clples of the progressive party In local affairs Just ae we seek to apply them In n.iinnni und state affairs." Colonel Roosevelt denounces Henry W iAre skillfully combined with other valuable Ingredients in Hood's Sarsa- Klel. the republican candidate, on imag ination that he was a delegate to the republican national convention who voted to sustain "the fraudulent roll." "If this Is so." said the Roosevelt let ter "he should under no circumstances receive the support ot upright and honest cltliens." Krs. Bay Ssska Brother Mrs. A. R. Itay of Rochester, Minn., has asked the nn,.i, nnllce to help her locate ner brothers. Albert and Barney Rlstlne. who I are supposed to be In Omaha. The oeath. parllla, making it, in our opinion, the strongest and safest, the most suc cessful, and the most widely useful medicine for the Mood, Stomach, Liver nud Kidneys. It contains not only Saraaparllla, but aso those great Alter atives, Stlllingla and Blue Flag; those great Antl-Hlllous and Liver rem edies, Mandrake and Dandelion; those great Kidney remedies, Uva Ursl, Juniper Berries and Plpsissewa; those great Stomach Tonics, Gentian Root and Wild Cherry Bark; and other valuable curative agents. Hood's Sarsaparilla of a near roiatlve Is the cause of the In- . . wonderfUi benefit In cases of Kheunintlsin. Sciatica. Catarrh. Rlnmurd qulry, as the two brothers have oeen ettj Troubles, Kidney and Liver Affections, Scrofula, Eczema, Skin Diseases, quite a sum of money IHocl Poisons, Bolls,. Ulcers, all Kruptlons, General Debility, Loss of Ap- Key to the BituaUon-Bee AdverUsina, petite, That Tired Feeling, and other Ills arising from impure blood.