KILLED BY A TORNADO A Furious Windstorm Sweeps Across Tens. THE fllY OF LAREDO IS IN RUNS. Eaoraeit Properly Damage, Accompanied by Great Lets ol Life, la Southern Texas A Hundred or More Are Injured, but ll li Thooghl Tbejr Will Recover School end Hoiplul Wrecked. Laredo, Texan (Special). Twenty-one persons were killed and loo or more injured in Laredo and in New Laredo by a tornado which tore through these cities late Saturday night, crossing the Rio Grande. Rumors of others killed in places outside Laredo lack confirmation The property damage i large. The damage wrought at the Laredo Seminary is extensive. Not one of the group of excellent buildings which go to make up that institution escaped damage. The barracks, the primary building, Emery Hall and the chapel were damaged from 50 to 75 per cent. The escape of the teachers at the in stitution was narrow, as the walla of .some of the buildings which they oc cupied were demolished. Mrs. Easlcy, one of the teachers, was rescued by sev eral young cadets, students of the insti tution, who lowered her by a rope' from a second - story. She was severely bruised. The roof of the Mexican National Hospital building was lifted from the edifice, and it will require much time to repair the building for patients. A trip through the town fails to show a block that has not suffered from the storm. Trees, fences, telegraph and telephone poles, corrugated roofs, chim neys and walls and debris of all kinds strew the streets. The city authorities are at work clean ing away the wreckage of the storm. Linemen are at work endeavoring to straighten out the tangle of wires, and it is believed that within two days the electric light service can be resumed. It is hoped to re-establish telegraphic com munication, at least partly, within two days. Conditions in New Laredo, across the Rio Grande, are similar to those exist ing on this side. It is not definitely known how many dead .or injured there are in New Laredo, but a city officer said there were five dead that he knew of. The five known dead added to the list of dead on this side of the river would bring the number of dead in both cities up to 21 persons. The storm made its appearance from the southwest in the neighborhood of Lampasas, Mexico, 72 miles from Lare do, and it is reported that great havoc was wrought at Lampasa, although it is not thought that any loss of life re sulted. When the storm struck Laredo the huts occupied by the poorer classes were razed; and as the wind increased in force the more substantially conducted buildings were unroofed, and in many cases, were demolished. Lightning tlashed vividly and contin uously, adding to the fears of the peo ple. The storm lasted about one hour. The Mexican National Railroad has temporarily abandoned its servile on ac count of lack of telegraph wires for the dispatching of trains. Physicians are busy attending to the wounded, and it is thought that all the injured will recover. Dr. H. J. Hamilton, of the United States Marine Hospital .service, has placed 150 tents with bedding at the disposal of the homeless. OGDEN SPECIAL TRAIN WRECKED. Prominent People Norrowly Escape Death Some Are Injured. Creenville, S. C. (Special). While rounding a curve inside the yard limits of the Southern Railroad, at Greenville, and running at the estimated speotl of 50 miles an hour, the special Pullman train bearing Robert C. Ogdcn and 100 members of the Southern Conference on Education crashed into the rear end of a freight train at 7.55 o'clock A. M., killing four persons and injuring a score of others. None of Mr. Ogden's guests was killed. The combination baggage and club car and two diners, together with the locomotive and a freight car, were piled into a heap, and in an instant fire broke out in the cooking end of the diners. Mr. McKelway, Professor Farnam, Mrs. Farnam, Mrs. Thorp, Dr. Dreher an 1 Ri bert M. Ogdon were eating breakfast in the second diner, which was torn to pieces. The floor collapsed and the pas sengers were picked up from the track. The seven sleeping cars behind the din ers were left intact, but the shock sprung many locks, imprisoning the occupants. Seth I.ow and Mrs. Low, Dr. McVickur and others w;:re rescued when the doors were smashed open with axes. The pas sengers in the St. James were quickly removed, but the three negroes could nut be saved. They breathed the flames and died. When he saw that the cra,h could not be averted Engineer Hunter, of the Ogdcn train, applied the emergency brakes and jumped. Practically all of the baggage, s:.icj to be valued at $12, 000 was destroyed. FACTS WORTH REMEMBER1NQ. Jwpan persists in its refusal to allow foreigners to secure any property, mines, mortgages or railways. In two years, at the outside, the strength of the Japanese Navy will be represented by about 250,000 tons of dis placement. Over one-fortieth of China's popula tion of 400,000,000 is slaves. Every fam ily of means keeps its girl slaves, it be cheaper to buy them limn to hire tticru. tfennr.n Flarl.smann, a poor ragpicker of Hanover, inherited $10,000 from an American uncle. When the money was piid ovtr to I'.im on February 14 he dropped dead. Proie.ssor Reu.ssnt-r, of Berlin, a recog nized KUthority on Russian affairs, in a recent interview said that 10.000,000 in habiuuti of the Russian Empire are lit erally t Irving. OvrittK to the railway congestion in Argentina, farmers and . exporters have loit cnonnou!j. Government intcrven . turn been demanded, incompetent ma'iaj;rait!it hnvi'ig been stated a the aiuc. , NEWS IN SHORT ORDEf, Tbe litest Happenings Condensed1 to Rapid Reading. Domestic Miss Mae Wood entered suit in Lin coln, Neb., against Private Secretary Locb, former Postmaster General Wynne and Miller Martin, a Secret Service em ploye, asking $35,000 damages for get ting' from her by trickery Senator Piatt's love letters. The grand jury returned indictments against tl members of the executive com mittee of the Cleveland Retail Coal Deal ers' Association for violating the state anti-trust law. A shortage of $71,000 has been found in 4he treasury of Athens county, O. The fund was tampered with during the in cumbency of various county treasurers. A number of aldermen of Grand Rap ids, Mich., convicted of being invi !vcd in the water works scandal paid the f.nes imposed on them. The stock market in New York was completely demoralized, frantic efforts to sell causing a terrific break in all securities. The legislative committee which has been investigating the gas question in New York has recommended 75-cent gas. United States Senator Bacon, of Geor gia, sailed from New York for. Europe on the steamer Prinzess Irene. Paderewski has cancelled his Ameri can engagements and decided to return to Switzerland. Helen Lord took arsenic in New York on learning that the man she loved was dead. Mrs. Whelan, 75 years old, a recluse, was found murdered at her home, in New York. A tablet marking the house No. 6,1 Prince street, New York city, in which President James Monroe died, in 1831, was unvclicd by Gouvcvncur Hoes, of Washington, D. C. a descen dant of the dead president. Gen. Fred crick Dent Grant made an address on "Monroe the Soldier." After a metting of the directors of the Wabash Railroad Company in New York it waa semi-officially announced that President Ramsay and Mr. Gould had settled their differences and that Mr. Ramsay will probably remain at the head of the company. In the United States Circuit Court at Chicago Judge Kohltaat issued a temporary injunction, .returnable May to, restraining interference with em ployes taking the places of striking teamsters. In Louisville, Ky., Bishop McCabe expressed himself in favor of the or ganic union of the two branches of Methodism. Fred Footc has been arrested at Beaudette, Minn., on the charge of killing Mayor Gannon, of Spooncr, Wis. The killing was the outcome of a town-site feud. Dr. John McMastcr, professor of history at the University of Pennsyl vania, disapproves of Carnegie's pension fund for college professors. Paderewski, the pianist, was attacked with neuritis in Canada and has can celed all of his engagements. Kansas City will be supplied with natural gas at the rate of 25 cents per l.ooo cubic feet. In an address before a committee of ministers in Boston Dr. Washington Gladden again attacked the Rockefeller gift, declaring that the Standard Oil played with stacked cards and loaded dice. The east wing of the new Claryida Hospital for the Insane, Iowa, collapsed, carrying seven workmen down with the debris. None of the men was seriously injured. Dr. Wesley R. Wales, of Cape May, N. J., pleaded not guilty to the charge of fraudulently obtaining money from the First National Bank of New Jersey. Frank G. Bigelow, the defaulting bank president of Milwaukee, filed a petition in bankruptcy with liabilities of over $j,coo,ooo and assets estimated at $1,500, 000. Mrs. Blanche Shaw, the principal wit ness against a number of officials in Pueblo, Col., has disappeared. It is be lieved she has been kidnapped. R. L. Leathtrwond and W. A. Denson, young lawyers of Birmingham, Ala., had a pistol duel. A bystander was wounded. Mrs. Josephine L. Noble was acquitted at Flushing, Long Island, of the charge of murdering her husband. Elijah Johnson, colored, was hanged in Philadelphia for the murder of Julius Collins. Albert T. Spargo .hot and killed his wife and himself in Quincy, Mass. iorcigu. Count von Tattenbach-Ashold, who is in Morocco to arrange a special commer cial treaty between Germany and Mo rocco, practically states in an interview that Germany docs not recognize French influence in Morocco. A St. Petersburg newspaper says that while sentiment in the United Slates seems to have favored Japan during the war, the attitude of the American gov ernment has been strictly correct. The business sessions of the World's Conference of the Young Men's Chris tian Association came to a cloc in Paris. John Wanamaker and Ambassador Por ter made addresses. The number of British emigrants to the United States in 1904 was nearly double the combined total of the emi grants to all the British