I , . \ REJECT A COOK CLAIMS _ AS POLE DISCOVERER- ) - . . . - . . , Danish Scientists , Declare That the , ' ' Proofs " Presented by Doctor i \ ' . . Are of No Value. "f , ; ( " OOLED , US ALL" - BRADLEY , . r 1 l Peary . on Receiving . News Says , "I " . Told . You So ! " - Recalls Gold-Brick I . - . . . , . . ; \ ' . Message from Labrador. , 0 " I . . . ' . The University of Copenhagen , the . , first institution of learning to recog- : " ' nize Dr. Frederick A. . Cook as the dis coverer of the north pole , has solemn ly declared that the explorer had fail- - ed to establish the claim upon which his high honors had been based. The committee appointed by the university to examine Cook's records " recently presented its report to the \ consistory of the university , which re viewed the deductions of the experts with the greatest care and discussed the findings' from every standpoint. " That both the committee and the con- sistory were disappointed was soon , . known. . . . . When . the consistory met the other day- a written report was adopted to the effect that the alleged records ' 'sub . . mitted for examination by Dr. Cook failed to prove his claim that he had - reached the north pole. The * report of the committee , of which Prof. Stromgren was chairman , .as presented to the consistory , states i that Cook's papers are without any value ; that his report to the univer sity is practically the same as , that published in the New York Herald upon his return from his arctic expe dition. The copies of his notebooks submitted , says the committee , contain no original calculations of observa- tions , but only results thereof. Ac- cordingly the committee concludes that , he affords no proof of having reached the pole. The documents handed the commis " sion of the University of Copenhagen " 1'1 for examination are : - 1. A typewritten report prepared by Cook's secretary , Walter Lonsdale , and covering sixty-one pages of foolscap. , 2. A typewritten copy made by Lonsdale from Cook's notebooks. This occupies sixteen pages of foolscap and I includes a description of the expedi- tion during the period from March 18 , 1908 , to June 13 , 1908 , during which , 1. ' 4 according to the statement , Cook jour- . neyed from Svartevog to the north pole and returned to a point on the " . polar ice not specifically indicated but , west of the Axel H iberg land. \ I The papers were not accompanied by a private letter from Cook , but Secre- . . . ? , v tary Lonsdale stated verbally to the ' commission that the original notes \ and books of the explorer from which f his copies were made- had been sent to Europe by another route as a pre- cautionary measure and would be de- l livered to the university in the course of a few days. . In presenting the data Lonsdale said explicitly and repeatedly that docu- ment No. 2 was a complete and accu- rate duplication of the information . : G- - contained in all of Cook's notebooks that could be of any importance to the university for the purpose of this I examination ! ' . In spite of the explorer's , promise and his secretary's assurance that they would be forthcoming , the commission is not yet in possession of . the original notebooks and diaries. ' "He has fooled us all , from the king . of Denmark down , " was the exclama- tion of John R. Bradley , F. A. Cook's New York backer in his arctic trip , . when apprised of the news from Copenhagen "And he fooled me with the rest. As a matter of fact , " con . tinued the sportsman , "I long ago lost all interest in Dr. Cook , the north pole - and everything connected with it. Po . lar bears and the wild life , of the arc- tic in general is the only thing that . has ever interested me much in that - . connection anyway. "Thre .months ago from the Labra- . ' dor coast I sounded an explicit and \ deliberately worded - warning to the . world , based on complete and accurate information in regard to the Cook c _ claims In doing so , I accepted the -L S responsibility devolving on me and fulfilled my duty to myself and to the . 