FAIRBANKS PUTS THE BURDEN ON CHURCH Vice-President Says it Only Can Make Capital and La bor Friendly. SOCIALISM IS DECRIED fiays It Is Inimical to American Go nius and Spirit—Earnestly Advo cates Merging of North and South Churches. ♦ ♦ CHURCH MUST HELP. T + — > 4 No political law can maintain 4 4 enduring relations of amity be- 4 4 tween capital and labor. No human 4 4 law' can bring them into such har- 4 4 mony as perpetually to avoid fric- 4 4 tion and collision. The Christian 4 4 church can do more than all the 4 4 measures framed by the hand of 4 4 man to maintain industrial peace, 4 4 for it teaches the brotherhood of 4 4 man and inspires men with a sense 4 4 of justice and fair play which is the 4 4 ultimate foundation of good rela- 4 4 tions. If men do not have within 4 4 them the spirit of love and justice, 4 4 if they do not have in their breasts 4 4 the spirit of divine law. there is lit- 4 4 tie hope of enduring concord.—Ex- 4 4 tract from Vice President Fair- 4 4 banks' address today before the 4 4 general conference of the Methodist 4 4 Episcopal church south. ♦ ^^^ ♦ Birmingham, Ala., May 16.—Vive president Fairbanks today addressed Ihe general assembly of the Methodist Episcopal church, south. He brought greetings from the Methodist Episcopal church and expressed the fervent hope that the two branches of the denomi nation would soon be merged. The vice president referred to socialism as antagonistic to the best interests of the people and to our form of govern ment, being a'‘leveling down” and not a "leveling up.” No political law, he said, would ever be devised which would bring labor and capital together in amicable union, the church could per form the greater service in this direc tion in part the speaker said: . ”i cannot refrain from expressing and emphasizing the hope which those 'who have preceded me in this brotherly mission have ventured to express. The :tvvo great branches of Methodism in America may be consolidated into one imighty church, not in sentiment and 'in purpose alone, by in organization as well. I give utterance to this wish f.pon my own responsibility, though it Is shared by many of my brethren. 'With me it is not a desire born of this ’kindly mission, but is one I have long jeherished; one which time has but .strengthened and which your hearty welcome has but quickened. The trend !of events seems to me to lead to ulti mate union. The process may be slow .but I believe it to be certain. The inexorable logic of mutual inter ests must lead us to a common conclu sion. Union will come through the subtle yet powerful influence of the law of gravitation, the gravitation of mu tual respect, of common faith! We have the same ecclesiastical policy and sing the praises of the Master from a com mon hymn book. Lines of latitude do not afford an insuperable obstacle to ultimate and permanent union. Ancient difference ■ do not constitute an insurmountable objection. The church inspires a feeling of brotherly love. It teaches forgiveness, and if either church has erred in the past, it has long since been forgiven in the supreme chancellory where those who misjudge for want of light are forgiven. Meth odism is too broad to be bounded by sectional lines. It is too catholic in its exalted purpose to be restricted by lim its less ample than those of the re public. "While with us the church and state are separate and should so continue, the Vhristian church is nevertheless a pow erful agency in the support of a free state. It presided at the birth of toe republic and has been its faithful guardian angel from that hour until now. It inculcates among the great body of the people that wholesome re spect for the rights of men that regard for law and order, without which the state cannot long survive. • The United States," said De Tocque ville, "must he religious to be free. Furthermore,” said he, "despotism may govern without religious faith, but lib erty cannot. "The socialistic tendency in certain quarters has not escaped the attention of the most casual observer of current events. Its growth cannot be viewed except with concern, for it bodes no good to our country. The church may well concern itself with all those things which affect the temporal welfare of Ihls great people. It may well concern itself with these things which menace tlie state., which tend to jeopardize the institutions which came to us from the hands of our fathers. The movement is •yet in its incipient stages and it is well that its pernicious influence should be understood. "Socialism is at war with our most cherished