k — i rer CURRENCY BILL” 15 NOW A. LAW The Filibuster Broken By a Clever Coup. PRESIDENT PROMPTLY SIGNS BILL Blindness of Senator Gore Gave the sistance of Vice President Fairbanks, Made It Possible to Secure the Be- ginning of a Rollcall. Washington, D. C. (Special) —It {s now the Aldrich-Vreeland Currency Law. The formidable Lafolette fili- buster was broken in the Senate Sal- urday afternoon in a twinkling. It was done by a trick, the like of which had never before been wit- nessed. The dramatic scenes attend- ing thereon were hardly concluded before the necessary signatures of the Speaker and the Vice President were attached. And before the ink from the pens of those distinguished signers was dry the President arrived from the White House and wrote at the bottom of the parchment: ‘‘Approved, Theodore Roosevelt." The breaking of the ifiibuster promises to become historic. The in- firmity of the blind senator from Ok- lahoma, Mr. Gore, was utilized to make the coup effective. Senator Aldrich, of Rhode Island, however, laid the wires. Vice President Fair- banks, as the Senate's presiding offi- cer, was an indispensable ally. For + verbially amiable and considerate of senators in his rulings, wielded his gavel with an iron hand. No czar of the House ever surpassed him. With clamored in determined tones, the Vice President ignored all but Sena- tor Aldrich. He overruled points of order and thus forced the bill to its final passage. The Trap Sprung. Senator Gore had been making an impassioned speech, which held the close attention of the galleries and alike of numerous senators. Senator Stone, of Missouri, who had preceded and expected to follow him, had just been at the Oklahoman’'s elbow. He could go on the moment Senator Gore concluded. Senator Lafollette, hav- ing enjoyed a sound sleep after his to the Capitol, but was in his com- mittee room. later, when Senator Stone hausted hig vocabulary. Unable ed his peroration and supposing that Senator Stone was still nearby, sank into his seat. “Il demand the yeas and nays,” said Mr. Aldrich like a flash. Before any- one could get a word the reading clerk, who was in secret, had called the first name and Senate bells were ringing for a vote, The rules pohibit a debate while a roll call {s in progress. name has been called it and he responded with feverish alac- rity—the filibuster was broken. other filibusters. stepped into the Senator Stone had tor Aldrich’s allies—where he being detained by conversation. avail. to kill session. The foundation for these proceed- ings had been shrewdly laid. The opportunity had passed currency legislation at tartan of long service could have succeeded. day Senator Aldrich to secure an order that when the vote as a was taken it call. preliminary would have ficient time ordinarily for position to start another speech. had been forgotten when be by roll not informed about the plot. The Climax. The bill carried 43 to 22. Democrat voted against it to expectation, four Republicans, Borah, Bourne, Brown and Heyburn, Joined with them. If was announced that Kittridge and Hansborough, ab- sentees from the Dakotas, would have voted no if present. Senator Lafol- Every having voted for the bill he filibus- tered against. He declared that he was doing so only that he might qualify for a motion to reconsider. A Double Tragedy, Bangor, Me. (Special). — Murder gad suicide ended the infatuation of R. G. Keith for Mrs. Elizabeth Ready. Lying together on the par- lor floor in the woman's house, their bodics were found by Mrs. Ready’s daughter. Keith, who Is married and has grown children, had long pursued Mrs. Ready. It is believed that she again repulsed him, and that he shot her dead and then put a bul- 3,608 Bills Passed By Conrgess, Washington, D. C. ( Special) Up to Tuesday 3,668 bills and resolu- tions passed at the present session of Congress have been enrolled and nearly all of them have been signed by the President. Of this number 2,695 are House bills and 973 are Senate measures. The President has been busy during the week singing the bills and he is nearly up with Congress in this regard. Played With A Rattle, Conn, of Lexington, Ky., salesman for a law book concern, died of a rattlesnake bite suffered in the cafe at the Conn, who was formerly a civil engi- neer in Arizona, sald he was a snake charmer, and