1 < ivorid.Vith these words Commander ; : k Ho : > ert K. 1 Peary expressed his senti- , " ments regarding the failure of the : ( . . . - University of Copenhagen to find any : . : pj ro.f of ' "the discovery of the north ' 'i'- pole by Cook. . . . , . . .t . " . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - / , "It ' ' < : ' . . .PASS 3-CENT TARE ORDINANCE. , " " \ . ' ' ; ; eh. " L-lauiI OiuiicilmcMt , Keiiew Cur * ! : ' Miio Franchise ; Gnl1 tJnUl11) v , - . The Johnson > , . administration sprang . . a surprise on the public the other . : . "night when an ordinance granting re- : . / . newals of many : existing : : street rail : way fr : ichises was introduced in the , Cleveland Council and passed under a suspension of the rules. The fran chises provide for 3-cent fares and rr penny transfers. They expire auto matically .Tune 1 , 1910. This action. . taken two days after a blanket ordin- . . . ance had been { passed granting twen- ty - five-ear . renewal of the Cleveland ' R.1 h..ay Company' rights on all its , lines at a maximum fare of 4 cents _ . , , - and sevon tickets I for a quarter , met ' . . ' 0. " with the vigorous. disapproval of Re- - it' publican ' Conncilmen.vlio protested ID I ' : . ' . . . 'yaln . , 'however. , . . . \ . . : ' . ' ; " ' , . . , , . , . . i'J : - - - . - - ' ' ' ' - ' " ' , - ' : \ - r , " . ' \ . . . , - " . " ' . I . , . . J FATHER TIME DISCLOSES TWO" INTERESTING PAGES IN THE WORLD'S HISTORY. : . . . . , . . ' , . . . . . " . . , I ' ' fll . WORLD'S ' HIS- . , . I ORy = . . . : . - . - ' ' . - - - _ O ' ) I = - = = ' I 1 II _ - . - I r - u _ - - . . ' - - - - ? - . / - - - . - : - [ EEi - - ' - , , , - - , r - L . . . . \ - = = = . i - - - - - = - - i p ; - . - = = = = 't"l1''Z' ' ' ' ' I'4 - . - - - = - L . f& I . I . _ . " 4 " , . - - ' ' i' li W ; - . / \ II1Mt ; ' . ( " \ n'\ - - - , \ - _ - " . ' , , < : : ; , - - - ' - = . / - - - - - - - - _ - . . - " , L---- ' . - ' : . - - ' , ' . - - = - = - - - . . . w ' 171 _ , - . ' - . - : : : : : - T'If1\oIt . OF" THE AIR. 5 . . ' U t1ES = . - . , 1.\ 1. - . UE COP . . - - . ; - li " , - = = . _ - : . - . - : - : : . - - - . - : - - - . . = ; : : : ' - . = - . - = - - - - - - - - - : : : : : _ : : - - ' ; : : : : ' I - = = - = _ - - = = = _ - - = = - - : : : : : : = - . - - . _ - , - - - " - . --:2 _ = - = _ - _ - _ - - _ - = - - - . - - = - - - : : : ' - - - . . - = " - - - - - = : - = _ ' - : : _ : ' - _ - - = - _ - - - ' - _ - - - _ / ' - - _ - _ - _ - _ - ci4 ; - " - . - - = - - - = - _ _ - . . : = : : - - - : I , -.Minneapolis - Journal. . - . - . I SENATOR M'LAURIN IS DEAD. / ' End Comes to Mississippi , Leader at Brandon Residence. United States Senator Anselm J. Mc Laurin , who had - been a leaderMn : Mis sissippi Democracy for many years , died at his residence in Brandon : , Miss. , Wednesday night. Death was due to an attack of heart failure , and came without the slightest warning. When the fatal stroke came upon him Sen- ator McLaurin was seated in a rocking chair in front of the fireplace in his library. He suddenly fell forward , without speaking a word , and life was extinct when members of his family reached his side. Senator McLaurin , who was ' 61 years old , began his first term in the United States Senate in i894 , but was elected , Governor of Mississippi in 1895 and served in that office four years. H $ was elected again to the Senate in 1900 and served one term. He was re " turned for the term which "began on March. 4 , 1907. His present term of office would have expired on March 3 , 1913. Senator McLaurin began the study of law in 1868 , after he had served through the civil war as a pri- vate in the Confederate army. He was born near Brandon and raised on a farm. Seven children survive him. In the Senate chamber he was known as one of the strongest defenders of the South. He believed in the South , its resources , and future. He did some active work on the Senate committee on the Mississippi river and tribu ' taries and was a member of other im- . portant Senate committees , among them those on civil service , commerce , immigration , ' interstate commerce , pub- lic expenditures , and the joint commit- tee on revision of the laws of the Unit- , . ed Estates. . . . "LITTLE