— “THE NEWS Domestic Signs of cyanide in the stomach of Col. Thomas H. Swope might have resulted from the mingling of for- maldehyde, injected in embalming fluid, and the patural amomnia in the body, testified Dr. Walter M. Cross in the Hyde trial. On representations that the Uni- ted States Life Endowment Company is totally insolvent, the concern was placed in the hands of the Central Trust Company, of Illinois, as re- celver. Seven passengers were injured when a street car of the Wilkes- Barre and Wyoming Valley Traction Company plunged into a mine cave- in at Wilkes-Barre, Pa. The American Bible Soclety of the Methodist Episcopal Church South has received a gift of $500,000 from Mrs. Russell Sage. The New York City Federation of Women's Clubs demands the appoint- ment of a woman an assistant district attorney. Frank T. Minor, a wealthy graie broker of St. Louis, was as bucket shop. Three firemen three injured In killed of were a wreck A plece of tattooed flesh was ex- sano, Wash. to restrain from placing States Senator the filled in Cleveland board of election name of United Charles Dick upon ballot. Operationg of a clever forger, who secured almost $5,000 in cash, have just been revealed to the Boston police authorities by the officials of the National Shawmut Bank, which lost that sum through bogus checks Willlam Randolph Hearst filed ad- ditional suits for damages owing te the Hearst-Gaynor controversy, against Adolph Ochs, Henry Water- son, Melville E, Stone, Herman Rid- der and seven Boston dally news- papers. Blue-print charts showing Heinze made good his famous that United Copper would pass An gamated were introduced in the tr fin New York hy the prosecution its trump card H, F. Laflamme told National Missionary Cong Chicago that a knowledge of denti: added ary in Airs ter the how bet 1al- rial as 10 the succe heathen Margaret Pott Known Margar ter the authoress gane by a court Progress rangement the fiftic tle of G £1 Pot- in- ed CL Horton declared as was used on Harvar porat cial er Mrs. ar the late E. H 4 deny nor confirm daughter Mar Cary Rumsey, of k. Mary 8. Moore, a Boston dress- maker, pleaded guilty to Jdefrauding the government of customs in the “sleeper” trunk cases, and was fined $500. The {reight steamer Santurce and the oil tank Ligonier were in collis- fon during a fog off Cape Cod. George A Trost, of Cumberland, Md.,, was awarded a metal by the Carnegie Hero Fond Commission. The Weslevan College, acting un on its own initiative, adopted a reso- lution abolishing hazing SBuffragists plan to tour the State $12,000,000 Suffragists plan tour of Illinois in automobiles. the Stast to Foreign Several hundred Rica, have been taken from the ruling The injured number three or four hundred The American Red Cross has cabled 85,000 for the sufferers. American found dead on the beach at Naples, and the cau uf whose death re mains a mystery, was shipped to New York King Frederick's University con- ferred upon Colonel Roosevelt the degree of dactor of philosophy. Mrs. I... M. Stevens, president of the National Women's Christian Temperance Union of the United States, preaided at a session of the World's Women's Christian Temper ance Untim Congress in Glasgow. King Edward is suffering from a revere Lronchial attack and was un- able to go to the rallwey staijon to meet the Queen on her return from the coulinent, The present friendly relations be. tween Hussia and Japan indicate the probability of an agreement affect. ing the Far East Commander Penry presented the British Boyal Geographical Soclety with one of the sleds which he took to the North Pole, Max Beorbohm, the writer and eritie, and Miss Florence Kahn, an American actress, were married in London. ft was ofMcially announced that the second international exhibition of aerial lncomotion will be held in Paris. Earl Grey orogucd the Canadian Parliment and made his farewell speech teepurcioiy to leaving for foglses, g ry fie yous ry { % PUT CHECK ON ARMAMENTS Roosevelt's Advice to the Euro- pean Powers. HE URGES A LEAGUE OF PEACE. The Colonel's Voice Giving Way Under Strain Of Making Speeches Daily—Fails Him Several Times In His Address Before The Nobel Prize Committee At Christiania He Advocated Development Of The Hague Tribunal — Scheme Of In- ternational Police Power. ROOSEVELT. No man is worth calling a man who will not fight rather than submit to infamy. Something should