DODYOFPAUL JONES IS FOUND REMAINS OP FATHER OP NA TION'S NAVY IDENTIFIED. PRESERVATION IS REMARKABLE. unceasing Toll of Tears by Ambas sador Porter rinds Ee- .. ward. : - ..",, .-. . - , !' i Unearthed in Paris Cemetery Wednes daySubjected to ...Close : Investlga ; tlon Which Establishes - Identity' Body Immersed In Alcohol. I WASHINGTON, April 14. The state department Teeeived a Cablegram from Ambassador Porter at .Paris today which announced that after years or uneeasing seareh the remains of Jo$n Paul Jones, the father of the Ameri can navy, had been found and identi fied.' Hundreds of coffins have been examined, bnt not until Wednesday wm the massive easket holding the re mains of the admiral located. The leaden coffin was opened , in the pres ence of General sorter. Colonel Bailey Blanebard and Engineer Weis, who have been directing the excavations. : The body, was well preserved, owing to its being immerse, in alcohol. It was wrapped in a sheet packed with straw and hay. Tholie present were struck with the resemblance the head bore to the medallions and bust of the admiral. The coffin was taken to a medical school, here. a most minute investigation by 1 experts substantiated the fact that the long lost body of the great admiral had been finally brought to light. Identification is complete in every particular. The remains are in a remarkable state of preservation. ? It is probable that a recommenda tion will be made to congress at the next session looking to Ambassador Porter's reimbursement. The remains of John Paul Jones are to be brought here and interred in the national cem etery at Arlington. It is likely that tbe transfer will be made 'the occasion of an interesting demonstration. It is frobable that Secretary of the Navy lorton will send a battleship to France to bring the body home. WILL VISIT FAIR HIGH SCHOOL GRADUATES TO BE GIVEN TEEAT BY VARI OUS CITIES. Splendid Opportunity for Story of - Educational Work of Other Cities , and Foreign Countries Inspection of Exhibits From All Parts of World. PORTLAND, ApnT 14. Various cities in the, Pacific northwest are art ranging 'to send the graduating classes of their high schools to the Lewis and Clark exposition, opening in Portland June 1. . Thus is the value of an inter national exposition as an adjunct to education recognized. The graduates will be afforded an excellent opportu nity, not only to study the educational work of other states and foreign coun tries, but to see the products of civili sation tire worl.l over and to observe the customs and habits of life of many races that will be represented at the fair.' i . Restive to the educational exhibit or. an exposition, me cniei vaine is in the opportunity offered for compari sons. A. brief review of previous en terprises of a character similar to the Lewis and CTark centennial shows con clusively that the educational displays were productive of results that ex ceeded tbe most sanguine expectations of their promoters. . The establishment of the School for Industrial Art at the South JCensington museum was the re . suit of the Crystal Palace exposition in London in 1851: The educational ex hibition at the Centennial-exposition, of 1876 led to the introduction of manual training in the public schools of this country-the institution of shop work as a part of The curriculum of technical STOP DRINKING! - v STOP CHEWING TOBACCO! stop smokTngi These things are made easy if you really, want to. quit If you have no desire to 'quit and abstain afterward, don't waste a your money. .j , . i r : ' . TRI B sc.,, ...n in i - n.:a 4 the great liquor and tobacco remeil', will . . take away from you all desire for the use of intoxicants or tobacco. !You ueetl not ) jjo away from home to use it No ex- - : ; pensive'board bills to rwy. The cure is ' f quick and permanent. ' . Remember ' TRIB will curef you if you are sincere in a - desire to be cured. It is only .$12 50 for a com. plete treatment For eule by - J. C. Perry's Drug Store ' Salem, Oregon schools which has rendered possible tie marvelous advance f the United States in arts and "crafts. - The reorganization of primary education in France following- the Paris exposition of 1878; the rapid growth of manual training and industrial art Instruction as a result of tbe - impetus.' gives by the. Cbieago World's fair in 1S93, and the,. action of the Freneh government in arranging to send stuSents annually to this coun try for the study and investigation of oar industria land commercial methods as a result offthe United States educa tional ' display -at the Paris exposition of 1900. - These results prove that, the influences - of ' an international exposi tion" are not to be underestimated. ; It