TIM" IS DEAD. r . Political Iviiis : : of Xew York Bowery PassesAway. . Timothy P. , ( "Little Tim" ) Sullivan , political king of the Bowery , and one of New York City's picturesque figures , died in his home , 222 East 12th street of acute Bright's disease and inflam mation , of the lining of the heart. From dawn until evening "Little Tim" was passing slowly away. At 5:30 : p. m. he emerged from a semi-comatose state. He knew he was close to death , and said farewell to the immediate members of his family : ; and a few close friends. The news spread quickly , and in many houses there was weeping. Thousands he had befriended , standing between them and actual want , were inconsolable. 7 . Grand Duke : Nicholas Nicholaievitch second cousin of the emperor , has been designated to take full and direct charge of affairs in Finland. Twenty Japanese were killed and fif teen were injured , several of them fa- tally , in the recent wreck of a Great Northern work train between Vancouv- er and New Westminster , B. C. The republic of Liberia has requested the assistance of the United States government in organizing a police force with a view ' of controlling the many tribes of the African hinterland. Sensational charges have been made by directors of the Dai Nippon Sugar Company , involved in the sugar. scan- dals of Japan , against cabinet minis : ters and " elder statesmen , of sharing in , the graft of $3,000,000 secured by the Formosa Sugar Company. It is reported from London that a cataract is rapidly forming on the re- maining eye of Gen. Booth , head of the Salvation Army. 'An operation Is in- ; evitable. Meanwhile he is busy ad- dressing meetings , controlling : the army and dictating correspondence , \ . e " t1 ALBERT TAKES OATH AS KING OF BElGIUM Hundreds of Thousands View State 1 Entry of Successor to Leo pold II. Into Capital. . . / FAVORS HUMANITY IN KONGO . New. Ruler's ; Speech from Throne- Gives Pledge for Mission of Civ- ilization in Africa. . i . Albert I. , King of the Belgians , with his queen , Elizabeth , made a state en- try into the capital from Laeken Thursday. Cannon boomed forth a royal salute , church bells rang out and hundreds of thousands of people lined the route of the regal march crying "Long live Albert ! " and "Long * live Elizabeth ! " t When the procession arrived at the chamber , where the oath of ascension was to be taken , the successor to Leopold II. was given a notable re- ception by the assembled senators and deputies. A feeble attempt of the So cialists to make a republican demon - stration failed miserably. . At every discordant note a fresh outburst of cheering drowned the voices of.the . malcontents. ' King Albert's speech from the throne was an eloquent tribute to Leopold I. and to his uncle , Leopold II. He declared that ' the latter had performed a prodigious t worlin : Africa , with the constant thought of enriching the nation and increasing the economic resources' of Belgium. Turning to. the subject of Belgium's future , King Albert said : "We must continue our unshakable attachment to constitutional liberty and the love of independence , and thus hold sacred our patrimony while advancing toward the peaceful conquests in the field of I labor and , science. In thp Kongo the nation wishes a policy of humanity and progress enforced. The mission of colonization cannot be other than a mission of high civilization. Bel- gium always has kept her promises , and when she engages to apply in the Kongo a policy worthy of her , none has a right to doubt her word. ESTRADA , VICTOR IN BATTLE. . Zelnyan Forces Conlpletely Van- quished by Nicaraguan Rebels. Gen. Estrada's victory at Rama , Nic aragua is complete. The _ Zelayan forces have been practically annihi- lated. Those not -killed , wounded or captured are cut off from retreat. Six hundred are dead on both sides , j he government loss being by far the heaviest. In addition , Estrada has captured more than 2,000 men , 1,500 rifles and a million rounds of ammuni- tion. Fourteen surgeons and * assist- ants have been landed from the Unit- . " ed States cruisers Tacoma and Des Moines at the order of Commander Shipley and are caring : for the wound- ed in improvised hos itals in Blue- fialds. FARMERS PURCHASE AUTOS. J C. Coe of Moose Jnv , Saskatche wan , Curries Orders of Kelgrliborsi Moose : Jaw , Saskatchewan , is the postoffice address of J. C. Coe , a farm- ; \ er , who spent a day in Detroit on his way to New York. 