colonics. French Foreign Minister Delcasse re ceived General Porter, the retired United States minister, and his successor, Mr. McCormick. The Antidueling League of Germany is endeavoring to strike at the causes of duels. Lord Grimthorpe died at St. Albans, England, at the age of K9. King Edward arrived in Paris and was cordially received. The estate of Baron Rekki, near Milan, Russia, was plundered by armed peasants and the Baron was assaulted and almost killed. Sanao, capital city of Yemen Province, Arabia, capitulated to the insurgents, who lire now proceeding to besiege Manakhe. For the first time permission has been granted for publication in St. Petersburg of a Jewish paper in the Hebrew lan guage. The international exhibition in honor of the seventy-fifth anniversary of Bel gian independence was opened at Liege. In deference to the wishes of the German government the American Chamber of Commerce in Berlin has changed its name to the American As sociation of Commerce and Trade. General Kozloff, former chief of the Moscow police, has been appointed gov ernor general of that city. His appoint ment is regarded as a revival of the harshest measures of repression. The British steamer Yuen Wo has been destroyed by fire and 1 50 Chinese P'"ed. p . , Moroccan miration ha excited. ' anxiety in Pari. GEN. F1TZ LEE DEAD Distinguished Soldier and Statesman a Victim of Apoplexy. BE WAS STRICKEN ON A TRAIN. Hod Been to Boston to Tell of Jamtitown Exposition His Brother, Daniel Leo, W11 the Ooly Near Relative With Him When the End Comt His Notable Career Before and After the Civil War. Washington, (Special). Brig.-Gen. Fitzhugh Lee, United States Army, re tired, and President of the Jamestown Exposition Company, is dead. He was stricken with apoplexy at about 2 o'clock Friday morning while on a train en route from Boston to Washington and insisted on being carried to the end of his journey. He reached here at 10 o'clock an was removed to the Providence Hospital, where he died at it. 20 o'clock T. M. His death came suddenly. At 9 o'clock Major Guy L. Edie, of the Army Medi cal Staff, who had charge of the case, issued a bulletin stating that General Lee's respiration was ,v his tempera ture )8.8 and his pulse 112. Maior J. R. Kean, Major Charles F. Mason of the army, and Dr. Hardin were in consultation with M?jor Edie over the case. At 11.15 P. M. Drs. Kean and Edie reported that General Lee's condition had taken a turn for the worse. His breathing became difficult and the pulse was not so good. A few minutes later he was dead. At his bedside when he died were his brother, Daniel Lee, and Drs. Edie- and Kean. The end came quite suddenly and was without pain. The dead Gen eral was doing fairly well considering the severity of the attack until 10 o'clock, when the change came for the worse. General Lee was on the Federal ex press when he was stricken, the train being near a terminal of the New York,. New Haven and Hartford railroad, in the vicinity of the Harlem river. Ho first complained of a pain about his heart, which was diagnosed, but later he sustained a serious stroke of- paraly sis, affecting his entire left side. The train was transferred to Jersey City and the Pullman car Ludlow, in which General Lee rode, was brought all the way to Washington. General Lee was conspicuous as a man among men. He was born November 19, 1835, at Clermont, Fairfax county, Va. He was the son of Commodore Sydney Smith Lee, who was the third son of Gen. Harry Lee, popularly known as "Light Horse Harry Lee." Gen. 1 Fitzhugh Lee was a nephew of the late Gen. Robert E. Lee and followed the fortunes of his distinguished uncle and of his native State in the Civil War, but accepted, as did the former, all the results of the war, and since Appomat tox has served Virginia and his country in a number of important official ca pacities. To him perhaps as much as to any other man may be credited that firm reuniting of the North and the South, which existed even before the war with Spain, disproving a favorite theory abroad that the United States of America was a conglomerated nation "held together by a rope of sand." TWELVE KILLED IN MIME EXPLOSION. Dangerous Oases la Shalt Became Igni ted. Dubois, Pa., (Special). Twelve men were killed and one will die as the re sult of an explosion at the Eleanora shaft, near Big Run. The shaft is lo cated one-and-a-half miles from Big Run, on the Buffalo, Rochester and Pittsburg Railway, 12 miles south of here. It is in an isolated part of the country. The mine is owned and oper ated by the Rochester and Pittsburg Coal and Iron Company, and is a com paratively new shaft, having been opened two years ago. The mine was thought to be free. from dangerous gases. The night shift was small, or there would have been more fatalities. Every man who was in the mine at the time of the explosion ex cept one is reported killed. Three bodies have thus far been recovered. Two of them were brothers named Kirkwood. The men were English-speaking and resided at Eleanore, a small mining vil lage' two miles from the