is not to be expected that every exposition- will .mark a noticeable change in educational methods, even in one department, but no, one can. antici pate the results of its influences. Aside from the educational features of the Lewis and Clark exposition, the visiting students will find much to sup plement their high school gleanings, in the displays of foreign countries in par ticular, inasmuch as these displays win be very instructive an will' serve to bring the student jn toueh with na. tions, peoples and customs of which they have readi, : . " ' , The proposal of cities snd smaller communities in the Pacific northwest to send beir high school graduates to tbe exposition is most ' commendable, and the example might, well be emulat ed by every section that has a college, an academy or a high seftool. Hearty co-operation of the railroad companies in extending special rates for such ex cursions is assured. Upon their arrival at the exposition the high school students will find tbe officials of the centennial excellent hosts. ' Every effort will be made td make flie stay of these youn visitors a pleasant one and they will be ex tended numerous courtesies which will enable them to see the exposition to their best advantage, V last Hope Vanished. When leading physicians said that W. M. Smithart of Pckin, Ia iad in curable consumption his last hope van Ished, but Dr. .King's New Discovery for consumption, Coughs and Colds kept him out of his grave, ile says: "This great speeifie completely cured me and saved my life. Sinee then I have used it for ten years, and con sider it a marvelous throat and lung cure." Strictly scientific eure : for Coughs, Sore Throats or Colds; sure preventive of Pneumonia. Guaranteed, 50c and $1.00 bottles at Daniel J. Fry's drugstore. Trial bottle free. HIGH SCHOOL LOSES DEBATE. Local Debaters Go to Eugene Where Laurels of Forum Are Wrested From Them. EUGENE, April 14. (Special to Statesman.) The Eugene high school debating team won out against the Sa lem team here tonight, tne deeidng vote of the judges being two to one in favor of the former. The decision was a close one, as the jndges deliberated for several minuter before rendering their verdict. The question for debate was: "Resolved, That the Policy "of Restricting Further Immigration to the United .Btates is Practicable." The Eugene team, composed of Raymond Kerr, Ross Chamberlain and Earl Leach, supported toe affirmative, and the Salem team, consisting of Rex Turner, Edwin JIaslam and Miss Helen Phillips, the negative. Mncb interest and "enthusiasm was displayed by tbe large audience in attendance and each speaker on both sides was accorded an ovation. About twenty-five people of Salem were in attendance and the hall in which the debase occurred was taxed to its limit of accommodations to con tain the audience. Tne judges were: Judge John IL- Scott of Salem, Dr. James Withycombe of the agricultural college at Corvallis, -and D. D. A. Paine of. Eugene. ; , (This is the fircfr attempt in which the Salem high school has made to enter into debate with the schools of other cities, and the representatives deserve congratulation and encouragement for tbe good showing they made, as. the defeat was an honorous one. On May 12 the Salem high school will debate with a team from the Roseburg schools here.) Sunshine and showers yesterday, mostly the former. LABOR COMING INTO ITS OWN LEGISLATION BEING FORMULAT ED TO REMEDY GRIEVANCES. 1 MANY INNOVATIONS FOB BUSSIA Shorter Hoars fox Workmen .and No ; Criminal Punahment for I Strikers. , Imperal Rescript Gives Becognition to Grave FerU Threatening LandNew System of Feasant Land Distribution Ttoubles Continue at Warsaw. ST. PETERSBURG, April 14. In re ceiving a delegation of workmen from Moscow, Finance Minister Kokovseff gave notice-to the workmen of Russia that the government commission was formulating legislation to remedy the greater part or ineir grievances, mouu in r state insurance against sickness, ac eident and death ami for shortening tbe hours of labor, abolishm- tbe prohibi tion of unions and the criminal punish ment for strikes, and for tbe establish ment of an industrial court in which employers and employes shall be repre sented; ., . , ., : . The imperial rescript, addressed yes terdav to Minister of the Interior M. Bocligan, and which created a special commission under his presidency to dis cuss questions relating to the peasant tenure of lands, is a direct recognition of tbe erave peril involved in tbe spreading of the peasant- agitation whieh threatens not only to work out a system clearly marking off the peas ant land ? from land of other owners. "in order to inculcate in the people a perception of property ownership,' whieh amounts to an imperial refuta. turn of the stories current among the peasants that the emperor had decreed a new division of the land. .It is feared, however, that the agitators may be able to ereate a dissension over . . m .i j. tne terms oi tne rescript. Warsaw, April 14. Disturbances here are feared during tbe Easter holi days. Many people are leaving War saw. Fresh strikes are reported at Lodz, where the situation is one of much uneasiness. , Libau, April 14. The dock laborers bave struck. Tbe loading of grain has been suspended and the barn burning in many districts continues. . Tiflis ' April 14. The strikers have a 1 . 