traditions. It is hostile to the rnlightened principles of our 'growth as a great people. It is a peril •to our social and industrial develop ment. It would paralyze Individual 'initiative, which has been the most po tent factor in our upbuilding. Here, amidst the unsurpassed advantages which a kind providence has placed at (our hands, the individual counts for 'more than' anywhere else beneath the sun. Here, no matter how humble his station, lie is able to develop his ge nius for accomplishing things, for subduing the wilderness, for building great cities, for spanning the conti nent with the evidence of ills power, for improving his environment and making better the home and stronger the state. But this were endowment enough. It has been the touchstone of our national development. It has giv en us countless communities, happy, self-reliant, prosperous,, brave and pa triotic. Socialism seeks to level down and not level up. It id alike at war witli the best interests of both capital and labor. "It seeks to restrict each in the ex ercise of its natural functions. It puts limitations upon each which are con trary to American genius and spirit. In the United St. tes the laborer of today becomes the capitalist of tomor row. Such has been our experience from the beginning until now. and it will be the history of tomorrow. "Neither constitutions nor statutes, though they were framed by men with the wisdom of Solomon, can establish and maintain equality and absolute justice among men. H'o must look to the persuasive power and influence of the Christian church to bring them to a complete realization of their tr ie re lationship to each other, to their prl mary duty to deal fairly with one er other; to carry into the various >"’■ tions of life the principles f the* 1 ,an,I splendid code, the gold. r. rub..." DON’T BE GRAY, BURN HAIR CELLS They Eat Pigment, They Change th» • Chameleon’s Color, but Heat Kills Them. Paris, May 16.—No one need be gra, haired who does not wish to be, de clares Professor Metchnikoff, the great, Russian biologist and embryologist*, Metchnikoff told the savants of the •Academy of Medicine that gray hair on the human head is a kind of disease (Caused by the super-activity of a cer tain living cell inside each hair which 'feeds on It pigment. A comparatively low degree of heat is fatal to this cell, which shrivels and dies if one pass an 'iron heated to 60 degrees centigrade <(140 degrees Fahrenheit) through his jor her locks. The learned Russian again states the fact that great emotion will turn the 'hair gray in a night. But he has a new reason for it. He says fear or sor row has strange power to stimulate the pigment-devouring hair cell, which lit erally fattens on human misery. Metch nikoff further told the astonished sa vants that the chameleon's frequent changes of color are due to the same singular organism which is made su perlatively active by the lizard-rep tile’s intense timidity. _ _ _ MRS. GORKY SAYS “DON’T BUTT IN” Real Wife of Socialist Says This Coun try Is Too Freo—Sticks by Maxim. Yalta, May 16.—Editor New York Herald: "I have today received a let ter from Alexis MaxlmOvitch Peshkoff (Maxim Gorky) which confirms the news communicated by the newspaoer telegrams regarding the reception giv en to him by America. I am indignant at the intrusion into the personal and1 intimate life of a man and astonished that the American, citizens of a free country, enjoying such large personal liberties, are not free from the predju dices dead already even with us in Rus sia. Ekaterina Peshkoff. Wife of Maxim Gorky. SEARCHLIGHT STRIKES ZULUS WITH TERROR British Find New and Effective Weap on Against South African Savages. Durban, Natal, May 16.—Searchlight! promise to prove as effective weapons in subduing the sedition of Zulus ast British guns, judging from the display given last night by the native com missioners belore a huge gathering of Zulus at the headquarters of the puni tive force. The natives were awe-, struck and regarded the searchlight as the eye of the Almighty. They said God had turned it upon them in his anger. The flashing of the light on the sur rounding hills bringing in plain view •the Kaffir trails as far as the horizon powerfully impressed the Zulus, who when the light suddenly flashed across their faces cowered or fell on the fround, before what they termed "The atest witchcraft of the whites.” QUICK PUNISHMENT. Looters Are Set to Work Forthwith in ’Frisco. San Francisco, May 14.