shaft. Saet By a Burglar. Newbtirg, N. Y. (Special). Rawdon Foster, a son of William Foster, a promi nent manufacturer, awoke early the other morning to find a burglar in his room. Young Foster grappled with the in truder. The burglar placed a revolver clo.se to Foster's body and sent a bullet through his lung. lie then jumped from a second-story window and escaped. Foster's condition is serious. Jealous Man's Crime. Quincy, Mass., (Special). Albert T. Spargo shot and killed his wife, Eliza beth, and then put a bullet through his own head, with fatal results, at his home in South Quincy. The tragedy is believed to have been caused by iealousv on the part of Spargo, who was a son of Councilman William T. Spargo, of this city. Spargo was 38 years old and his wife was 33. Skull Are of White Men. Victoria, British Columbia (By Cable). Advices from Quatsino report that an investigation of the cave discovered near there by prospectors, in which 35 skulls were found, tends to show that the bones are evidently those of white men not Indians. None of the skulls has the high cheek bones peculiar to Indians of that section of the coast. Settlers in the vicinity believe the skulls are probably those of a shipwrecked crew murdered by the Indians in the early days. Langlil at His Prayer. Albany (Special). The feature of the session of the assembly was the prayer delivered by Rev. C. H. McDonald, a ne gro minister. He prayed loudly that "when life's) journey is at an end we ask Thee to bring us to that General As sembly where Jesus Christ will be the Speaker and business shall be transacted without graft or the dictation of the lobbyist." The reference to graft was greeted with roars of laughter, and Speaker Nixon had difficulty in getting the member to subdue their) merriment. MINISTER BOWEN CALLED HOME. Must Justify fill Attack on Secretary Loomls His Successor. Washington, D. C. (Special). Secre tary Taft has received instructiohs from the President to call Minister Bowcn, now at Caracas, to Washington; also to send Mr. Russell, now minister to Colombia, to Caracas, and Mr. Barrett, now ' minister to Panama, to Colombia. It is stated that if Mr. Ilowen's action relative to the charges affecting Asssist ant Secretary Loomis are not subject to criticism it is the President's purpose to send him as minister to Chili and then probably as ambassador to Brazil. The cablegram to Minister Bowen, in structing him to report to Washington forthwith, was dispatched by Acting Sec retary Loomis. If the Minister is par ticularly active, he may reach Wshing ton about May 8, the day the President expects to break camp and start home ward. If he misses this steamer, the Minister must wait at least week for another. Arriving here before the Presi dent's return, Mr. Bowen will ruakc his statement to Secretary Taft, who is disposed to deal with the case himself and not permit it to remain open to add to the bulk of important business which will confront the President upon his return to the capital. Secretary Taft also sent a cablegram to Minister Bowen stating the reasons for his summons to Washington. They are, in brief, first, because Mr. Bowen has filed charges against Mr. Loomis; second, the publication of those charges in the New York Herald; third, Mr. Loomis' complete denial; fourth, Mr. Loomis' countercharge that Mr. Bowen had secured that publication, and rith, Mr. Loomis' desire to be confronted by Mr. Bowen here. The Secretary added: "If all goes well, you may return to the diplomatic service." The official admission that there is a possibility of Mr. Bowen's eventually be coming ambassador to Brazil indicates the President's purpose to make a change at Rio. As a matter of fact, David E. Thompson has for sometime past been seeking to effect the transfer from Rio to the Crty of Mexico. The President was desirous of accommodating him, but found it neoessary to promote Minister Conger from his place at Peking, and Mexico afforded the only opening among the embassies-. So Mr. Conger was sent to Mexico with the understanding that he should relinquish the place Within the year in favor of Mr. Thompson, and, to console the latter 'for the delay in the realization of his aspiration, the Bra zilian ministry was" erected into an em bassy. Mr. Thompson will, however, in the ordinary course of events, succeed Mr. Conger as ambassador to Mexico sometime next winter at the latest. The changes announced leave the mis sion to Chili vacant, even in the event that Mr. Bowen, having satisfied the au thorities here that he is blaneless in the matter of the circulation of the rumors in the asphalt case, is transferred to San tiago, for that detail will be only tem porary, and the post is likely to be filled permanently in the errtl by the appoint ment of John Hicks, of Wisconsin, who was American minurcY to Peru during President Harrison's administration. CONDITION OF Y. M. C A. A Total Membership of 688,000 In Forty Co n:rles. Paris, (By Cable). The greetings of King Edward were presented to the World's Conference of the Young Men's