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AN FRANCISCO CALL O NDAY JULY & CARDINAL GIBBONS RECEIVES MENTION IN THE SPECULATION AS TO THE PROBABLE SUCCESSOR TO THE THRONE OF ST. PETER Frail Body of Ponttfl Is Racked by3 Pains During His Final Hours of Life. Continued From Page 1, Columns 6 and 7. weakness As & as he saw 1 L ily’ requested me to my best means ring whi sal | grad n ag s I wi try LAST ring a few was, therefore, deemed n of his grave con as it rested, ows on which ttle sign of life except the keen, eyves—always his most striking e bed rouped the Noble ng uniforms; the ak and Sword, in their val costume of black twenty-five of the Car- e members of the Sacred present in Rome—state- e figures in their sweeping | the whole forming a scene ubdued colori fit subject. | {'Rembr: the pontifical 1 Rampolla and amberla he whole tamily, | lud- were bed stood the im- | Cardinal grand tall fig: he 3 ar Vannuttelli, with the e's « hear the last co fees f the departing Pontiff. SCARCELY A TEARLESS EYE. The priest apc lic approached, bear--| viaticum, to give the last com- and the extreme unction, assisted nitentiary. Pope Leo confession of faith as f Trent, and absolution and the nce In articulo mor the grand "he heads of the great re we granted 1al which | vilege terring. ) ouching prayers f a paseing soul i part of the Gospel, “The | the last words died 1 their knees. € his transparent fi effort, pronou rds his benediction on ent, and There whole assembl) as scarce eve in the the sobs of the Pope's | nly heard in the deep | gain by mur- | us ejaculation oggia of Raphael, apartments, were the Riccardo Pecci ard Count DOAN’S KIDNE! PILLS 3 FRIEND’S ADVICE Will Often Help You Greatly. Kead What a San Francisco Citi- 2en Says. hesitate to listen to the advice he testimony of friends of Francisco is worth | your most careful attention. It is an easy dents matter to investigate such proof as this. The evidence must be conclusive. Read ng Niler Cook of 7 Hunt street | ing like th back | ng and 1 had attacks of it for years some of them so bad that I did not know what 10 do with myself. When a woman is annoyed like I have been and at last finds & means to end that annoyance she is | or akful but is also anxious to her s and acquaintances a good | turn by nting them of the fact so that they profit by her experience. any one suf- nmrvlnlm or backache | may Let me emphatically advise fering from kidney to_use Di Kidney Pills.” _For sale all dealers. Price, 50 cents. Foster-M T , Buffalo, N. Y., sole | agents fc e United States. | Rem ember the name, Doan’s, and take | 1051 MARZET 67 bet. GrbaTts, 5.7 Cal, The Laggest Anstomica Museom in the Wwarid or any comtracted Cisease ponitively cmrad by the cldest Speciaiist on the Coust. . Est. 36 years OR. JORDAN—DISEASES OF MEN pomiation tres and srictly reaigpent personally of b Pocinee Ourt m every case: Weire for Book. PHILOSOPHY of MARBIAGE, WAILED i valuable book for men ) sy DAN & CO... 1051 Markerst. s 7. @ | etter. A Vi, VIGOR, VITALITY for MEX. MORMON BISHOP'S PILLS | have been in use over flty ears by the leaders of the ormon Church and their followers. Fositively cure the worst cases in old &nd young of well- trom. buse. dissivation. excesses o Lost Impotency, Lost (Nt‘ht Losses, Fowe Insom- uia, Pains in Back, Byil Desires, Laine Back, 5 '“:m Debitiy, Headache, Uriinese to Mar: Semen, mnum. Stop. Mr o V’m nm_nmmt + CENTSucy 16 v, "fl”."" ’”“ apondgnt. & oare '-?{:u IM hr-l- IM nerve conters: Stimaiate box; A written guarant T eunded “with & C % o fll" “ oy oy Fan 40 _Eilis and 40 RANT BRUG CO London Press participation in the last sacraments and | the rderful composure with which the | >ontift received from the doctors the in timation of the gravity of his iliness. The informant sald: | the eagerness displayed rament ereign of the church to the last and re- | possession of hie facuities. | tral the whole gorgeous pomp of the Vatican.” | articles this morning unstintingly eulogize | epective of creeds, | vest @ | ter pai | ti | pears to be quite unfeasible. The Russian | must | RIVER BREAKS THROUGH River broke through the levee two miles Count Moroni, the Pope’s nephews. It is said that owing to the serious ill- ness of the Pope the proposed visit of g Victor Emm el to Paris will be initely | pestponed ind Eulogizes the | Dying Pontiff ONDON, July 6.—The morning pa- n Rome concerning the condition f the Pope. The consensus of opinion of srrespondents is that the aged Pon- (iff can live but a few hours, though there i pe shat his extraordinary vital long life even to some days coreepondent of the Daily Rome le sa Ma ill witk and “Dr. tells me the Pope is umonia, which affects lobes of the right oni wer ang. His Holiness is in full possession of his mental faculties.’ Dr. Mazzoni says there is a bare possi- bility of the Pope’s wonderful recupera- tive powers saving his life, or at least de- ferring death for several days. Never- s the physician apparently enters essimistic forebodings The Morning Post's Rome correspond- ewitness returning from the Vatican at midnight described as a most the grandeur of the Pope’s | say ving scene “Although the Pope himself feels worse than ever in hie life, he is optimistic and has entirely given up hope. Noting by the doctors, s himself ordered the last sac- his part of sov- not nis Hollne wishing to play final consolation while in full Before par- ticipating in the rite the Ponuff bade arewell to the pontifical court—the cen- figure in a setting which unfolded eive the The London newspapers in their leading the 4 “whose bedside, irre- is a center of melan- ng Pope, choly fin est to the whole Christian world.” The Daily News ¢ Pope Leo has done something to bring back the papacy to the position which it held during the s in the middje ages—the position of arbiter and peacemaker in Europe. He is battling against death with the serene and cheerful fortitude which has been the keynote of his life. The Dai graph says “His saintly character and blameless life appcaled even to th who most strongly repudiate his spiritual claims. He has conferred a luster on his life akin to that which the office conferred on him. The whole world prays that he may en- ly into rest.” articles in the same the Dellef that re- Other papers have ain, all accepting very is impossible. @it O ASSEMBLING OF WARSHIPS, TR, N Connnued rrom Pnge T, Column 1. had been dersta ling cached in regard correspondent adds that a well-in- d official informed him that the Chinese policy of Count Lamsdorff, the Russian Foreign Minister, is based en- tirely upon detaching America from Eng- land and Japan. This, he said, was no matter at the outset, and now, nks to Count Cassini’s bungling, it ap- Government will now be compelled to fight or knuckle down, and at no period in Russian history have the Russlans been less willing for war than now. If America is resolved to play the part of slegbing partner in the Anglo-Japanese allfance much Russian money that had been spent in Chinese and Manthurian schemes will be thrown away and Russia begin anew. Of actual war, the ofticial added, there was not the remotest | likelihood, however much Russia may lose at the green-table of diplomacy. —_————— THE LEVEE NEAR YUMA Colorado Forces It (] W&y Into a Fer- tile Valley and Threntens Auin. YUMA, Ariz, July 5.—~The Colorado south of here and Iz now flooding a large fertile valley. Considerable damage to ranches in the vicinity is expected. KIG)AYKEN HOLD UP STREET CAR PASSENGERS Tacoma Conductor Chased by One Bandit and Halted by Bullets. TACOMA, July 5.—Early this morning three highwaymen held up a South Ta- coma street car and robbed the carmen and four passengers of §100 in money and three watches. The conductor was chased half way across the Tacoma-avenue bridge by one of the highwaymen and brought to a standstill by shots from a revolver. ——— Fire Causes Quarter Million Loss. NEW YORK, July 5.—Fire tc-day des- troyed Pler H of the Lehigh Vailey Rall- road Company in Jersey City. The pier wase used almost exclusively for the stor- age of flour, and $100,000 worth of the staple was consumed. The total damage is $250,000. ———— Death of a Mining Magnate. DENVER, July &.—~News was recélved from Redstone to-night of the death of A. C. Caes of this city, first vice presi- dent and general manager of the Colora- do Fuel and Iron Company. ————— Barn and Hay Burned. VALLEJO, July 5.—At the Good Tem- plars’ Orphans’ Home, near this city, last evening a barn containing thirty tons of bhay was burned. The loss will approxi- mate $500. CORONA, July LeoEmeterio Grl a Mexican, 45 years of age, was shot kilied by Rosario Seneiz Anaheim a! incon ll &n_early hour this tated that he :‘annl ba and stated ¢ a an pressed the m“er, mot knowing the wea) was loaded. h‘ e OME, July 53.—At 5 o’clock -this morning His Holiness, after receiving communion in or- private confessor: “I desire to receive solemn communion this cvening.” | ? | dinary form, said to his | | The confessor replied : | But the Pope insisted, saying : more.” day by one of his physicians, church. “Your Holiness would better “No, administer it this evening. To-morrow I shall be no It was after this solemn declaration by the sufferer that it was decided to adMinister the i last sacrament this cvening. The prediction of the Pope coincides with the who expressed the belief that the end The wvitality of the Pontiff continues to amase all about his bedside. dom raise his voice above a whisper not, he continues to give advice for the gmdunu of ' the Not at any time does his mind appear to dwell upon his owon condition for more than a | monment. Even while writhing in pain he devotes his thoughts to his religious duties. E vait witil to-morrow.” American May Be Elected if Car- dinals Fail to Agree Upon an lItalian. v | OME, July 6.