1 1 "" . i 1 ' cut me teiegrapn wires ac tne niiza bethpol station and a number of trains have been held up. YOUNG BANDITS THEIR EARLY CABEEB SUDDENLY ENDS BEHIND DOORS OF REFORM SCHOOL. Plan Bank and Train Bobbery Enough Powder Cached to Blow Up Block One Bobs Church and Then Becomes One of Its Members. GRANT'S PAS, Or., April 14. Plans to rob a local bank aid hold up a Southern Pacific train, in addition to perpetration of seven Hbold robberies, were disclosed at the preliminary- hear ing of Far. Durham and Belcher, the three youthful (Grant Pass boys, who Jeft (J rant '8 Pass last night in custody for the reform school. A oung. lielcuer is a law student in the oflice of TI. D. Norton, a local at torney. Tnere, where he had appar ently been studiously reading law, was found enough powder to blow up tbe block. It was the discovery of miscel laneous booty, looted from stores, resi dences and even a church, that led to tbe a r rent of the .trio, and the expose of the organized '.'gang" that has stirred the town. In the attie of the opera "house was found one cache of stolen goods, while more was discovered in the law office, together with tools for carrying on their crooked avoca tion. ! t Iast Sunday the Durham boy joined the Bethany Presbyterian church. That night the White House grocery store was robbed by the trio. The Belcher boy was committing tbe eatechism for admittance into the Kpiseopal church All the boys, in addition to their prom inent connections, were quiet, -well be haved, and by no means of ; the "rowdy" sort. Nearly all the articles taken in sev en robberies have been produced. The boys broke completey down when flrst questioned,, and tearfully begged that all knowledge of their crimes be kept rrom tneir parents. . Frightful Suffering Beliered. ' Suffering frightfully from the viru lent poisons of undigested food, C O. Grayson of , Lnla, Miss took i Dr. King's New Life Pills, 'with the re sult," he writes, "that I was cured." All stomach and bowel disorders give way to their tonic, laxative properties. 25e at Daniel J. Fry's drug store; guaranteed. ' TO SUSPEND XJ3ES TEMPORARILY Japanese and Formosaa Steamship Oom Cempanles to Discontinue Ban ning Steamers. TOKIO, April 15. On aeeouat of the presence of the-Russian Baltie squad ron in Pacifie, waters the Japanese steamship lines operating between Ja pan and America are planning tempor arily to susnend their trans-Pacific op erations. It is expected also that, the IVmosaa steamship lines will discon tinue rnnnmg their steamers until all seizure by Russian warships is ended. S j! .. DABS : TEAfJEDT IN - LEBANON. LEBANON, Ind, AprU , 15. Ber. John Dodge, pastor of Holiness church, was arrested today charged with hav ing stabbed Oscar Johnson, a member of his congregation, daring a quarrel during a meeting to consider the ad. viability of allowing a negro to preaeh to the congregation. ' 'PLAGUE HAGE3 AEOUT BOMBAY, Bats Said to Spread Smallpox That Is riUlns; Hospital to Orer- Hcnrlng. BOMBAY, April It A: terrible epi demie of smallpox, in addition to the plague, is ragiag-here.,-;The infection hospitals are crowded with "Cases, but the number of doctors anil narses is wholly inadequate to deal with the out breaks, and scores of victims are, per foree, left unattended. Some idea eaa be drawn front the awfnl conditions ex isting in this part of India, when re- mortabty from the plague alone- in tne month of March reached the enormous total of 318,000." Of the whole, total, tbe United Provinces of Ajrra and Ondh are responsible for 50 per eent and the Punjaub for SO per cent. - -v Every obstacle is placed in .the way of tbe disinfection or stnesen areas, and inoculation is so bitterly opposed both by reason of , caste prejudice and religions restrictions, that any attempt to enforce it would be followed Dy .ine gravest eonsequencea. In - the larger of tfe afflieted communities, ; some headway is being made in the direction of inducing the peope to temporarily abandon their villages when shelter ean be found for them