Christian Associations now in session here, through Lord Kinnaird, one of the vice presidents. Messages were also received from rulers and notable per sons in Norway, Italy and other countries and from the Yopng Woman's Chris tian Association. The report of the condition of the associations by Prince Bernadotte, second son of King Oscar of Sweden and Norway, showed there were 7,661 associations in 40 countries, with a membership of 688,000. North and Soulh United. New York (Special). Cheering under the Stars and Stripes entwined with the old Confederate flag,' 320 women of the North and South sang "Yankee Doodle" and "Dixie" with equal enthusiasm at the annual luncheon of the New York Chap ter of the United Daughters of the Con federacy at Delmonico's. Mrs. Fairbanks, wife of the Vice-President, struck the note of sympathy in saying, "Your or ganization and the one 1 have the honor to represent have helped to hide the scars of the past division of our country, and they have covered the divisions with the flowers of forgetfulness and the gar lands of gentle remembrance." LIVE WASHINGTON AFFAIRS, At the meeting of the Senate Com mittee on Interstate Commerce James H. Hiland, third vice president of the Chi cago, Milwaukee and St. Paul Railroad Company, made a statement regarding railroad rates which specially affect Northwestern traffic. The State Department received a re port from Minister Allen, at Seoul, 011 the facts of the assault by robbers on Dr. Forsyth, an American missionary doctor, and the efforts to punish the robbers. The appeal of Chief Naganab, of the Chippewa Indians, of Minnesota, in his case against Secretary of the Interior Ilitchock was docketed in the Supreme Court. Rear Admiral Bradford's squadron, of the North Atlantic fleet, has been ordered to relieve Rear Admiral Sigsbee's divi sion in Cuban and Dominican waters. Secretary Taft will, if the Presilent assents, order Minis.er Bowen, at Caracas, to return immediately to Wash ington and explain the charges against Secretary Loomis. James P. Dolliver, of Morga,ntown, W. Va., father of Senator John P. Dol liver, of Iowa, died at the latter's resi dence, on Massachusetts avenue.- He was 90 years old. The French govenrment has desig nated M. Gueard as the French member of the Board of Consulting Engineers attached to the Isthmian Canal Com mission. A' police census of the District of Columbia shows a population of 322, 445, of which 227,607 are whites. There is a gain of 43,727 over the federal cen sus of 1000, The Census Bureau has issued the final report on the cotton crop grown in 1904, showing an increase of 35 per sent, over the yield of the previous year. Walker D. Mines continued his state ment before the Senate Interstate Com merce Committee. lit criticised the Esch-Townsend bill and said the In terstate Commerce Commission was not sufficiently vigorous in prosecuting rebate law violations. ANOTHER CARNEGIE GIFT $10,000,009 Fond For the Woraoat Professors. UNIVERSITY PRESIDENTS TRUSTEES. The Ironmaster's Benefaction la the Interest of Higher Education Says He Believes This Inportant Class of People to Be Underpaid Colleges Have No Means of Providing for Them. New York, (Special). A gift of $io", 000,000 by Andrew Carnegie to provide annuities for college professor's who are not able to continue in active service was announced by Frank A. Vanderlip, vice president of the National City Bank of New York. Professors in the United States, Canada and Newfoundland will share in the distribution of the income of the fund. United States Steel Corporation 5 per cent, first mortgage bonds for $10,000,000 have been transferred to a board of trus tees and steps will be taken at once to organize a corporation to receive the do nation. Dr. Pritchett, president of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and Mr. Vanderlip have been selected by Mr. Carnegie to obtain data on the sub ject to be presented at the first meeting of the board of trustees, which will take place on November 15. Mr. Vanderlip gave out the following letter to the press : Mr. Andrew Carnegie has transferred to a board of trustees, consisting in the main to presidents of the most important colleges in the United States and Can ada, $10,000,000 first mortgage 5 per cent. Steel Corporation bonds. The purpose of the trust fund thus created is to provide annuities for college professors in the United States, Canada and New foundland, who, from old age or other physical disability, are no longer in a position to render the most efficient ser vice. Steps will at once be taken to organize a corporation to formally receive the be quest. The first meeting of the board of trustees has been called for November 15. In the meantime it is Mr. Carnegie's desire that Dr. Prichett, president of the Massachusetts Institute of Technol ogy, and myself proceed to obtain data from all the institutions concerned for use at the meeting of the trustees. The bonds which Mr. Carnegie has so gener ously donated have a market value of $11,000,000, and will produce an annual