—All kinds of specu- , toll, breadth of views and love lation are already in eirculation | of mode been strengthéned { as to the probable successor to | during h America A the throne of St. Peter. Opin- | The religious candidat statement made to- ions are much divided owing to Jottie, whe -would would come to-morrow. many fnterests which will be affected ac kb Sie: sad | cording to the choice made by the Sacred Angelo di Pletro, wito also Though he can sel- RACE WAR RAGING IN EVANSWILLE Continued From Page l Column 3. for some time the committee addressed the crowd and told them that the négro was not there. Dr. William Gilbert, the nh'nrman of the committee, tried to calm tl emblage., but his = voice was drowned by shouts of “Go, get the nig- The people refused to belleve that negro had been removed from the city. | d shouted, “Death to the ne- The police fear they will murder all the negro prisoners indiscriminately. The race war started late last night, when a little boy named Logan was Shot | in the lég by a negro. An unknown negro | woman was killed and several negroes were seriously wounded. The entiré po- lice foree i< stationed at the jail and the as nesroes are taking posseesion of the town. The race riot was the immediate out- come of the shooting of Patroiman Mas- sey on Friday night by Lee Brown, a ne- | gro. Brown and another negro had en- gaged in a quarrel and Brown had sworn | to kill his antagenist. He ran toward his home to secure a revolver, and Patrol- | man Massey, hearing of the trouble, lay | in wait for Brown. As the negro came | back armed, hunting for his énemy, Mas- sey stepped from a doorway and laid his hand on Brown's shoulder. Brown turned quickly and shot the patrolman in the | abdomen. The officér, as he lay on the sidewalk, fired at Brown and_wonnded him dangerously. He fell and the two fired at each other as they lay on the pavement, emptying their revolvers. Mas- sey died soon afterward. At 2 o'clock this morning tne crowds on the streets are increating and firing can be heard in all directions. Disorder and rioting are overywhere and every one of the thousands on the street is carrying his iife in his hands. The police are be- ing cheered for numerous arrests of the negroes they are now making. Bvery time a negro is taken into custody the police | are applanded and hundreds of people are on. .. whole patrol was picked up on r minutes ago and about hots were fired as they passed up Main street. The mob is still going through the streets looking for negroes. The Acme Hotel bad to close its doors Water to-night because aH of its colored ser- vants became panic-stricken and ran away WHITES LOOTING STORES. 3 a. m.—The jail is still surrounded, and whites armed with rifles and revolvers are searching the ecity, looking for negroes and oting into the well known negro resorts. The jall presents a battered appearance. One window has been crushed in, the bars and stone copings are gone; a séécond win- dow is wrecked where the battering ram went through the waus and bullet marks | by the dozens can be seen on the walls. Whether the mob is leaving any dead behind is not known, as every one flees before it and no search has been made for dead. The mob does not stay to in- spect the result of its work. Whites are looting hardware stores to obtain weapons. At First and Sycamore streets an attack was made on the store of Boetticher & Keilogg. This was re- puised by an employe of the company, who declared that the store contained no more guns. The crowd then passed to Water street, where the absence of ne- groes seemed to rankle the men. Some one yelled, “On to Baptisttown,” where many negroes live. The march on Baptisttown was begun with the unarmed men howling for guns. uUn Main street, near Fifth, some one yelled that the store of E. M. Bush & Co. should be attacked. His suggestion was immedjately answered by a rush on the plate glass front. In two minutes the door was forced open and the big windows shattered by gun barrels. Policemen rushed up and drove the mob away. The mob then rushed to Willerding's gun store and forced its way in. Tén minutes later it had 300 additional guns and the march to Baptisttown, where the negro colony lives, was resumed. The mob continued its rush for Baptisttown with the intention of stopping on the way and robbing a powder magazine to secure exploslves with which to blow up the negro colony. AR WOULD CONDONE LYNCKINQ WASHINGTON, July 5.