took the reptile out of its exhibition case in a spirit of bravado. He was bitten twice. He became unconscious in a few min utes, and was taken to a hospital, He raved until deat’ ended his suf. fering. HILARITY IN HOUSE SOLENNITY IN SENATE Congress Ends at Midnight May - 30, : Washington, D, €. (Special) Just 10 minutes, oficially, before the hands of the big, round clock in the chambers of the two houses of Congress pointed to the hour of midnight the first session of the Six- tieth Congress came to a close. * In the House the closing hours were characterized by singing of songs by Republicans inh honor of Speaker Cannon, and by Demoerats in the interest of William J. Bryan. The excitement, which was great at times, finally subsided, and the ses. sion closed with general good-fei- lowship among the members, The Senate was extremely quiet during the closing hours, held to- gether only by the necessity of re- malning in session for the engrossing and signing of bills. The last days of the Senate will be memorable on account of the fili- buster of Messrs. Lafolliette, Stone and Gore against the Emergency Cur- j rency Bill, by the remarkable inter- | pretations of the rules which go far | to establish cloture In a body note- { worthy for the freedom of debate, |and by the final passage of the Cur- | rency Bill, | DEAD AT THE THROTTLE. i {| Overland Limited Sped 60 Miles An i Hour Past Danger Signals, | Chicago (Special). —The Overland | Limited, fastest train of the Chi- cago, Milwaukee and St. Paul Rall | road system, ran at full speed of | nearly 60 miles an hour over inter. {locking switches and past { near Byron, Ill, with Engineer Al- { flccr and no controlling hand on the { throttle, the train with a hundred | passengers abroad narrowly missing ia smashup, { Officials of the railroad heard the story, as told by Fireman Nash, San Francisco throttle in Near Davis the health Byron, with Gauvins at apparently good Junetion, at the right of way of another road. iwas flying {tracks at top {adverse set ACTrOss speed, signals switches unmindful Just as ler road a heavy train across in the rear. Nash leaped back into the engine cab and discovered | Gauvins' body lying on the i The train was stopped and i called. An examination gineer was dead as the result hemorrhage of the brain | some delay another engineer was ob- i talned and the train proceeded. Gau- vins had been in the service of the { road about 25 years help showed the en- oO { a 1,000 LIVES LOST. | The Terrors Of Typhoon And Flood In China. B. C. (By Shinono, of Japanese line, which just arrived here, brought of disaster through Hankow following Victoria, Cable), steamer the i News another typhoon at the loss of more than 1.600 ing several of the foreign river craft The typhoon came sudddenls boats in the Kan River to splinters Steamers broke away from | get up steam quickly escaped { aged { The shores were thick wi of river people covered before i Shanghai ! News was also brought of 8 great | coal mining disaster in Kwang { where 1,000 lives were lost | the mine took fire i ] th corpses Hundreds were the steamer left ad Sues For Doghite, Newport, R. 1 — The { Special) against Mrs. Francie O. French, brought to recover $10,000 for Juries alleged to have been sustained by the plaintiff by reason of an at- tack by a large dog. the property of the defendant. Mrs. French is the mother of Elsie French Vander- bilt, who recently secured a divorce from Alfred G. Vanderbilt. Nearly Killed By Japs, Vancouver, B. CC. (8pecial).— Eighty infuriated Japanese nearly killed Thomas Hughes, conductor on a Canadian Pacific freight train, and put the other members of the crew to flight when the freight train ac- cidentally derailed a car in which the Japanese workmen were riding The Japanese then made their escape. Warrants have been sworn out for the ringleaders. Made $2,000,000 In Corn. Chicago (8pecial).——A gift of $150,000 for a gymnasium building at Northwestern University was made by James A. Patten, “king” of the corn pit dn the Chicago Board of Trade, The announcrment was made by President A, W. Harriz at the annual convocation of the stu- dents held in Fisk ‘Hall. Mr. Patten, who is credited with having cleared $2,000,000-more or less—in the corn market within the last two weeks, was in the audience. SECRETS OF THE BG * RSHIP ARE OUT Wright Brothers Expect to Sail 100 Miles An Hour, MACHINE SIMLE IN CONCEPTION, Machine in Which They Have Flown 28 Miles Is Built on the I'rinciple of a Skimming Flat Disc—Have Spent Seven Years Learning to Dive From a Hilltop. Dayton, O. (8pecial).