income of $500,000. The corporation which is being formed will be styled "The Carnegie Founda tion." Yours very truly, (Signed) F. A. VANDERLIP. Mr Carnegie's letter to the trustees is dated April 18, and is as follows: I have reached the conclusion that the least rewarded of all the professions is that of the teacher in our higher educa tional institutions. New York city gener ously, and very wisely, provides retiring pensions for teachers in her public schools and also for her policemen. Very few, indeed, of our colleges arc able to do so. .The consequences are grievous. Able men hesitate to adopt teaching as a career, and many old professors whose places should be occupied by younger men cannot be retired. I have, therefore, transferred to you and your successors as trustees $10,000,000 5 per cent, first mortgage bonds of the United States Steel Corporation, the revenue from which is to provide retiring pensions for the teachers of universities, col leges and technical schools in our own country, Canada and Newfoundland under such conditions as you may adopt from time to time. Expert calculation shows that the revenue will be ample for the purpose. The fund applies to the three classes of institutions named, without regard to race, sex, creed or color. We have, however, to recognize that state and colonial governments which have es tablished, or mainly support, universities, colleges or schools may prefer that their relations shall remain exclusively with the state, I cannot, therefore presume to include them. . There is another class which slates do not aid, their constitutions in some cases even forbidding it viz., sectarian institutions. Many of these established long ago, were truly sectarian, but today are free to all men of all creeds or of none such are not to be considered sec tarian now. Only such as are under control of a sect or required trustees (or to a majority thereof), officers, faculty or students to belong to any specified sect, or which imposes any theo logical tests, are to he excluded. Trustees shall hold office for five years and be eligible for re-election. The first trustees shall draw lots for one, two, three, four or five year terms, so that one-fifth shall retire each year. Each institution participating in the fund shall cast one vote for trustees. The trustees are hereby given full powers to manage the trust in every re spect, to fill vacancies of nonex-officio members, appoint executive committees, employ agents, change securities, and, generally speaking, to do all things nec essaBy in their judgment to insure the most beneficial administration of the funds. I hope this fund may do much for the cause of higher education and to re move a source of deep and constant anx iety to the poorest paid and yet 'one of the highest professions. Gratefully yours, ANDREW CARNEGIE. (Jos Wrecks Horn:. Newark, N. J., (Special). An ex plosion of illuminating gas front a broken pipe wrecked the home of Charles Koch, a machinist, and set fire to the house, causing the death of Koch and probably fataly injury to his wife. While sup posed to be temporarily insane Koch broke the pipe in his dining-room, and when Mrs. Koch. entered the room with a lighted lamp an hour later there was an explosion which blew off the roof of the house. ' Carneglt Cautious. New York, (Special). Andrew Car negie, accompanied by his wife and daughter, sailed for Europe on the White Star Line steamer Baltic. They pro pose to spend the summer at Skibo Castle, Mr. Carnegie's estate in Scot land. Mr. Carnegie was asken if he would say something regarding the agi tation about "tainted" money. "No," he replied laughingly, "I an, hardly in a position to discuss the sub ject. I never give money 'where I think that it will not be accepted." PRESIDENT CURTAILS TRIP. Will Return to Washington a Week EarKer. Glenwood Springs, Col., (Special.) President Roosevelt will break camp on May 8, a week earlier than he had in tended, and will start for Washington at once. The only stops he will make will be at Denver and Chicago, where the dates for his reception have been ad vanced to meet the new arrangement. Secretary Locb returned from the camp, where he conferred with the Pres ident. He announced upon reaching here that affairs in Washington made it necessary that the President curtail his visit. That there is nothing alarming in the situation is manifested in the fact that the hunt will be continued 10 days more, in spite of conditions of govern mental affairs which resulted in the altered plans. The Venezuelan situation, it js be lieved here, resulted in the order to start home on May 8. New Castle, Col., (Special). Cubfoot, a grizzly ktar that has been a terror to sine.!! larmcrs and ranchmen for a num ber of years, was killed by Fred Tollcns, a member of President Roosevelt's hunt ing party. It had been hoped by mem bers of the party that Mr. Roosevelt would get a chance at this bear, but the animal was overtaken by the dogs, and was playing havoc with them when Tollcns came up. To save the hounds Tollcns was compelled