-A remarkable utterance is credited to President Roopse- velt and would be incredible bBut fof the fact that is vouched for by Secretary. of the Navy Moody, who says: “When, recently, 1 traveled with the President and the car was surrounded by a large but friendly crowd, I remarked to him ‘the possibilities of personal danger, and he said that if an attempt was made upon him (the President) he would con- done the lynching of the guilty party. “‘But,’ said I to the President, ‘are you certain they would secure the right per- €on in such a mément? Are you certain that they might not even take you? “The question had never presented it- self to the President in that light before and he agreed that there were dangers which deprived lynching of justification.” Becretary Moody gave a stinging rebuke to lynchers to-day when asked to explain bis allusion in his speech delivered at the Independence day celebration —on the White House lawn, when he stated that mob violence 4nd such displays of pas- sionate resentmént as were recently ex- hibited In New Jersey and Illinois and the Southern States rendered America’s voice helpless when raised against oppression elsewhere. This utterance was generally | loss to the company will aggregate fully WATERSPOUT OVERWHELMS CROWD| i e Continued From Page 1, Column 2. Pittsburg, was purchased by the Pitts- burg, McKeesport and Gréensburg Elec- tric Raillway Company about six years ago. Shortly after the park was laid out a lake was projected to cover six | acres—and the plans rapidly materialized. The water was secured by never falling | springs two miles to the north of the park. An immense wall was built across the ravine. It possessed a basin covering thirty feet and gently slanting. The basin was from five to twenty feet deep. The lake was used for bathing and boating By the ‘numerous picnickers there during the summer months, To-night the delightful little park and lake, this morning the pride of Greens- burg, Jeanette and the railway company, is nothing short of a mudhole and there 1s no lixelihood that an attempt will be made by the street car company to re- place it. During the past two months thousangs of dollars worth of improvements have been placed there. A handsome theater, | fountains and other attractions were built and it is estimated to-night that the $300,000, all caused within the brief time of ten minutes. Py e DEATH LIST VERY LARGE. PITTSBURG, Pa., July 5.—A telephone message from Jeanette received to-night says that from fifty to seventy-five men, women and children perished in the cloud- burst at Oakford Park to-day. The ma- jority were drowned or had their lives beaten out against the rocks in Brush Creek, but quite a number were electro- cuted, i At léast eight hundred persons were at the park, seeking relief from the heat. ‘When theé storm burst the greater num- ber sought the hiilside, preferring the | shelter of the forest trees to the park | buildings, because they did not care to be below the level of the Sam and but little above the drv-season level of Brush Creek. When the dam broke a solid wall of water twenty feet high rushed down and completely filled the narrow ravine with its car tracks, car barn and restau- rant. In front 6f the car barn stood a car containing from fifty to seventy pas- sengers, many. of them seeking to return toJeahet hers using it as a tempo- ra she] With the immense body of water behind it, the crest of the flood bore down with irresistible force. As it swept down the narrow ravine it carried with it the load- ed street car and the crowded restaurant. The torrent was filled with men, women and children struggling for their lives. The poles carrying the heavily charged trolley wires were uprooted and strewn along the ground. In a number of in- stancég=how many_ 1s not vet known—the | victims, of the flood, grasping anything that might save themi from the fury of the ‘water, seized the: trolley wires and met death lectrocution. Several bod- jes already récdvered show that death re- sulted fron;.ifils sastas; FLOOD CBEA'!ES HAVOC. IBWII\, Pa,, July —The sudden rising of Bru‘lh Creek to-night, caused by the cloudburst and. the breaking of the Oak- ford dam, caused damage in this vicinity amounting to several hundred thousands of dollars and probably. loss of life. So sudden was the rise in the stream that residents along the banks had barely time to run to the hills. Many houses and other buildings were swépt away. | The water is still rising, and at 9 o'clock the entire frelght station at this place was washed from its foundations and car- ried down the stream, taking with it the Irwin brldge, the-steel bridge on the Youghiogheny branch and the iron bridge to the freight yards. Five loaded coal cars_on the bridges were swept down the interpreted here to apply to the protest led against Russfan persecution of the ebrews. Secretary Moody said: “I meant just what I said. There is no offense against the law so unpardonable