be done soon as possible to check the growth of armament, especially naval ar- maments, by international agree- ment, It would be a master-stroke if those great powerg honestly bent on peace would form a league of peace, not only to keep the peace among themselves, but to pre- vent, by force, if necessary, its being broken by others, JOHN LUND, But it is not Norway alone but the entire civilized world which hag reason to be grateful to the United States. i Millions upon millions from Europe, poor and often down- | trodden, but capable, have found in the new world that happiness and prosperity which the old world was unable to afford them. In many ways the United States haa reached the goal for which Europe is still sighing. i | Christiania, Norway (Special). heodore delivered his address Roosevelt “International before the Nobel prize committee here. The former president of the United States entered upon the most dificult field of European politics, and in the conclusion of a carefully worked-out thesis advocated an inter- aational agreement that would serve to check the growth of armaments, especially naval armament, and the formation by those great powers hon- estly bent on peace of a league peace only to keep the peace among themselves, but to prevent by force, if necessary, its being others." What Mr. Roosevelt had to say before the King and Queen of Nor- way and representative per- sonages constituted the basis of the private convessations which he is having with the statesmen f Eu- rope as occasion aris concerning the practical collec action ments versal “N No on "not +h other a3 oO tive for * iforcement of peace man is worth calling a man,” said the speaker, “who will not rather than submit to in th that are dear to wrong." This i it applied , Mr. Roosevelt's showed the effect of it has tees uni- famy or see him Mr ASB Re guffer Roose pro- been | emphasis, ng himself The whole house arose and stood with bowed heads for a moment when Mr. Roosevelt referred to Bjornson, whose death, he said, ‘leaves a gap in the literature of the whole world ™ as he conceived the right to be. As Mr. Roosevelt proseeded with his ad- dress the Norwegians commented one to another upon the resemblance be- to the same style of public speaking, ——— ---England London (8pecial).—King Edward VII, who returned to England from a vacation of 10 days ago in the best of health, died at 11.45 o'clock Friday night in the presence of his family after an illness of less than a week, which was serious hardly more than three days. The Prince of Wales succeeded to the crown immediately, according to the laws of the kingdom, without of- ficial ceremony. His first official act was to dispatch to the Lord Mayor the announcement of his father's death, in pursuance of custom. His telegram read: am deeply grieved to inform you my beloved father, the King, away peacefully at 11.45 to- that passed night. (Signed George. The physicians soon afterward is- | sued their official bulletin, which fol- lows: : May 6, 11.50 P. M., His Majesty, the King, breathed his last at 11.45 tonight, in the presence of Her Ma jesty Queen Alexandra, the Princes and Princes of Wales, Princess Roy- the Duchess of Fife, Princess Viec- the Duch- | i i lLaking. { Reld, | Powell, Dawson, (Signed) Cause Of Death, { bronchitis, the cause | thus far statement following have been the doctors Pneumonia, ig believed to of death, but have refused to Some of the King's friends are con- . wis 1 vinced that worry over the critical political situation confronted | him, with sleepless ni i, REETAY od, if Aid not cause, the fatal ill- Ness, make a which fnt- is is All of 180 Men in Workings Are Believed to Be Dead. THE EARTH SHOOK FOR MANY MILES. Forty-five White And One Hundred And Thirty-five Colored Miners Entombed At Palas, Ala.