elsewhere. . " As before, the greatest mortality is amone women. .4 This is attributed "to the fact that they spend more time in their houses than the men, and rarely wear shoes, thus rendering themselves espeeiallr llhble to the risk of eonta 2ion from the dead and dying rats.' In the towns the crusade against rats is being conduated with great vigor, and whenever funds permit a reward of a few pies there are 1- pies to an anna which is equivalent', ; to a penny is given for, every -at slaughtered. FIGURES APART KT.AMATH CANAL COMPANY RE FUSES THE PRICE OPFEBED BY iWATEB USEES. Concern Turns Down Figures Which Are Said to Be $150,000 Too Low- Water Users Prepared to Bay at Actual Cost Of Construction. KLAMATH FALLS, Or., April 15. N. Hawkins, president of the Klamath Canal company, refused the offer of the Klamath Water-Users ' association of approximately $100,000 for the Klam ath Canal company's property at a con ference held yesterday afternoon be tween the consulting board of govern ment engineers of the reclamation serv ice and representatives from the two associations mentioned. President Hawkins offered the entire canal property to the government for $250,000. The water-users would allow only actual cost of construction and what they consider a reasonable bonus. This leaves the government and 'the Klamath Canal company apparenty as far apart as ever oh the ' question of rights in the Klamath -government irri gation project. The consulting government engineer board, which consists of J. B. Lippm cott, W. If. Sanders, C. H. Ensign, and Joseph Jacobs, after visiting various sections of the country connected with the Klamath project and conferences with various interested parties here, has gone partially into tbe estimates, but has -found its time here will be too limited to complete the estimates. It is necessary for the board to be in Yuma on April 2L On that account, and on account of Engineer Wisner's illness in Los Angeles, the board will complete its work in in at town. The board, while here-, found noth ing to materially change the publicly expressed views of the engineers of the service in regard to the Klamath proj ect. After work is completed in Los Angeles the latter part of this month, the report pi the board will be Imme diately xorwarued to the chief engi neer, and very soon after the general findings will be made public. The engineers say they regret Jbeing unable to give out any, figures at pres ents to the total cost, or the cost per acre, because their work will not be completed while here, and because it would be contrary to the regulations to make any material findings previous to tne submission of tae report to the cnier engineer. All the engineers find the project a very interesting one, and one that is entirely feasible from an engineering standpoint. . During the remainder of the stav here the board will devote its time to vewing special outside features of .the work and gaining ceneral information of conditions as they actually exist. DEATH CAUSES DOUBLE SUICIDE. Two Sisters Befuse to Be Parted From Third Who Died Family Now : . Extinct. . VIENNA. April 15. No little rvm. pathy has been aroused by . the tragic death simultaneously of three sisters belonging to an ancient and highly honored Austrian 'familv. the Bar- onesses Louise, Cresina and Augusta Zrnn von Zinnenburg, the eldest being 70 years of age. For many years they have lived at Klarenfurt. tbe eanil&l of Corinthia, in extremely indigent cir cumstances, gaining a precarious liveli hood by1 kntting aid fancy work. The Baroness Cresina died this week after long suffering; scarcely was she laid out when her two sisters. Louise and Augusta, standing on either side of the bier, shot themselves with re volvers at one and the same moment. both falling beside Cresina, where their bodies were subsequently found. Each had fired with determined aim at her temple, and death had been instaneous. In a note found in the death cham ber it was stated that the three sisters had sworn together that in the event of the death of one the two others would not be divided frem her. The Zinnenburg family, which had been rich landowners in Bohemia sinee the twelfth century, is now extinct. - ' Better B. B. Service. A gentleman who' travels all over, the state and is in close touch with rail road officials, today informed a Guard report er that an official of the Southern Pacifie company has told him. that the Albany local train will be extended to Eugene within two weeks Guard. j BIGHTS FLEET IN CHINA SEA RUSSIAN SQUADRON SEEN STEAM INO IN NORTHERLY DIRECTION IS RUNNING WITHOUT LIGHTS. Reported That' Flotilla 1 Is Composed of Forty Vessels in Battle ? f - Array. , Crowding on Steam and Plowing Wat . ers at TwelTe-Knot Oait Was ' Off Lincoln Islands in Seventeenth De gree of Latitude. - PARIS, April 16. The correspondent of the Petit Journal at Ilaifong, in French . Indo-Qhina, cabling under date of. April. 