—A novef method of stamping out the evil of looting, which has been on the increase despite the stern measures taken by the civil and military authorities, has been established by Chief of Police Di nan. He has issued an order that whenever a looter is caught he is to be put in a squad under the command of Detective Sergeant Charles Taylor. Members of the squad are compelled to labor at clearing away the debris. Already Sergeant Taylor has seventy five men under him and the number i constantly growing. The taskmaster c| this chain gang is given discretionary powers as to the term each of the members shall serve. Already the streets about Portsmouth square and the Hall of Justice are beginning to assume their old time appearance of cleanliness, the result of the work of the captured looters. Chief Dinan believes that when the existence of Sergeant Taylor’s army becomes generally known looting will greatly decrease. HOPPE BEATS SLOSSON. Youngster Wins Championship Bil hard Contest in Chicago. Chicago, May 14.—Willie Hoppe, the boy billiard expert, won first prize in the professional tournament which was finished Saturday night in Orchestra hall. Hoppe went through his four games without a single defeat. George Sutton, the Canadian cham pion, captui'ed second place, having three victories to his credit and one defeat. The other three players, George Slosson, who won the championship in the recent tournament in New York; Louis Cure, the French champion, and Jake Schaefer, finished with a triple tie, each player having won one game and lost three. The score: Hoppe—118, 0, 0, 89, 0, 1, 0, 70, 2, 15 51, 63, 0, 20, 0, 50, 1, 6, 2, 10, 2—total] 500; high run, 11S; average, 23 17-21. Slosson—18, 27, 11, 3, 23, 1, 11, 34, 1, 0. 4, 2, 4.’2, 0, 0, 20, 1, 1, 1, 1—total, 171; high run, 34; average, 8 32-S3. MORE NOSES; FEW VOTES Paris, May 14.—Paris takes pride in its population, and now is rejoicing in new figures, 2,731,728, showing an in crease of 71,169 in five years. Some arrondissements gained and others lost,, among the latter being the fourth, sixth and seventh, their decrease being enough to cause each to lose a deputy in the chamber. The strange result thus obtained is that, though Paris shows an increase of over 70,000, on account of the fashion in which the population is distributed, it will have only thirty seven deputies instead of forty. The falling off in certain arrondissements is explained by movements toward tne suburbs. Kansas City—A couple seeking marriage went to Independence yesterday. Thu prospective hridegroom. when told that i\ license would cost $2. insisted on getting It for $1.7)0, but finally paid the price. Then he inquired what It would cost to bq married and was informed $2 "Not tot me," exelaimed the economical bride groom. "1 can get a preacher anywhere to do it for $1.30." He finally paid Justicr J. F. Buchanan the $2. Boston, Mas-.—With tr.o advent cf spring the girls at Wellesley college have de veloped a fad for cross-country strolls, and not sat'sfied to keep to the sidewalks they have romped and frolicked over lawns and private estates. This so annoyed resi dents that a warning against it was print ed today in the Wellesley Townsman, the local newspaper, and In the Welieslej College News, t!;4 student publication. COAL CONSUMERS SAVED $25,000,000 •John Mitchell Discovered Op« erators Had 18,000,000 Tons Stored. DART OF BAER STRATEGY Mine Owners Kept Secret the Amour of ooal on Hand—Calling Off Strike Means Much to the Country. Philadelphia, May 16.—What have the people of America saved through John Mitchell's action in preventing an anthracite strike? Eliminating the cost in human lives and injuries, the wages of the mine workers and the loss to the wage earn ers and capitalists in the host of in dustrial establishments which would be affected by a prolonged suspension, und calculating only the extra price the consumers would be obliged to pay for the reserve stockb of coal held by the operators, the saving which has been accomplished is tremendous. At no time during the suspension did the railroad operators and the Inde pendents give anything approaching a detailed estimate of their reserve stocks. This was kept secret from the public and the miners as a bit of the Baer strategy with which the battle! was to have been fought. Eighteen Million Tons Stored. John Mitchell sought the informa tion. and when he could not find it di rectly from the companies obtained it in his way. His investigation satisfied him that the stocks would have lasted well into the winter, and, at the high rates which would have been extorted as the strike dragged Into the late sum mer, the