and dangerous as that of lynching. Re- cent events have shown that the practice of violating the law in this respect is not confined to the South, but has been witnesed in TIllinois and New Jersey. Lynching is not an offense that may be ascribed to sectionalism. Tt has made its sppearance in so many States that it might appear as though action should be taken by the Government to prevent such abuse. But it is a condition which must be met by separate States. There is no law now in existence that applies to it. “T do not belleve that lynching is jus- tified .under any circumstances. The evil is that it has a perverting effect upon those who take the law in their h and-think they are wiser than the law. “It would seem that in view of the fre- quént recurrence of lynching and in many sections of the country, some . Federal law would be waranted to crush out the practice. It not only is dangerous ta or- der and law .at home, but it likewise weakens our volce abroad. Tt is time te call a halt to lynching or burning. If it is found that there is a necessity for burn- ing .any one guilty of somé atrocious crime, why, the law should provide for it. But the element of danger to our State and national institutions lies in this: That they take the law in thelr own hands and encourage a pessimistic view of law and orde FMN | College. If the cholce does not fail on an | Mas the desirable prerequisite. of old age, Ttalian, Cardinal Gibbons appears to have | being 75 years old. ‘a spléndid chance among the aspirants of All of ese ¢ idates Hve in other nationalities. party which mi | The first question the Cardinals wifl 1y foreign Cardinals have to solve will be whether the con- | the election of a Cardinal who is 3 & | clave shall be held in Rome or outside of | member of the Curia, such as Carc | Italy. - It is belleved that the supporters | Sato Pat eh of Venice; €ardinal TURKISE TROOPS WIN of the idea of abandoning Rome will be | rari, Ar op of Milan, both intran A SMALL VICTORY |even fewer than in the conclave held |sigdnt or Cardinal Capecelatro, Arch- ——\ after the death of Pius IX, when thi*ty- | hishop of Capua. who is pe the most Defeat a Detachment of Bulgarians|two out of thirty-seven Cardinals voted Ionrnfd it .’»‘ Sa r:?r\m\ . Near Vodena After a Sharp in favor of Rome. The second question | has conciliatory ideas, = - Skirmish. | will be whether the next Pope must be | ¢ i hejeved that the f o OSKUB, European Turkey, July 5.—In a | an Italian or a foreigner. It is generally | v merely a test, in w ody will be conflict bétween Turkish troops and Bul- | beleved that he will be an Itallan. be- | elected, but it will be used to see’ which garians near Vodena, forty-six miles | cause in view of the struggle between the | L o . o0 4 blows. It s oconsidered north of Salonica, the latter had _ten | church and the state since the fall of the | (o0 " Wi Do = Ruay- killed and the Turks two wounded. The | temporal power and the constitution of | -8 % PR’ 1 :.“ dead Bulgarians wore uniforms bearing badges fnscrfbed “Liberty or Deata united Italy all of the clergy, as weil as | the clerfcal party and even foreigners, | CONSTANTINOPLE, July 5.—The Porte . with a_view to yesterday sent letters to the Ottoman | think that an Itallan Pope can protect | ana X o e Embassadors in Vienna, St. Petersburg, | better than a stranger the advance of the S nexs Berlin and Paris vigorously repudiating | religious and political Interests of the SHENstancy: . the accusation made by the Bulgarian | chyrch supposed that Cardinal Oreglia, dean of Government of concentration of Ottoman ; | the Sacred College, will be chosen. He is troops at strategic points along the Bul.| The candidates chiefly spoken of are |75 soare old. garian frontier. Representations to this | Cardinal Rampolla and Cardinal Serafino | 41| of these plar espec effect have already been made to the Bul- | Vannutelli. They are both representa- | oo % "0 T en ainats L ridabdei i | tives of the conservative policy, but are | yro 3 B0 E L0 L he 2 bitter antagonists of each other. Cardinal | .. .. ey from outsle __Warships at Puget Sound. Rampolla is a very warm Francophile, | "j‘]"f‘”‘ "_"f” - e . VICTORIA, B. C., July 5.—A dispatch | white Cardinal Vannutelli Is averse to | . o P - el from - Carmauat POIdE-YaROEE Tt tha | o, olicy inaugurated by the present RIS & partivs United States warships New York, Ben.| (¢ Policy Inauguraf 3 pee of the I om the pr nington and Marblehead from San Fran. | Pontifical secretdry of state. The mOSt | with the foreign Cardinals, there be a po might in at 7 probable liberal candidates are Cardinal- Bishop Agliardi and Cardinal-Priest Sa- | cisco for Puget Sound p. m. passed “LOVE’S CONFIDENCE.” D e R D e e e —— T Y Be Sure to Get This Beautiful Picture FREE With Your Next Sunday’s CALL.