to kill the bear. AT WORK ON THE CANAL. An Effective Organization Already Formed Many Men Employed. Chicago, (Special). Speaking of the actual physical work of building the Panama Canal, Mr. John F. Wallace, chief engineer of the Panama Commis sion, said that an organization had al ready been formed, embodying a total of 8,000 men. Of this number practically 6,000 men arc engaged in equipment and construction work, and 21000 men are engaged in polking the canal zone and in sanitary work and in cleaning up the isthmus. This organization will be rapidly increased and has been increas ing at the rate of from 800 to 1,000 men a month. Of the total number of men employed about 10 per cent, are high-class men from the United States and the rest are meclmnics, artisans and laborers that have been brought from the nearby South American and Central American coasts and from the West India islands. There is a demand for men expert in the mechanical trades; for instance, steam-shovel men, draftsmen, railway track fore.. .en, engincmcn, carpenters skilled in heavy timber work and in the construction of dredges and bridges. Should it be decided to change the canal to sea level, Mr. Wallace said it had been estimated that 14 miles of summit cut would be necessary, and this would require 100 steam shovels, about 300 engines and train crews and 15,000 dump carrs. The service would necessi tate four double-track railways for the removal of the material, which would have to be hauled on an average 15 miles. Approximately 350 miles of construction track would be necessary. 0IFTS TO SOUTHERN COLLEGES. Dr. D. K. Pearsons, of Chicago, Distributes ' Sum of 135,000. Chicago, (Special). Dr. D. K. Pear sons, of Chicago, announced gifts to five Southern colleges. The amotjnts donated range from $10,000 to $50,000. The total amount is $135,000. Dr. Pearsons announced that he had rejected requests of over 400 institutions. The selections are as follows : Guilford College, Greensboro, N. C, $25,000; Piedmont College, Dcmorest, Ga.. $2S.ooo: Washineton Collcire. Wash ington Tenn., $25,000? Grant University,' Chattanooga, Tenn., $50,000; West Vir ginia Seminary, Morgantown, W. Va., $10,000. Dr. Pearsons, who is a wealthy retired business man of this city, has made donations heretofore aggregating over $2,500,000. Referring to the gifts made today, Dr. Pearsons said: "The colleges to which I give these presents must raise $3 for every dollar I give them, and this must be done with in a year." , Trading Stamp Store Run. Lafayette, Ind., (Special). Warned by merchants that a local trading stamp company was moving itj stock from La fayette on account of alleged financial trouble, an active crowd of more than 100 men, women and children attacked the company's store in Main street and for a time there was much excitement as a run on a bank would have caused, holders of the stamps crowded into the store and took possesion of the first things thev could lay their hanrrs on. Within half an hour the well-stocked establishment had been stripped of every article that had been kept for the re demption of trading stamps. No ar rests were made. Shot Prisoner In Hlk Cell. Shreveport, La., (Special). After .working three hours with sledge ham mers and picks, 25 men broke into the Parish Jail at Homer, La., and shot "Dick" Craighead, inflicting wounds which will probably prove fatal. Craig head was charged with the murder of Mrs. Isaac McKee, wife of Craighead's half-brother, and her little son. FINANCIAL Amalgamated Copper directors de clared the usual quarterly dividend of I per cent. New York Central has fallen 16 paints from its recent high level when the talk was strongest about a merger with Union Pacific. Stockholders of National Lead voted down a resolution to the effect that if ever the preferred stock is retired the price shall not be Irss than $140 a share. The fact that the Bank of England re tains its 3') per cent, rate of discount shows that there is no fear in London over the financial situation. - Grain men say that the Gates pool paid an average of $1.12 for its 20,000,000 bushels of May wheat. The price tum bled five cents. Almost four times as many shares of stock have changed hands in Philadel phia so far in 1905 as were bought and sold in the same period of last year. Baltimore 4 Ohio makes an excellent report for March. Gross earnings in creased $380,413 and net profits gained $214,203 over the same month last year, RESULT IN TARIFF WAR' Cermany'i Exclusion of the United Stat;s. AMBASSADOR TOWER'S HARD TASK. Stands Ready, However to Negotiate a Reel proctty TreafyQtrraao Olllclals Say United States Cannot Reaiooably Expect to Share In Special Benefits Olven to European Stales In Exchange for Tarlfl Reductions. Berlin, (By Cable). The Imperial Government, preparatory to excluding the United States from the privileges of the new reciprocity treaty signed re cency with seven European states, has formally notified the American Govern ment that the tariff agreement between Germany and the United States of July 10, 