15, says: V . . I am informed that the Russian fleet, forty vessels strong, and running at twelve knots and with out lights, was sighted in the seventeenth degree of latitude, steaming in a northerly di- .With the departure of the hospital ship , Orel from . Saigon, the last cord eohneetiirg the Baltic squadron with 8t Petersburg was severed and (he ad miralty expects no further direct news until the battle is fought and deter mined. ;j . BLEED INO KANSAS REJOICES. Carrie Nation Sells Property at Topeka and Bids Farewell to State. TOPKKA, April 15. Carrio Nation closed a. deal for the sale of her Topeka property this afternoon and left for Cbieago, where, she will spend a. few weeks looking after her' publication, "The Home Defender," which is be ing issued there. From Chicago she will go to Alabama for a lecture tour of two weeks, and from there for an other lecture tour in the West. Shawnee, Okla will be her future home. , IT MAY ERUPT PEOPLE IN SISSON FEAB THAT MOUT SHASTA MAY BECOME VIOLENT. Ashes and Lava Mud Ooze Through the CAround in Village Near Mountain and Logging Track Sinks in Two Places Flow Is Increasing. SAN PRANClfeCO, April 14. Mount Shasta threatens to become active again. Some starting occurrences are reported at Sisson, a town in the vicin ity of the mountain.' The ground has opened at several points and mud is ejected. The railroad fill across a big canyon has sunk - forty' feet, and the streets of the. little mountain town are filled up with muddy stuff, full of oil. Redding, CaL, April 14 Considerable anxiety exists among the people of Sis son and other places, in the vicinity of Mount Shasta over the strange actions of the, mountain. For several d&ys dis tant rumblings have been heard, and the snow is. melting fast. Yesterday volcanic ashes and lava-like mud began to ooze through the surface of the earth at the' edge of the town of Sisson. The nnw oraiinnllT in4rniAl until tmlsT it is .pouring forth in several places, likeH thickened paint. The reDort comes from the other side of the mountain that the McCloud Lum ber Company 's railroad track suddenly sank in two places, and tbe same flow is notieeable. While the mountain it: self shows no visible eruption, the signs are sumeient to cause some alarm. Eleven years ago the same conditions existed for a time, causing much alarm. AN INDUCEMENT EASTERN CORPORATION SEEKS TO PROMOTE THE PROPOGA TION OF CHILDREN. Contracts to Put Premiums Upon Grad uated Scale for Birth of Idring, Breathing' Children to Policy Hold ers Not an Lisurance concern. (From Saturday's Daily.) Attorney-General Crawford came ia contact' with a .knotty problem yester day afternoon when be was asked to classify a certain corporation in order to determine waeiber it .came under the corporation or insurance tax laws, or whether it" was subject to taxation at all under , any of the state laws. It was of such an unusual .nature that, while, its title indicated that it was an insurance company, it could -be classed, neither as s life nor ah acci dent insurance , corporation, nor could it be, deemed exempt frem .taxation and Judge Crawford has practically come io iue -conclusion o uecuie mai n was neither but that it would be subject to taxation under, the general corporation law, without classification. The name of this new corporation is the American Birth Insurance company, but its objects are just the opposite of what one would naturally conclude from the nature of the title, as, in stead of insuring against aecident or death in child-birth, the company eon tracts to pay stipulated sums, ranging from $200 to $-00, in the event of tba birth of a "living, breathing child" to tae- poey hoIer. The amounts to be' paid are conditioned upon the nam- CASTOR! A Tot Infanta and CMldren. r Tt3 KM Yea R2T3 Ahnjs E::?tt Bears thm T.ZfT' denature cf (ZrfJVCJi Z&ZC ber of monthly assessments paid by the policy holder to the date of the birth, ranging in periods of from ten to eigh teen months after taking oat the policy. Another peculiar featnre of the con cern, which served to make the classi fication more difficult, is that no person is eligible to iold a policy ia this com pany unless ibey be a member of tbe American Parents Educational asso- ciaticn. -"ff.' , - - j' tm TTBH BUO'S BUSY DAY. Incendary Burns Two Houses and Two ,, Barns In Douglas County. ROSEBUBO. Or., April 17. Neil Me Beth, who was recently, released from the state penitentiary, was arrested by Constable Pinkston