'Farmer Coe's main reason in visiting Detroit was to buy an automobile. From his farmer neighbors he had orders and bank Irafts for twenty-nine more "whiz , vagons. " Coe's automobile cost $4,5.00 , ind the rest of the cars , were all of I iiigh grades , several in the $5,000 I lass. \ ' , \t _ , . - " . - . , , . . I COREAN PREMIER IS STABBED. t , Head of National Cabinet Fatally Wounded While in Seoul. , Premier Yi , the head of the Corean Cabinet. was stabbed and fatally wounded the other day by a Corean , Yie Chamm Yong. . Premier Yi was formerly Minister of Education in the Corean Cabinet. He became Prime Minister in May , 1907 , when a recon- struction of the Cabinet followed a five hour audience that Marquis : Ito , the Japanese resident , had with the Em- peror. Yi was regarded as a firm and competent officer , but his efforts to carry out the policy of the new admin- istration met with determined opposi- tion from his political adversaries. The attack occurred at 10 o'clock in the morning. The assailant was a Chris tian who was for many years a resi dent of the United States. , The Pre- mier was riding 'in his jinricksha when the assassin came up with a long knife in his hand. He drove this twice into the abdomen of .the Premier and once into the latter's lung. , The assassin then turned on the Premier's jinrjck- sha man , whom he stabbed and instant- ly killed. The assassin was immediate- ly arrested. He is a youth of about 20 years : anl is believed to be a member of a political secret society. TRAGEDY IN A PAWNSHOP. , Man 'Opens Fire AVIien lie Is Ar- rested at Kansas : City. In a "pistol battle in which County Marshal Joel B. Mayes'Policeman Earl C. Logan , and an unknown negro were the participants , the negro was killed and the marshal was shot in the head and severely wounded in the Star Loan store , a pawnshop , at 210 Inde- pendence avenue in Kansas City. The officers had been notified that the negro Nwas in the pawnshop trying to borrow money on some stolen jewelry. Policeman Logan entered the store with the marshal and arrested the negro. Suddenly the latter shot Mayes : in the head. Mayes : steadied himself and shot and killed the negro. Valu- able rings and other stolen jewelry were found in the pockets of the negro. \ 'CtlOOLS J \ ) ' - ( } UCia Trustees of the Carnegie College re- tirement fund have modified the rules of the trust , so that the retirement age for instructors will be 65 , or after twenty-five 'years. Frank White has been appointed di- rector of education for the Philippine islands , to succeed Dr. Barrows , re- signed. Mr. White has been assistant director of education at Manila for several years. He was reared in Ne- braska and is a graduate of the Uni- versity of. Chicago. Louisiana will follow the methods of Minnesota , Wisconsin and the Dako- tas and teach to every one of the pu- pils who enter the agricultural high schools the same curriculum that is taught in the four Northwestern States. This is the first yearthat , ag riculture has been taught with system and practical work in the high schools of Louisiana. The first published report to the ef- fect that the famous elective system at Harvard had been abolished proves to have been incorrect. It appears to have been 'true , however , that under the Lowell administration plans for improving that system are receiving attention. One change contemplate is to require students to complete the prescribed course in any study that they elect. At a meeting of the Graduates' Club at New York the subject for discus sion was "Do our systems of public education prepare children and youth to enter life with principles .of honor ? " A number of prominent educators ex- pressed the fear that they do not , and Prof. John Dewey thought there was a [ much higher standard of morality in our