mountains of coal would have yielded enormous profits to their hold ers. Tills knowledge was potent in influ encing Mitchell’s advice to the mine workers. He found that within 100 miles of New York city more than 9,000,000 tons, mostly' domestic sizes, were heaped, and that as much more could be counted upon in the storage yards at Bridgeport, Port Richmond, St. Nicholas and other points in Penn sylvania, and in the output of the op erated washeries and collieries like the Cayuga, Oxford and Bellevue, in Scran ton. Reduction Comes Quickly. From these 18,000,000 tons 40 cents per ton has been cut by one brief sen tence from the anthracite trust's head quarters in the Reading terminal, the very day the anthracite miners voted against a strike. This announced deduction is from the list prices of anthracite, and is far low er than the real gain to the people. Calculations upon the 40-cent. basis shows that the people saved at least $7,200,000 on the 18,000,000 tons which the operators had or would produce. But the real saving to the people, as y.as been said, in the price of coal is fnuch greater than 40 cents. The retail price of domestic sizes fell 65 cents, and, of steam sizes 75 cents, a ton. Calcu lating this saving of 70 cents upon tne total of 18,000,000 tons shows a grand total of $12,600,000. Consumers Save $25,000,000. It must be remembered that this was; only the beginning of the struggle be fore a strike was even declared. Noth ing is more certain than that the av-J erage of 70 cents a ton over last week's prices would have been more than dou bled within two months if a strike had been declared. The people, in that event,, would have been mulcted to the tune of' more than $25,000,000 over and above the1 normal cost of coal. It is a fact that independent operators and owners of washeries were already getting advances ranging from $1 to $2! a ton for their steam sizes. This estimate makes no count of the millions of dollars which Mitchell's ac tion has saved to the business men of' the anthracite region, nor those other; millions which would have been sheared' from the investments in all manner of, securities. It is only a glance at one' 'corner of the picture, a corner which faffects every household and factory m which anthracite coal is a necessity, j ALLEGED MURDERER NABBED AT DOCK William Meyer, Accused of Strangling Aged Woman and Putting Muti lated Remains in Trunk. Now York, May 16.—William Meyer, 2S years old, charged with the murder of Mrs. Marie Vogel, 74 years old, a wealthy woman of San Francisco, at Frankfort-on the Main, Germany, was arrested on the Hamburg-American line steamer Grof Waldersee on its arrival at Hoboken. The body of the murdered woman was found last Friday In the railway sta tion in Frankfort-on the Main. It Is in a trunk, dismembered, and badly de composed by quicklime. Mayer was a furniture dealer in Now Orleans and says he is a citizen of the United States. He vigorously denied that he was guilty of the murder. He made no resistance when arrested and said that he could prove that It was a case of mistaken identity. The woman with Meyer, who came ns his wife, a comely-looking woman. 23 years old, appeared to be greatly shocked over Meyer's arrest. She said she had no Idea he was accused of crime. She broke down and wept bit terly and had almost to be carried from the ship. Before being taken to the Tombs tiie piir were arralgrad before Commis sioner Shields in the Federal building. The man pleaded not guilty. The wom an said that Mrs. Vogel was Mey-i's> aunt. She said she knew nothing of ihe crime. She finally confessed that she was not married to Meyer, but showed a wed ding ring dated November 3, 1903, whi. Iv she said Meyer had given her In prom ise of marriage. She said that Mrs. Vogel had ob jected to the fact' that they had liv 'd t< gather as man and wife. MINERS GET MORE PAY. Highest Rate Since Commission Made Its Award. Tamaqua, Pa.. May 14.—The com mission appointed by the anthracite I strike commission to compute the rate of wages for antnracite miners has no- ' titled th; coal operators the miners will be paid 8 per cent, on a $4.30 basis for the month of May. the average price of cor.I at tidewater last month being $4.93 a ion. This is the highest rate at whim miters have been paid since the comrnisdcn made its award. 1 KILLED ENTIRE FAMILY. Unknown Assassins Slay Minister, Hit Wife and Seven Children in Florida. Pensacola, Kin., May 16.