—The secre!s of the famous Wright Brothers’ air- ship are out. The machine's suc- cessful flights, in which, however, a wreck was recorded at Manteo, N. C., seem marvelous until it is explained that the airship is built for opera- tion on the centuries-old principle of the flat disk, which thrown ito alr, sails by the motion of its orig nal im- pulse for gcores of yards, and then in falling skims along over the ground for an indefinite distance, finally settling to earth without peceptible collision. their trial flights, have encountered simple as that of the disk on which the machine is modeled. For seven vears the brothers glid- ed from the top of Kill Devil Hill, at Mantoe, merely to solve the prob- lem of steering their machine. Then they designed the gasoline motor and propeller to obtain a continuous energy in the place of the first pulse which they had gained from the start from the hill top. In Dayton last winter the Wright brothers declared that it would be possible for them, after slight i changes in the mechanism of their machines, changes which their ex- | periments had developed, to make a speed of 100 miles an hour. An aeroplane capable of carrying 750 pounds at 20 miles an hour re- quires an engine making eight horse- power, they said At 30 the power would be 12; at 60, 24. This ratio would be retained for each additional mile. They had great hope | fact that mechanical engineers were constantly {improving gasoline en- i gines, They sald they were confident that the airship they were then about to | construct would be able to run for a thousand miles without renewing the { fuel supply. The machine which was wrecked in Mantoe could run for 500 miles without taking on more gasoline, One strane feature of the Wrights talk of the machines was that they thought the airship never would sup- plant land locomotion; that as a regular carrier of freight and pas- rajiroads had no reason to fear competition from the aero plane The utility of the airship would lle entirely in its advantage as a reconnoitering agent in time of war They had no desire to sell their invention to a private company, but were anxious to have the War | Department take it up. The Wright brothers” airship built of spruce wood, second growth ash, steel wire, heavy muslin and small portion of metal In appear ance it resembles nothing so much as a big box kite, consisting of two ! parallel planes, forty feet long and six and a half feet wide, muslin form. ing the planes, which is built and to edges of spruce Between them and just under the upper plane i= a motor which drives the propeller, which is in the rear, six feet behind the disks or planes There is included an arrangement by which the driver directs the ma chine's course by raising or lower- ing the edges of the planes and by shifting the direction of the propell- Per There is also a rudder the front of the machine which is shifted to ald in steering is in Lg A Fatal Peep. Cincinnati (Special).—A real dead victim of the sheath dress is Joseph 28 years old A pretty girl, unknown, wore one of modi fied Parisian forms on the street here, and Zing turned his head so i sharply to “rubber” that he broke nis neck. He's now dead Zing suf- fered from tubercuiosis the ver. tebra or spinal colunin. This ail- | ment Is not unusual, but it Is rare {that the disease attacks such a high {part of the column, ti first and | third vertebrae. These bones were {80 weakened that the sudden motion jof the head caused the second to £lip out of place and press against the spinal cord. { Zins, name of “© Went Hatless Forty Years. St. Louis, Mo., (Special). After having served as errand man for a candy manufacturing firm for years, Jacob Gross, 70 who during his years of service was never known to wear a hat, died of crease, Hetty Green Reckless, New York (Special). — Mrs. Green entertained a party of her friends at dinner at the Hotel Plaza. The dinner was served in the dining room of the grand suite of the hotel and the Plaza gold serv. ice was used. The dinner is said to have cost $20 a plate. 