of Oakland, yester day on the charge of incendiarism. Two country houses and two barns, located two miles apart, ten miles west of Rose burg and belonging to Charles and John Thorn, wrtre .destroyed by fire early last Thursday morning. The fires were in cendiary, 'as neither house had been oc cupied for some weeks, both tenants having gone into the mountains. It is claimed j that fte Thorns and McBeth had been having trouble, and that tbe latter had threatened to get even with the Thorns. ' " Immediately after the fires McBeth disappeared, and Sheriff McClallen com menced a systematic search for him. He was t in jail here last evening. f" - : SHE ACCEPTS MODIFICATIONS. PEKIN, April ll-It is officially stated that the negotiations between (Sreat Britain and China have resulted in an agreement on tbe Tibet convert tion, ureat Uritam accepting some modifications. GREAT SPORTS ELABORATE PREPARATIONS ABE MADE FOB GAMES AT LEWIS AND CLARK FAXR. ; V Schedule Provides for Interscholastic and Intercollegiate Baseball, Boxing, Track and Field Games and Gymnas tic Contests. . PORTLAND, April 15.-Under the auspices of the Multnomah Amateur Athletic club of this city, the full schedule of toe Lewis and Clark ex position athletic; games and champion ship contests has been completed and is now (being dispatched to all colleges and athletic associations throughout the United States. The schedule pro vides for interscholastic and intercol legiate baseball, boxing and gymnastic contests and tutck and field champion ships. Jiu jitsn, tne Japanese athletic art, will be featured to advantage, as Well as numerous games with which the people of tbe west are almost un familiar. Notable among the various contests will be the La Crosse matches. The athletic events at the exposition will afford the people of tUis section an opportunity to witness spienuiu feats of physical manhood never before seen on the Pacifie coast. The manage ment of the exposition has arranged for attractions not any less pretentious than those of the fU. Louis World's fair. The events will be open to all associations under the direction of the Multnomah Amateur Athletic club. Intercollegiate events possibly will prove more popular than any, in so far as many colleges' throughout the coun try are preparing to send, their crack aggregations of athletic prodigies. Men who have astounded the world witB remarkable records, particularly in track and field meets, will partici pate. Caluornia already announces her second try-out for aspirants to the intercollegiate contests. ! The first of these was held last fall on the oval of the University of California. Fou Stanford men entered won three first places and , one second place. Three more field days will be held and then the state team will be picked from among tbe successful candidates. Men from any institution or colle giate rank are eligible TTorman lole, who holds the world's record for pole vaulting, will figure in the contests.. Fred llolman, carrying good records in the mile and the half-mile, will be present, as well as O. K. Hyde, who in the last intercollegiate meet broke the American intercollegiate record for sixteen-pound shot-put. Besides these men a number of endergradaate track and field men will compete if there is no conflict with the dates of the uni versity interests. Iteports from various colleges would indicate that the same interest is man ifesV all over , the country. Trophies valued at thousands of dollars will be awarded. WORKS CLOSED RIOTOUS CONDUCT AND UNREAS ONABLE DEMANDS CAUSE SHUT-DOWN. Conflict With: Police and Cossacks Scheduled for Today in St.-Petersburg if Laborers Insist Upon Carry ing Out Their Program. ST. PETERSBURG, April 15. The Poutiloff iron works shut down today Tbe .reason assigned is tbe riotous con duct- of the workmen and their unrea sonable demands. Troops have been sent to protect the works. The out break originated because of thfc scheme of the employes to make the burial of the men. killed in the recent accident in the works .a grand political demon stration. The workmen propose! to have the interment made in the Smo lensk cemetery, which is in the Vas sili Ostrov, opposite the city, and which would involve a five-mile parade of 12,000 workmen directly through that part-of the city. The police insisted that; the interment take place in the cemetery near the works, but the work men 'refused and, it is said, will en deavor to carry out their program to morrow, which will mean a certain con flict with the police and Cossacks. Lejal Clanks at Statesman Job Oec ALL CAPITALS HAVE AGREED I NATIONS ASSUME NXOATIVR AT TITUDE TOWARD GERMANY. VIENNA IN DOUBTFUL COLUilN It, too, May Have Acquiesced in