—One of the most horrible crimes in the history of this stale if not of the entire south was committed ten miles north of Milton. An itinerant preacher named Aeker |man, his wife and seven children, the oldest about 14 years old, were killed land their bodies cremated in their .home, which was burned by the assas sins. The crime was discovered by par ities with whom Ackerman had an ap pointment. They found the house in ruins and the charred bodies of Acker iman and the eight members of the family scattered about the wreckage. : [Examination by physicians showed that Ackerman and his wife had been struck ■in the head by some blunt instrument, ;thelr skulls being crushed. The citi zens of Milton have raised more than la thousand dollars which will be offer ed as a reward for the apprehension lot" their assassins, and Governor Brow ard has been appealed to to offer a re Iward for the state. Ackerman is not known to have had jany enemies. MUTUAL HOLDERS TRANSFER POLICIES Britons Are Divided Into Rival Camps, and Haldeman Appears to Have Lead. I London. May 16.—British policyhold ers of the Mutual Life Insurance com Ipany of New York are being organized 'into rival camps. Those following the 'plan outlined by the "protection com-, mtttee," headed by D. C. Haldeman, a former London manager of the Mutual, (today Hocked to the officers of the (North British and Mercantile Insur iance company, where they filled out (papers transferring their policies to the [British concern. Haldeman with a part Jof the old staff of the Mutual company 'were kept busy all day directing pol 'icyholders how to take the necessary 'steps. Thev nro receiving hundreds (bf applications by mall, their offices having the appearance ot a large bank Ion the day of a popular loan. Halde man claims to have a majority of the flarge holders on his side, and expects fthe smaller ones to follow their lead. , The scheme for the transfer of the business to the North British com (pany was sprung suddenly. Arrange ments were only completed late Satur day night, and were not published un til this morning, giving Haldeman a 'day’s advantage to communicate with his clients. MRS. CHADWICK SAYS SHE GOT ONLY $241,000 '‘Queen of Finance” Failing Fast—De nies That Friend of Pittsburg Lent Her $800,000. Columbus, May 16.—Cassle L. Chad wick is aging rapidly under her present Imprisonment and will probably not (live out her term. She has lost flesh inoticeably in the last few months and would hardly be recognized by those familiar with the "Queen of Finance,” as she presented herself for trial in the federal court in Cleveland last year. She has become almost deaf, too, in the last two months, so that in taking her depositions yesterday for use in the tease of the Frlend-Jutte case of Pitts burg, the attorneys had to sit within two feet of her in order to make them selves heard. The depositions were taken In secret and sealed, to be opened only by the court at Pittsburg. It is known that she said she did not get $800,000 from (Friend. She said the exact sum Was $241,000. _ _ _ TIE OlTsUPREME COURT DECISION Mrs. James G. Blaine No. 2 Arrives in Sioux Falls With Avowed Inten tion of Divorcing Jimmie. Sioux Falls, S. D., May 14.—Rumors that Mrs. James G. Blaine intended Coming to Sioux Falls for the purpose of establishing a residence and secur ing a divorce became a reality today by the arrival of herself and maid in the city. They were driven from the train di rect to the Cataract hotel, where Mrs. Blaine has engaged a suite of four rooms, and where she will make her home during the six months or more she remains in Sioux Falls, pending commencement of her divorce suit. Her arrival caused quite a flutter among the members of the local divorce col pny. It is recalled that she is the second wife of James G. Blaine to come to Sioux Falls with the object of procur ing a divorce, the first being the for mer Miss Nevins, who now is the wife of Dr. Bull of New York City. ■ " " 1 ■ • * <00,000 POUNDS OF POWDER LETS GO ^nd Bridgeport, Conn., People, Think ing an Earthquake Was in Oper ation, Fled in Nightclothes. Bridgeport, Conn., May 14.—The ex plosion of four magazines In the stor age grounds of the Union Metallic Cartridge company, containing about 100,000 pounds of powder, situated In the northern section of Bridgeport, •early today shook up this section as if by an earthquake. No person was injured, and property damage is chiefly limited to the demo lition of windows in buildings In the city and suburban sections. The con cussion caused great alarm in the city and neighboring towns. Many people (fled from their homes in their night garments, believing there had been an earthquake. PHILLIPS GOES OUT. Tarboll, Baker and Steffens Will Like ly Leave McClure’s. New York, May 14.