—Roof Of Mine Falls In And Fan Is De- molished-—Flames Shoot Hundred Feet Into The Air—A Pedestrian Blown Into The River By Force Of Explosion. Bitmingham, Ala Forty-five white and 135 neg entombed ers are are the of all n siieved that 1 by are owned Coke Company mines and The Coal dead Palos Birmingham, The flames from the ghot up 100 feet in the air and the shock was felt for miles, Timbers were hurled several feet from the mouth of the mine Rocks from ithe roof caved in and made access difficult. Residents of Palos, which Is 40 miles west of Birmingham, began at | | once to do what they could, but re-| lief work was not started in earn-| ‘est until a special train from Bir- ! mingham reached Palos. This spec-| {al train carried State Mine Inspec- | Hillhouse, J. J. Rutledge, explosion clinched hand. The address was broken by abun- joined. | government expert in charge of the | geological station at Knoxville, | § velt. The Colonel proposed The hospital relief car of | dispersed. TO TAKE TWO-YEARS' WALK. Rev. Augustin Jones To Through China, Ete, Afoot, Chicago (Special) Rev. Augus- tin Jones, pastor of the Fourth Con- gregational Church, of Osk Park. suburb, who takes pleasure walks of from 40 to 60 miles, has resign. ed, and after a year's study in Edin. burg, Scotland, will start on a two years’ walk through Southern Europe, Asia Minor, India and China, Mrs, Jones will accompany him, but she will travel by railroads, camels and other conveyances. Mr. Jones ia five feet three inches tall and ac- quired his remarkable pedestrian ability in the Rocky Mountains, where he went for the benefit of his health. WILL RAISE THE MAINE, Congress Passes Bill To Remove Wreck Of Bat leship, Washington, D. CC. (Special). After twelve years the ill-fated bat- tleship Maine Is to be removed from Havana Harbor, and the bodies which went down with the vessel will be interred in the National Ceme. lery at Arlington. A bill providing for such removal and burial which passed the House was passed by the Senate, The bill directs the raising of the vessel by the Seertary of War and the Board of Engineers with "all con venient soeed.’”’ The in the ship are to be buried iu Arlington and the mast lifted above their a8 4 monument, ‘. oT This | mines. { The first rescuers who went into {the mine after the explosion were, overcome by fire damp, and had to ibe carried out. Mr. Rutledge was the first to enter. After | working his way 400 feet down the | i slope, he found the second right en-| try caved in. The two bodies re- | | covered were in the main slope. ‘Talk in Rome About Action of th: Vatican. Rome (Special) .——Right Rev. Wil- liam Paret, Protestant Episcopal Bishop of Maryland, has left Rome for Florence. His friends say that he was not affected by the incident with the Vatican, which is inter- preted by some persons here as in- dicating the intention of the author- ities there to snub Cardinal Gibbons, who so warmly recommended Bishop Paret for a private audience of the Pope. The Cardinal went so far as to give the Bishop six lettersfor Care dinal Merry Del Val, Bishop Ken- nedy, rector of the American Col- lege: Monsignor Bisletl, the papal major domo, ete. When Bishop Paret inquired the best way to gain an audience with the Pope he was informed that his introduction to Cardinal Merry Del Val was the most important, and wag quite sufficient to effect his ob- ject. He went to the Vatican, but could not see Cardinal Merry Del Val. He then wrote to the State, explaining that | Wa we eR be granted RULER In Gloom. The intelligence that the end of King Edward's reign had come was not a eurprise at the last, The people had been expecting to hear of it at any hour since the evening's bulletin was posted at Buckingham Palace and flashed throughout the kingdom. The capital received it without excitement, but gadly, for the King with his own people was lar rulers in the world They re- garded him as one of the strongest forces making for stability of the peace of the empire Notifying Other Rulers, Within a few minutes after the death of the King, the Home Office was telegraphing the intelligence to the heads of other governments and the British diplomats and colonial officials throughout the world All who knew the King antici- pated that his death would be sud- den, and it would not have occa- the 0O0~ A WHY THE STEEL WORKERS STRUCK U. 8. Bureau of Labors Submits Report to Senate. CONDITIONS AT THE BETHLEHEM WORKS Report Shows That 2,322 Men Work. ed 12 Hours A Day For Seven Days A Week—Large Percentage Of Laborers Received Only 12% Cents An Hour—Additiona! Work Demanded Of Men With Shorter Houses Caused Them To Strike. The upon Washington, D. C report of the Bureau the conditions at the Bethlehem Slee Works of South Bethlehem, Pa which was submitted fena'e vAys that 2,322 men hours a day for seven days a wes { Special). of Labor the to worked a large percentage of these laborers earning only hour "While very of the force had working day of 12 