colleges than there used to be. / The introduction of the professional element In college athletics was de- plorefl } v I I . . . , / . , . . n , NEGRO IS HERO AT FIRE. Saves Physicians and Students When Kansas City Building Is Razed. Heroic work on / the part of Wash ington Johnson , a negro janitor , saved the lives of a score of persons in the Rialto building , a five-story office structure at 9th street and Grand ave- nue , Kansas City , which was destroy- ed by a fire caused by a gas explosion. . The loss is estimated at $300,000. Johnson discovered the fire and , realizing that a number of physicians and medical students were sleeping on the . upper floors , he rushed through the halls shouting an alarm. When he be- lieved every one had escaped he made his way to the street. There he learn- ed that Charles R. Mauley , a student who slept on , the fifth floor , was miss- ing. Without a moment's hesitation "Johnson rushed up the stairs to tHe top of the building. , As he started through the hall on the fifth floor he met Manley , dazed and half-choked , groping about. Taking the mall _ by the arm , the negro guided him through the smoke and flames and the two men reached the street just as a second explosion shook the building. WARRINER GETS 6-YEAR TERM. Big Four Embezzler , Guilty and Asks , Quick Sentence. With a hysterical plea that sentence be pronounced' ) ' immediately , Charles L. Warriner , the defaulting local treas- urer of the Big Four Railroad , plead- ed gifclty to embezzlement in Cincin- nati and was sentenced to six years at hard : labor in the State penitentiary. The plea or guilty was made by pre- arrangement between the county pros- ecutor and the attorneys for the man who is alleged to have stolen at least 5643,000 from his employers. Mrs. : Jeanette Stewart-Ford , the woman in the , Warriner case , will brought to trial on a charge of blackmail , and the principal witness against her will be Warriner , whom she is alleged to have driven from crime to crime for ten years. When Warriner's lawyers en- . tered a plea of guilty their client made a wild , passionate declaration of the agpnies he had suffered during the years that he had been engaged in systematic thefts. He concluded with an appeal for an immediate sentence. , MONSTER WARSHIP LAUNCHED. - - Utah , Greatest of Battle Craft , Leaves Ways Into the Delaware. Declared without an equal afloat , the U.tah , the greatest battle ship evSi built in the United States , was launch- ed from the yard of the New York Shipbuilding Company at Camden , N. J. , in the presence of several thousand persons , who crowded the piers and every other vantage point. , As the hull started to leave the ways , Miss : Mary : Alice Spry , of Salt Lake City , daughter of the Governor of Utah , broke a bottle of champagne against the keel of the ship. Launchings ol warships on the Delaware have be- come a common sight , but the latest addition to the American navy aroused the enthusiasm of the crowd , whose cheers , as well as the din made by the whistles of river craft , continued sev eral minutes. . BIG CINCINNATI BANKS : MERGED - First National Absorbs Merchants' I Combined Deposits $ 26OOOOOO. By action of their boards of direct ors the Merchants' : National Bank is absorbed by the First National in Cin cinnati. To accomplish the merger the First National increased its capital stock from $5,000,000 to $6,000,000 , and it now hasa surplus and undivided profits of $2,100,000 and deposits of 26000000. The First National be comes the largest bank in the Ohio valley. W. S. Rowe , ' 'president of the " First National , continues" that of , fice. M. E. Ingalls , president of the Merchants' National , retires I . . ' 1 8 mE , 400 fltSGUEft'K If AN ILLINOIS MINE A Explosion Is Followed by Death- \ , Dealing Gases in Pit Near * Herrin. OPEN LAMPS CAUSE DISASTER" I Prompt and Gallant Rescue Measures y Are Put Forth by Manage . ment and Others. , Eight men were killed and the lives - of 400 others were imperiled by an explosion of gas In mine "A" of the- Chicago and Carterville Coal Com- pany , near Herrin , Ill. Open lamp carried by the mine's