—The announce ment Is published that S. S. McClure .has purchased all of the Interest for 'merly held by John S. Phillips in Mc Clure’s Magazine and in the book pub lishing firm of McClure, Phillips & Co. Oscar W. Braay has been elected treasurer of both companies to suo veed Mr. Phillips. Mr. McClure de .dined to make any statement as to the 'significance of the change. Phillips was asked about the report 'Of the difference over the "muck rak ers." and whether he intended start ing another magazine. He replied that •it was too early to discuss such things, but added that In ull probability an (other magazine would be started. He stated emphatically that Ida M. Tar jbell, Ray Stannard Baker and Bin Coin Steffens will b» associated with him in his new enterprise, whatever it (might be. CARL SCHURZ DIES AFTER SNORT ILLNESS | , | 'Videly Known Publicist and a Former Cabinet Member Succumbs. MAN OF STRONG PARTS Nas Editor, Lecturer and Author, Winning the Respect of the People of His Adopted Country— 76 Years Old. New York, May lfi.—Carl Schurz, the widely known publicist and former cab inet member, died at his home In this city early today. Death was due to a complication of diseases following an attack of stomach trouble which became acute Thursday last. In spite of brief periods of seeming improvement Schurz slowly failed yes terday afternoon and sank into a state of coma, which continued until the end. At his bedside were his son Carl r. and two daughters, Mnriunne and Agatha Edward E. Pretorlus, Sohurz's business partner. Schurz was 76 years old. Carl Schurz was born near Cologne, Ger many, March 2. 1829; was educated In the University of Bonn; while yet u young man, became connected with the press, and .alited a uaper identified with the rev olution of 1848; took part In the defense of Rastadt, after which he tied to Switzer land; subsequently resided In Paris and London, whore he was a teacher and cor respondent for three years; emigrated to the United States in 1852; was a delegate to the Chicago convention In 1869, taking z leading part in its proceedings; In 1861 was selected, by President Lincoln, as minister to Spain, which position he soon resigned; was then appointed a brlgadler reneral of volunteers, and was present at the second battle of Bull Run, and at the battle of Gettysburg; after the war was appointed a commissioner to visit the »outhern states and report upon the af fairs of the Freedman's Bureau; In 1865 and 1866 was a Washington correspondent for the New York Tribune; was subse quently conected with the press of De troit and St. Louis; was a delegate to the Chicago convention of 1868; was elected a senator in congress from Missouri for the term commencing In 1869 and ending In 1875. serving on the committee on pensions, territories and military affairs; In 1876 be came secretary of the Interior in the cab inet of President Hayes, remaining In the position throughout the term of four years: after became editor of the New York Evening Post, in which position he ontinued until 1884. “UNHOLY ALLIANCE.” Forthcoming Marriage of King Alfons. and Princess Ena Denounced in London. London, May 16.—What Is calculate*, (o create bitter feeling between the Woman Catholics and Protestants in England was the violence of language used in protest the other evening at the approaching marriage of Princess, Ena and the king of Spain on the part of a large assembly of the clergy of the Church of England, who had come from all parts of England to attend the an nual assembly of the Protestant Re form society. A resolution condemning the alliance is a slight and Insult to the Church of England and a danger to the British nation was carried with vehement :• heer.s by the audience which crowded Exeter hall. Here are some of the remarks of the speakers: "Tlie unholy alliance was not worked up in England, but was engineered in Rome, and the black hand was behind It all.” "The peace of England, which rame through the blble, Is endangered." “Our ancestors already have suffered from a member of the royal family hav ing married a papist." "The pope has won an English princess to his side who will be a valuable agent in bring ing other converts to the church o( Rome by the vows she has taken. She has declared that her uncle, King Ed ward. was worthy of eternal damna tion.” But one of the most violent speeches of the indignant clergy was the one In which, amid hisses and cries of shame, an excited, white haired old man said: "Princess Ena is to be pitied for receiving the blessing of the pope and having the order of the Golden Rose bestowed upon her. No one who ever got the blessing prospered, and it is notorious that the bestowal of the golden rose always is followed by a calamity to the receiver.” DEATH IN MUMMIES. Great Spread of Tuberculosis Due t Disinterment of Bodies of the Pharaohs. Chicago. May 14.