30 of 0 5 A 005550 Not TH From Cancer. New York (Special).— George F. Parker, secretary to the Equitable LAfe Assurance Society trustees, gave out a statement in which he sald he was authorized by Mrs. Grover Cleveland to deny absolutely the reports that Mr, Cleveland is suffor- ing from cancer. Mr. Parker sald Mrs, Cleveland is now in Princeton, that Dr. Bryant has not been to Lake- wood since Monday, and that no other physician is in attendance upoa the former president, THE EPISCOPACY FILLED Men Chosen Have Won Renown as Pastors and Educators. Baltimore (8pecial).-—By the elec. tion Tuesday of the last four of the eight bishops needed to bring the episcopacy up to the desired strength the General Conference of the Meth- odist Episcopal Church, at the Lyrie, brought to an end one of the greatest elections it has ever held. The last PRESIDENT EDWIN H of De Pauw University: PRESIDENT WILLIAM LEWIS, of Morningside Sioux City, Iowa: i REV. DR. ROBERT McINTYRE, of! Los Angeles: REV. DR. FRANK M. BRISTOL, pas- tor Metropolitan Church, Washing. ton; The four bishops elected previous- ly were: REV. DR. WILLIAM F. ANDERSON, | of New York; HUGHES, SEELEY College, pro- fessor of Nast Semi- nary; REV. DR. WILLIAM A. QUAYLE, Chicago; REV. DR. CHARLES W. BM ITI, Pittsburg. All Picked Men, The eight men chosen are regard- Theological of | of by Thomas Coke and Francis Asbury, | thousands of ministers of the church and among the foremost churchmen | of today. In Intellect and moral strength they will constitute a big addition to the present board of gen- eral superintendents, of which there are only 12 in active service. In future church annals the “Baltimore bishops” will be considered the peers of any in the church. , The new bishops will be conse- crated at a special service at 4 P. M. Sunday atl the Lyric, LIGHTNING STRIKES CHURCH. Funeral Was In Progress And A Wild Panic Ensues, (Special ) —While the funeral services of Mrs. John A. Losh being in the Friends Cammack, five miles west of this city, a bolt of lightning struck the church steeple, tore a hole through the roof, destroyed part of the belfry and injured several per- BONS The Muncie, Ind were held Church at church was crowded to the doors with mourners and friends of the Losh family and the choir was singing "Rock of Ages.” For awhile a panic was imminent Many per- sons made an effort to vacate the bullding, but the people were finally quieted and the injured were cared for The most Hazel Taylor from nervous recover, geriously hurt was Miss She is still suffering prostration, but will Three Years At Hard Labor. 0. (Special) J. W formerly a prominent real estate dealer, involved in frauds that are believed have amounted up into the hundreds of thousands, was sentenced three years in the penitentiary at hard labor by Judge Beacom, in Common Pleas Court this afternoon Cleveland, Hamby, io to Ten Killed By Torasdo. Wichita, Kan (Special). dead, 12 injured, hundreds of head of cattle killed, a vast acreage of crops destroyed and many bulldings wrecked are the results of a series of tornadoes that visited Alfalia County. Ok The glorm seemed to enter Alfalfa County from west, north and northeast simultaneously. Every obstruction was leveled, Ten President Roosevelt signed the bill for the enconragement of the devel opment of coal deposits in Alaska and to protect the coal deposits in the territory from monopolists, Herbert Knox Smith, commissioner of corporations, made public the sec. ond and third parts of his report on operation of cotton exchanges of the United States. By unanimous consent the House passed a bill for the incorporation of the Congressional Club, an organiza tion of congressional women. i The House passed a bill allowing passengers from Hawall to San Fran. cisco fo travel on foreign vessels as well as American. Firet steps have tho been taken to Admiral A. 8. Crowninshield, U. 8./ N., retired, died in a Philadelphia following an operation for! an affection of the nose. { Secretary Taft had a conference with Frank H. Hitchcock, Eastern and Southern manager of his cam-/ paign, and Mr. Vorys. i It is stated that Secretary Taft will guit the Cabinet immediately after his nomination by the Republican Convention, : The jury to sit in the trial of Gas- ton Philip, accused of the murder of | pleted. i The Senate adopted the conference report an