1900, will terminate March 1, 1906, the day the new treaties go into effect, but that Germany stands ready to nego tiate a reciprocity treaty with the Uni ted States. This notification, made by Foreign Secretary von Richthofcn March 14 after the decjsion of the Cabinet, said that the treaties concluded with Rus sia, Italy, Belgium, Switzerland, Austria-Hungary, Roumania and Servia "form a new basis," so reads the text, "for the commercial relations of Ger many, and the Imperial Government holds itself prepared to enter into ne gotiations for the conclusion of a new commercial treaty with the United States." The German view, as held at the Foreign Office and at the Ministry of the Interior, is that the United Statej cannot reasonably expect to share in special benefits given by Germany to certain European states in exchange for other specific tariff reductions. Should the United States have the same ad vantage without giving anything in re turn treaty countries could justly com plain that they were in effect discrimi nated against because from them certain things were exacted by bargain which were freely given to the United States, But if the United States desires to take np the general tariff question and arrange a reciprocal agreement Germany .will be very glad to do so. Otherwise uermany s new general taritt, wlncll goes into effect March 1, 1906, will be applied to imports from the United States. The Government in terminating the present modus vivendi has done what the agrarians hav? steadily asked for since the new commercial treaties were concluded. Public opinion in Germany has also been fully prepared for the Government's act by publications of the Commercial Treaty Association and the Central European Industrial League and articles in the principal financial periodicals written by persons in affilia tion with the Ministry of the Interior. Washington has not yet replied to Germany's proposal. THREE BEARS FOR ROOSEVELT. Oreat Success of the Colorado Hunting Trip. Glenwood Springs, Col., (Specials President Roosevelt's hunting trip has been crowned with success far beyond his expectations or those of the most sanguine of his guides. Three bears were killed by the party Monday and two Tuesday, one by the President and one by Dr. Lambert. P. B. Stewart, of Colorado Springs, one of the Presi dent's hunting companions, arrived here, accompanied by Courier Chapman. They brought the story of the hunt. The killing of the three bears was telephoned to them, and they understood that Presi dent Roosevelt brought down two of. them, but details are lacking. The party is almost snowbound in its present location, and no attempt will be made to cross the divide. Fifteen .feet of snow is on the ground on the other side, and any effort to reach Red stone would be futile.- The hunters are satisfied, however, for they have reached the center of what the guides say is the best bear country in Colorado. Bobcats are thick in the country now being hunted so plentiful," in fact, that many are allowed to escape without a shot being fired in their direction. Sev eral fine skins have been taken, however. The bear killed by the President Tues day was of the brown variety, not so, heavy, but furnishing a much finer pelt than the first animal killed. One of the bears killed is said to be a grizzly, but this cannot be verified. 5 i SHOT BY AN EX0NVICT. An Old Man and His Daughter Wounded By Morris Cremeans. ' Richmond, Va., (Special). Morrisi Cremeans, who completed a penitentiary! sentence here a few days ago, is in jail at Pearsisburg, in Giles county, charged with shooting an old man named' Kidd and his daughter because they re fused to take him in at their little moun tain cabin. Cremeans shot through the door with a shotgun at the old man and fired a second shot, hitting the daughter in the leg, and then fled. A posse from Bluefield hearing that Cremeans was making for his home in that city secreted themselves in a moun tain path, and he walked into the trap and was captured with a cocked shot gun in his hands. There L considerable feeling against Cremeans. The old man is thought to be fatally wounded. Anti-Trust BUI la Michigan. -Lansing, Mich., (Special). The low er houie of the Michigan legislature passed unanimously the Bland Ami Trust Bill. It is said to be tho niosj sweeping unti-trust .measure ever passed In the country. It defies and declares illegal all corporations which aim at the monopoly of any business, trade, avoca. tion or profession, and nullifies any agreement binding individuals not to engage in a certain occupation. Lawyers Have Pistol Duet Birmingham, Ala., Speoial). R. l Leathcrwood and W. A. Denson, promi nent" young lawyers, engaged in a pistol duel on South Twentieth street, in, the retail district. Ten shots were fired, a negro drayman being wounded in the! leg and neck. He will probably recover, Leatherwood is in jail. The shooting grew out of a . feud which began lastj year by each of the participants reporting the other to the State Bar Association for alleged Wtlaticn of legal ethics. ,