—"Egyptology Ver sus Health” is the title of a mono graph received at the headquarters oi the Tuberculosis Institute of Chicago. In which it is alleged that the great spread of tuberculosis in Europe and' America in the last 100 years found its causation in the disinterment and’ shipment broadcast over the land of the mummies which had reposed so long in the tombs of the Pharaohs. ' The monogram was written by Dr. Rafaelle Sorgnae, one of the lecturers at the Sorboime in Paris, who was arj interested visitor at the recent tuber culosis exhibit in this city. "That the disinterred mummies started tl\e spread of tuberculosis germs in Egypt cannot be doubted." says Dr. Sorgnae in his monograph. "There are more tuberculosis germs in the almost impalpable dust around a mummy case than in many cuspidors of effluvia. "These germs live for thousands of years, as has easily Deen proven, and the exhumation of the bodies, even the well preserved ones, caused an epi demic of consumption among the work men and scholars wno first exhumed the eases. It is also well known that the keepers of the mummy cases have been subject to the disease. "The start of tuberculosis in France | In a serious sense may be traced to the great importation of mummies andj mummy cases at the time of the Na poleonic Invasion of Egypt, and this' start gave the disease its first great foothold In Europe, whence it has spread all over the western world. , Dead bodies may not secrete the germs, ' but dead bodies are undoubtedly a fa vorite lodging place for the tubercular bacilli. "The bacilli from the mummies are undoubtedly of great age, and it has been shown by experiments in Paris that these aged bacilli are infinitely more deadly than those obtained front the sputum of live persons who are in fer ted " TO STUDY AMERICA. Prince of India, Direct Descendant of the iviahratta Generals, Arrives in New York. New York, May 15.—The Maharajah Gaekwar, of Baroda, accompanied by his wife, the maharanee, $nd his broth er, Sam patras, lended yesterday from the steamer Celtie, which arrived from Liverpool. The Maharajah Gaekwai is the second greatest prince in all India and the direct descendant of the Mah ratta generals who were the moguls or rulers of India when the East Indies wrested control from them. He is the ruler of the state of Baroda, which, has a population of 2,000,000 and an area of 8,000 square miles. His brother act* as his secretary. There were many persons on the pier to see the ruler of Baroda, but those who expected to see a mai| dressed in oriental trappings and hung with Jewels were disappointed. De scending the gangplank, there came a dapper little man who would have been taken ordinarily for a prosperous East Indian merchant. He and hi* wife, followed by two maids, were ta ken to the Waldorf-Astoria hotel, where they will stop while in New York. "During my stay in the United States,” said the maharajah today, "I shall visit most of your large col leges. I am most anxious to see Yale, Princeton, Harvard and Cornell, for I understand that there are a large num ber of Indian students at those insti tutions. After I have spent two weeks in New York I shall go to Boston, and from there to Philadelphia and then through west through Yellowstone park. And on my return I intend tc visit President Koosevelt at Washing ton." The maharajah takes a deep Inter est In the development and uplifting of his fellow countrymen, and toward this end has established a college in Baroda. He will send some of the graduates to the United States to learn the customs of the people here. ANOTHER REVOLUTION IN SAN DOMINGO Said That Base of Operations Is in Porto Rico, and United States Government Will Take Aetion. Washington, May 16.—Reports have reached the state department of the or ganization of another revolutionary movement directed against the govern ment of President Caceres, Santo Do mingo. It is understood the island of Porto Rico Is the base of operations and It Is supposed ex-Presldenta Morales and Jimlnez are leaders of the movement. Instructions have been sent to the In sular governor of Porto Rico to take steps to carry out the neutrality laws, which would prevent the organization and departure of any hostile exporta tion. American warships surrounding the Island of San Domingo will also be instructed to prevent any landing of hostile forces. IS HARD HIT. Rev. Dr. 3. T. Carter Says Thera Is No Such God as Westminster Conference Describes. Now York, May 12.