the so-called Omnibus Pub- | lie Lands Bill. : The House passed the bill provid- | ing for greater air space in the steer. age of steamships. Orders were issued by the War Department providing an elaborate military escort on the occasion of the removal of the body of Vice President George Clinton from the old Congressional Cemetery to Kingston, N. Y. Senator Fulton delivered in the Sonate what he called an “omnibus speech.” He frankly admitted have ing been requested to do so to kill me. Senator Wetmore introduced a bill making October 21 in each year a legal holiday, to be known as Dis covery Dav in honor af Columbine, » SHOT AT WARSHIP Monitor Arkansas Rains Shot and Shell at the Florida, HER MILITARY MAST IS RIDDLED. Commafider Quimby snd Crew, n Order to Test Explosive Shells of Big Guns and Armor Plate, Stand at Their Posts Within the Hull of the Monitor. Fort Monroe, Va. (8pecial).—On the broad waters of Hampton Roads, not far from the 45 Monitor and Mer- riddled each other with shot and shell, two modern monitors en- place where the in a bloodless contest in the interest of naval science. The moni- tor Arkansas, of 3,225 tons, fired six | was accurately aimed | One of the shots fired 12-inch pro- | loaded with a new high ex- This shot struck the of the Florida's turret each of which I yt por just a | which had been placed in position to take the place of the regular 12- | This shot smashed the armor protecting the front! the turret, The force of the 12-inch high ex- plosive shell ‘had been entirely spent by crushing the armor plate, and the cloth screen placed inside the turret ports showed no damage, indicating that none of the fragments of the exploding shell had entered the tur- ret ports, and showing, as Chief Con- Washington L. Capps de- clared, that if anyone had been in the turret at the time the powerful projectile struck he would not have been injured. The only occupant of | the turret was a dummy man, ranged with springs and wires to re- cord the shock. He was standing the breech of one of the 12-inch guns and was unhurt The biggest naval gun, the est projectile and the highest sive known, combined with range and deadly aim, were allowed to work their full havoc on the tur- ret plate. The result is declared be a victory for turret construction, and this, notwithstanding the 11-inch hardened steel plate was blackened, broken, the seams of the turret sprung and the rivets and screws loosened and twistea it was not five terrible impact that the anced mechanism of the being worked with perfect the 12-inch gun on the left side was trained at will Inside the turret where stand the gunners and gun crew the havoc was much less ap parent - than from the outside Ex amination showed that of the mans delicately adjusted instruments for fire control, sighting and operating the turret, few, if any, were out of working order. “If thie had happened battic the Florida would be fighting yet, sald one of the rear admirals with enthusiasm, Then followed a destroy the newly mast erected on Florida. After five Arkansas’ guns had through it the mast “Forty shots would bring It down, and no enemy would waste ammunition and time shooting at it, was the expert comment if was pre- dicted that all spew ships will equipped with battlemasts of design. ar- heavi- ex] io clos § ¢ the bal Was and after finely turret Case minutes in fey iil futile attempt to fighting of the “ designed the stern shots from the gone ripping still stood firm not be DRAMATIC COURT SCENE. Whitmore. A dramatic Theodore For Theo. 8. New York (Special), — incident of the trial of 8 the Lampblack Swamp, near Harrl-| son, N. J., ocourred in the court in| Jersey City, when Frank J. May, a! gpecial policeman of the Pennsyl- vania Railroad, was called to the witness stand and testified that he saw the man who made the remark! “You are a cheap skate” to another man who refuse to pay his return York at 1.40 A. M. oni the night Mrs. Whitmore was killed A witness had previously testified that he saw Whitmore in the crowd and heard him make that remark. “Is that the man?” asked Alexan- der Simpson, Whitimore's lawyer point to Whitmore, who stood up. May surveyed Whitniore head to foot, and then said “1 never saw this man before my life.” from | in Bank Clerk Dead In Creek, Sunbury, Pa. (Spocial). An quest over the remains a man found in the creek near here re! sulted in the positive identification | of the body as that of F. M. Bloom, a bank clerk, who abs~onded abou! three weeks ago after a shortage In his accounts of $10,000 had been discovered. It is believed that Bloom committed suicide. Miners Sign Wage Scale, . Pittsburg, Pa. (8pecial).