hours for the tire seven days a week, a large 12% cents an a considerable per : centage ei a week,” according to a summary sioned great surprise if it had to the end he refused take to his bed, and was sitting in a large chair, 80 the palace storie go, corroborating him an unruly patient, One of the last utterances buted to King Edward was “Well, it is all over, but | k I have done my duty.” He seemed te yy ip as thin thin end fast and four in the sick the day Several his death the King was tose condition, but he 10 o'clock, that his was approching others of the family and doctors have been 2 £348 3 hours b in A COmMA~ ie } # wa wv # on i¥ between 8 and peared to recognize his family he relapsed Into unconse ended in hig passing Del Vals regretiing that giving audiences Cardinal Merry tary answered, Pope was that time he would be In weeks, that th BOr a # tinteons te criticise i. the wry Rome whereupon he was e Pope neither a i statue to be inspected and that the could not be granted friends of Bishop Paret Ol an affront for se informed wif # it is requeste audience he to 1 : this ns reported ted Bishop sider that shortly Paret see the Pope In col amid a crowd which offer ght ence o : persons, FE Pp Paret ignored BY TELEGRAPH Secretary Dickinson has d¢ ti ed Judge John W. Judd, of Nash Tenn., to visit vestigate the present system of granting franchises for public utili ties on the island its investigation into end of the wire responsibility for the receipt of steck quotations by buck- etshops. Secretary of the Navy Meyer ap- on Naval Affairs and explained de- falls of the Naval Appropriation Bill, A Benate bill providing for the naturalization of aliens who gerve four years in thg Navy or the Marine Corps passed the Senate. Heart specialists attending the Surgeons discussed the effect of to- baceo upon the heart, Rev. John Hunter. of Glasgow, Scotland, who is making a tour of the United States, delivered the open- ing prayer in the House, The Bureau of Labor submitted to the Senate a report on labor con ditions at the Bethlehem Steel Works, Bethlehem, Pa. The Spanish Treaty Claims Com- mission ended nine years’ labor and awarded damages of $1,388 845 on claims. Postmaster General Hitchcock ex- pects to save $10,000,000 during this fiscal year in the Postoffice Depart ment. The Senate passed the bill author. izing the raising of the Maine ia Havana harbor. The House Judiciary Commitice ordred a favorable report on the resolution calling upon the Attorney General for Information as to the action taken with reference to cot- ton gambling. Ninety-two sail and steam ves. sels were added to the merchant marine of the United States during April, according to the Department of Commerce and Labor. Dr. William H. Welch, of Balti more, was elected president of the National Association for the Study and Prevention of Tuberculosis, The Senate passed the House bill to create an Art Commission in the distriot. A favorable report was ordered on the banker's bill of lading bill. The government closed down the cement plant at the Roosevelt dam because the big engineering project is nearly finished. the nomination of General Nelson H. Henry to be surveyor of the port of New York. Both House and Senate knocked the traffic agreement Joo vision out of the administration Railroad Bill Commander Ross, of Revenue for two i. Cutter more * SR oe W Pattee wa Th wt Fllmsw hours a day frequently wer it was stated, to work days and to t on Bundays, and it this extension ring of wi the employes hours th requir from shortest ke which men f'é 10 A On a bonus s at began ¢ Feb with Cons gpeeding up. was high pressure that K Were an un They advance according to feared that helr work carried overiis Gue they { croachments day | putt ng the 1 ‘ ‘ overtime would bour day ant of work ultimately week the ys #g = eof Bon ini pras Ca Sunday overtime men." normal wée) daye, 1.413, the #4 ntivm mised WHE entire 30ND time work 10% -hour Sundays the Ja in positions was the regular seven days In a week, worked in positions in which hours was the regular working for six days a week Eghty-two | men were reported havyng a 13- hour day for the entre seven days teferring to the cause of the strike, the summary report prepared by the department says: “The strike at the Bethlehem Steel Works started February 4, 1810, when several hundred machin. ists struck against the discharge of three men