—The question of dis ciplining or trying on heresy charges Rev. .Dr. Samuel T. Carter, who several years ago became prominent In an effort to (have the Westminster confession revised, has been taken up by the Presbytery of Nassau at Jamaica, N. J. The meeting :was called because of a letter In which Rev. Mr. Carter declares he does not be jUevo the Westminster confession to be the truth of God, but "an Idol of man’s In vention as truly as any worshipper In •Delhi, Pekin, or Africa." This letter Is addressed to the general lassembly of the Presbyterian church which Is to meet May 18 In Des Moines ,1a. The writer terms It a "protest and confession.” The letter Is as follows: , Fathers and Brethren: The Presbytery of Nassau overturned the general assent, lily a year ago asking that the brief stat« menc of doctrine be substituted for ths .Westminster confession as the confessloc bf our church. By a practically unani mous vote the generaly assembly, reject ed this overture and retained the West minster confession. By this action of the assembly many ministers are compelled t( 'declare Llielr acceptance of a confession which they do not heartily believe and many of our best members to acknowledge a creed of which they are ashamed. X ap peal from the action of the assembly tc the manliness and honesty of the ministry of the Presbyterian church. Many years ago when X was ordained to the ministry of the gospel I declared In the most sol emn manner that I believed the West minster confession to be the truth of Godi 1 now In an equally solemn manner de clare that I do not believe It to be the truth of God; that I utterly reject it as a setting forth of the character of ths Heavenly Father. No Such a God. There never was, there is not now and there never will be such a God as the God of the Westminster confession. It Is an Idol of man’s Invention as trull as any worshiper in Delhi, Pekin or Af rica. I believe that the great and tru« God is infinitely and exquisitely good an* gracious; that the one thing that we ca* neither fully receive nor declare Is th« boundless love of God; that all the noblest exhibitions of human love are but brlghr and beautiful sparks from that lntenss and divine fiame—the love that througl ages and generations has been leading mn by the fullest wisdom and most tendei providence to heights of knowledge, lov« and boundless hope that far transcend alt human thought. I lift up this overwhelm ing divine love before my fellowmen, be lieving that this alone will draw all men unto him. 1 believe that the Westminster confes sion of faith darkens and denies this grea* love of God and should not be retained as a confession by any church today, and that our church is false to its greatest du ty of being a true witness for God so Ion* as It retains this confession. I send this protest and confession to the clerk of the general assembly, and I In voke upon It the blessing of Almighty God and kindly judgment of all honest men. The letter was sent from Rome, Italy. In Church Thirty Years. Rev. Dr. Carter has been In the Pres byterian church for over thirty years, but is not in charge of a church. More that a year ago his views were discussed b> the Nassau presbytery. The presbytery was In session only twt hours. Upon Its adjournment It was stat ed that the Carter case had been acted upon, but all the members were pledged to secrecy In the matter. If the presbytery has decided to pro ceed against him he will have to be sum moned from Europe to answer the charges: and this would entail an Indefinite delay. It was reported last night that when the general assembly ot the Presbyterlar church meets at Des Moines next week Dr. Carter’s letter will be presented of ficially there. The Nassau presbytery, It Is said, has given instructions concerning the Carter letter to its delegates, Rev. James N. Grace and Elder William Gould. PULAJANES ON WARPATH AGAIN. Manilla, May 13.—The following des patch has been received from the act ing governor of Cinco Island. Samar: ■ A band of twenty-four Pula janes hav ing five rifles and other weapons en tered Inabagan today, killing one and wounding seven residents, burning and looting thirty-six h- :ses and taking over twenty residents prisoners. Troops and constabulary are pursu ing the bam