-=A wage scale operative until March 31, 1909, in of Pittsburg district was signed. The agreement is the same as the one in A AR NS 80S Rls Killed Man And Hersclf, Roanoke, Va. (Special). Wm. M. Simpson, a well-known locomotive engineer, was shot and killed by Sadie Butler, formerly of Lynchburg, who immediately drank a bottle of carbolic acid and died in a few min. utes, The woman was of 3 Jey re possessing appearance, an a . iy In By ith Simpson and had often declared that she Intended kill ing both herself and him. The trag: edy occurred In a house where thc | AS A SACRIFICE FOR HUMANITY bs i i sp——; Inoculated With Germ of Tuberculosis. New York (Special). In the hoped of discovering a preventive and cure for tuberculosis, Frank Merritt, who about two weeks ago volunteered to surrender his body in the interest of humanity and medical science, had permitted a physician to inoculate his evetem with the germs of the dread dieease., An examination made show- ed that already the disease hag made considerable progress since the inocu. lation a week ago. Merritt, who man, was at bookbinder in cording to his Man middle-aged prosperous Ac~ and a victims of tuber culosis. Their loss preyed his mind to such an extent that he final- ly falled in buginess and be wanderer, Two weeks ago he ap- to the Balvation Army head- quarters in this state for lodging and wae sent to the Salvation Army Hotel in Catham Bquare, It was there that he first announced his willingness to if his death mi way in combati: tuberculosis “1 have had ficulty body and soul together.’ “and death no For several days afte; announcement he waited but no one appeared take advant- age of his offer Finally Dr. C. C Carroll, of 2102 Broadway, found Merritt and last Thursday inoculated the man losis A statement office says that the oughly entered and it is under way thropists is a time a Western state story his one a wife on ame a plied in any ig of diffi me.’ ierritt’s : reply has terrors for for to with a ger from the discase into expected in and other case to call i sherman $ f ¥ im of tuber doctor's now thor BYsiers the iat in the ype watched a certain will be made to cus tor seems to be i Pes it Of GeEveic from (a0 OLD NORTH STATE 15 FOR PROKIBITION Crys Sweep State By Probably 50,000 Majori'y. Raleigh, C {51 majority Carolina Is 1 i8 possible This is on figu: nished the News the state Prohibi This (Wake fi the COUnLTy he total vots hibition 54 maj ghip precincts mite, gave making Ka n Your mington ( 1,000 majority, the wets an half that number Buncombe County ville is located. majority for The election iy and there was polis {srees ity, where wets Wo! ¥ in which gave about dry ticket was conducted trouble 7X i the no a gboro {5% goes dry, giving 1 against precincts Greens. DOO 59% yotes Kev. voted r small against them county Prohibitionists In one of made up of cotton mill opera- vole ig 180 for Prohibition against, Point, 3 he 9g High fives the second argeet is dry by 1,000 The Prohibition forees » county ority Ee by ajority i as being dry 1.500 mal J FINANCIAL | Dick Brothers say the cotton acre- greater than last year. Some of the May corn contracls are being settled for privately at 74 cents a bushel, Subscription books for the $17. 000,000 of Virginia Railroad notes were closed immediately after open- ing, as the amount was heavily over- bid. Missouri Pacific, which recently roge from 45 lo 64% In a compara. tively few days, has suffered a large reaction. National banks still carry $176, 000.000 of United States Government deposits. London egain sold a considerable quantity of American stocks. Lehigh Valley's April statement shows that the company carned net nearly $60,000 more than in the same month last year, Bear traders wore selling stocks on the report from Washington that a new Government suit was to be brought against Union Pacific. Newburger, Henderson & an- nounce that all of the $2,356,000 “vicago & Kastern Illinois § per {equipment bonds which were .woenlly purchased have been sold.