who shortly before had {served as a committee to protest { against Bunday and overtime work. { There were at that time no labor {organizations in the plant and one of the elements of interest in the {strike is that it was a strike of un- organized workmen.” The investigation into the condi tions at the plant was authorized by Secretary Nagel on March 17, in re- sponse {op the request of the strikers. which was acquiesced in by the com. pany. Commissioner of Labor Neill sent three of his special South Bethlehem, where lected thelr data from of the company. It fa said the steel works has a great amount of government work in its plant, and the report of the Bureau of Labor agents has been awaited with much interest | meantime delegations from South | Bethlehem have been in Washington several times, making their repre. sentations to members of Congress and finally to the president of a Com- mittee of business men of the Penn- sylvania town asked Mr. Taft not to let the strike at the steel plant in- terfere with the granting of addi tional contracts by the government, while on the following day represen- tatives of the rtrikers called the President's attention to the alleged labor conditions at the plant and re- quested that the government with hold further contracts until the con- ditions were corrected The report of the Burean of Labor on the subject was sent to the Sen- ate in response to a resolution by Sensor Owen, of Oklahoma, calling or > ny as they col Must Carry Wireless, Washington, D. CC. (Special). The Senate passed a bill requiring every ocean-going steamer carrying with wireless apparatus capable of Sas ing between por lesg than 200 miles apart. AS: loss than vight or day. bill do not 1,000 nor oot aes etd a HONDRED'S PEOPLE PERISH Earthq ake Destroys Cartago, in Costa Rica. SEVERAL OTHED CITIES ALSO SHAKEN Hundreds Of Persons Injured By The Collapse Of Buildings—Panie Reigns As The Shocks Continue Much Suffering And Destitution Among People In The Disturbed Territory — Wife And Child Of Guatemala's lepresentative To Peace Count Killed, San Juan del A Sur, Nicaragua part of Cariago, stroyed by a pow- { Special). larg: erful seismic move ment It is known that at least 500 per- BONS are many hundreds injured. buildings were torn Jown, among them the Paluce of Justice, erected by Andrew Car- and child of Dr. Guatemalan magis- ral American Arb been killed been shaken, ngs being dame deathg are reported me persons are slight. dead and Beores of or 0 Bocanegra to the Cent tration Court, San Jose of the but no 3 that city 8¢ fhe 0 aged, injured, 0 Were aagna, Reports reach. is much Cartago, felt at fear BEV. the there al Cartago of Iraze swept rable practically J we both Cartago the force of the congid iu for WIRELESS SYSTEM TESTS, 8, Cruisers Will Over Try 3.000 To Com- municate Mileg 11. Wash negion arrived ve the waters ft COMmi~ himself pojitionl $18 and al her Will Not Resign. tn ' . . ALOl 8 ( Special) the would vicious continue the g the re- mpiated sider these UDWArranis ne, said Ballinger in that President the Secrelary deny ha ot after emphatically denied that he st all have no intention resigning.” he emphatically declared of Sits On Hat Pins In Theatre, Los Angeles, Cal (8pecial) — Per. entered a motion picture down and instantly leaped inte He had struck a sharp hatpina and in the lap of n woman in This woman's escort immedi. jumped on Van Dyke, and Van to be seriously wae taken to a hospital Drke was injured and Victim Of Hookworm, Newport Ne Va. (Special) — The hookworm bas claimed its first vietim bere, In the case of James R. Shippard, 10 rears old, who died We, Shippard had been suffer. hookworm for two TORTS, : oblain- tainable physicians falled to offect a cure. - Local Optionist Boats Prohibicionist, Montgomery, Ala. (Special) .--—Ro- turns received from 67 counties show that Emmet O'Neal. local optionist, was nominated for governor in ihe Democratic primary held in tis st by a majority of 12.000 over his ale ponent, H. 8. D. Mallory Mallory Fan on a statewide Prohibition plat. orm. NA AS, Former Prison Warden Sentenced, Jackson, Mich. (Special). — Allen N. Armstrong, former wardes of the state prison hero, was senten Judge Parkinson to pay a fo po $5000 and to serve o in the Detroit louse of Corrections for accep ting a bribe to favor a pris on contractor. Armstrong was are Rested February 8. 1903, and pleaded -t