Acting Secretary of State Taffs Position. Moroccoan Policy of Fatherland Findj . Countries Little Inclined to Its Sup portFrench Press Highly Pleased With Taft's Decision. PABIS, April 15 Information reach ing high quarters here are quite defi nite that all the capitals except Vienna took substantially the same grounds m did Washington in assuming a neutral or negative rttitude toward Germany's propositions relative to Morocco. Con cerning Vienna the information is leas exact, but lit is believed to be in ac cordance with the action of the otlier capitals. Acting ; Beeretsry of Htate Taft's course evokes the warmest tributes from the French press. SCHOOL OF FINE ARTS. Institute to Be Established at Nev York With. Endowment ,of $000,000. NEW YORK, April 17. Plans for a school of fine arts equal to 1 he Kcolc les Beaux Arts of Paris, have lx-en made public by Dr. Nicholas Murray Butler, president of Columbia univer sity. They are based upon the con solidation of' the National Acaic-my of Design and, the present art intercut of Columbia university, to be a il-! by the co-operation of the Metropoli tan museum. A fund of $.(),((() will be necessary to finance tb enterprise. One-fifth of that sum has already been promised by a eitizen whose name ha not been made public. It is expcrtcl that -tbe site which the Academy of Design acquired at Amsterdam aveniii and Eleventh street, where the tem porary school now stands, will be so' and the, proceeds applied to mainten ance of the proposed institution. The academy will then, if present negotia tion are approved, build on a site op posite (.Toluuibia university, a structure in which will bo housed schools of painting, sculpture, design and archae ology, all under the direction of the university. The plan rests largely upon biicpm- tions made by Hir Caspar l'imlon Clarke, the rwwly elected director of tbe Metropolitan Museum of Arts, who came from lxndon a few weeks sif", urging that the museum must be a Jiv ing institution, and that the genius at American artists should be fostered. Under tbe name of the Acair of Design of Columbia university the new college will teach esthetic and the philosophy of art, while the Aca-lemy of Design will teach the technique nl instruct pupils how to eronte wrV. Tbe Metropolitan Museum of Arts will so arrange its collections -ns to make them object lessons to the tulcnt.. It is believed by the promoters that this plant will "not only greatly en courage American artists, but will im prove anl develop cratts snd manu factures throughout the country. 1 The trustees of the academy may art on tbe matter in a few days 'or pos sibly not until tbe annual meeting, May 10. OVER HALF SUBSCRIBED. Every Promise of Complete Subscrip tlon to New Electric Line in i Idaho. NEZ PERCK, Id. la., April 17.-A meeting was held today in the interest of tbe electric road from Lewiston to Nex IVrce and (Jrangeville at which.-$.-t5,000 was .sntwcrilted. It is ln lievel that the entire ujjMr county will sup port the road with large -subscription and the work among the land owners will commence at once. One hundred and seventy one tlnn sand dollars out of the $'2m,ihM is now secureL GETS "BIG STICK" PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT IS PRE SENTED UNIQUE SOUVENE BY PUEBLO CHILDREN. Nations Chief Arrives Within LlmlU of Colorado, Where lUs Greeting I of Old-Fashioned Western Caliber Hurries on His Way. PUEBLO, April r 14. Five thousan l Pueblo citizens ; greeted l'resMcnt Roosevelt on his arrival at the union depot at 5:45 this afternoon. Tbe president made a brief address, during which he was interrupted by the pre sentation of a "big stick," the gift of ; the school children ; of the city. After a five-minute stop tbe traia pulled out for Colorado Springs. TRTMlDAn. Ar.rii 14 Seven thou sand people, including 2000 school clil trj o,:ln ..noli fl ct erected President Roosevelt here this after noon. A number of Hough Winers other veterans acted ss guard of honor. The president was introduced by Mayor Brown as "the greatest man in t"6 world." The president talked for nve minutes on irrigation. The pulling out of tbe train ir rupted his speech. As the tram movcu, the crowd climbed the car and he sho'ik bands with as many as possible. rv-vrrir? TV"i HPiiivfiH." April Fully 10,000 people were assembled at the Hants Fe depot tonight to welcome President Roosevelt. - v Promntlv nt 7:30 o'clock the prc"- lential special train pulled into the oe- pot. Wild 'cheering reetc.i me lent as he stepped out upon ia in form of the car. The president ecu. ered a felicitous address. He "cxpressr.. the wish that newspaper men would r't follow him into the country where is to hunt with hi party.