engineer and his assistants caused the disaster. There were three men and a boy in this party and all lost their lives. Prompt action by the management of the mine resulted in the safe exit of the hun- dreds of men who were at work be- low ground. Within five minutes of the first .reports of the explosion the miners in the immediate vicinity of \ the accident were 'started toward the surface and on the return trips of the cages rescuers were lowered to entries , Nos. 7 and S west , where the catastro- phe took place. The dead are : Eugene Barrett , as- sistant engineer ; Salvatore Greeco . ' Thomas Plarber , miners ; W. T. Pierce , mine engineer ; Pietro Romeo , labor- er ; George Snyder. miner ; Thomas. Williams , assistant manager ; uniden- tified boy , about 16 years old. James Guinney superintendent of' * \ the mine , and Robert Hueston , mana ger , headed the first relay of rescuers. Despite the black damp which flowed into the chambers adjoining those in which Pierce and his party were kill ed , these men plunged into the work- ings. Three bodies blocked their path. Hasty examination showed that the- men were alive , and they were rushed , * to the surface. One of them was A. J. * Hueston , a brother of the manager. The others were Charles -Klein and Albert Shelton. All were revived and are expected to recover from the ef- fects of the gas. " I The rescuers next found the bodies- of Snyder , Greeco and Romeo. None- of these men had been burned , the- condition of the bodies testifying , mutely to the force of the concussion. Harber's bjody was badly burned , the. features being scorched almost be- yond recognition. The valiant efforts of the rescuers to penetrate m re- , deeply into the workings were re pulsed by increasing banks of after . damp. The ventilating aparatus of" the mine had not been damaged , but it could not cope with the gases and- Guinney and Hueston and their help- ers were forced to retreat , leaving the bodies of Pierce and his'companions Fire also began to gain headway. Later all efforts were directed to- wards fighting the flames. Conditions are such that it is hoped they will be- confined to the two entries affected by the explosion. The mine is under the active man- manI agement of J. B. Peters of Carbon- dale , who is vice president of the Chi- cago and Carterville Coal Company. The president of the concern is James Pease , of Chicago , former sheriff 0- Cook County. EX-SENATOR HARRIS DEAD. Prominent Kaiisuii Is Suddenly- SirieUen in Daughter's Home. Former United States Senator Will- iam A. Harris , of Kansas , who two years ; ago was Democratic candidate- for Governor of that State , died sud- denly of heart disease at the home of Mrs. Lydia1. : : ilackey1 : , in Chicago. He was a member of Congress from 1S93 to 1S95. and was United States Senator from 1897 to 1903. He r/as prominently connected with the . Amer- ican Short Horn Breeders' Associa- tion and the International Live Stock , Exposition. 1 FORTY HURT IN TRAIN WRECET Mail Clerks Barely Escape from , Burning Car Xear 3Inukato : : , Minn. : , St. Paul passenger train No. 43 , run- ning north at thirty-five miles an hour , spread the rails one-half mile east of . Good Thunder , Mirin. , and plunged into the ditch. Forty passengers were hurt , none fatally , - it is believed. The mail car rolled down a thirty-foot . embank- ment and caught fire. The mail clerks. "aad a narrow escape. Slays Wife , Children and Self. George C. Cheuvrent , a prominent resident of Fresno Cal. , killed his wife with . . a hatchet and then perhaps fa tally injured his children , a'boy of 14 and a girl of 10 years. Following this , Cheuvrenf rushed to the Southern Pacific tracks , threw himself under a. passing train and was killed. It la- thought he s suddenly came insane. He was a rancher. . Three Children Burned to Death Three children lost their lives in a are which destroyed the residence of Jasper Williamson , of Sunbury , Ohio , while the parents were working in a -barn 200 feet from the house. It is * _ believed that one of the children Wa ! ! ! . playing with matches in a bed , as th . . . ire started in a bedroom. t