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May 31. 11 a. m., wedding in the Church of San Jeronimo. At night, illuminations of the city and display of fireworks.

June 1. 8 p. m., banquet in the royal palace in honor of the foreign princes, special ambassadors, and envoys (chiefs of missions only), followed by a reception of the suites of the special embassies and missions. At night, popular festivals, "verbenas.'

June 2. 3 p. m., royal bull fight. 9.30 p. m., reception at the royal palace, the ball that had been planned having been changed into a reception without music on account of the death of many persons as a result of the attempt made upon the lives of the King and Queen on the day of their wedding.

June 3 (Sunday). 11 a. m., Capilla publica in the chapel of the royal palace. 9.30 p. m., gala performance at the Teatro Real.

June 4. 9 a. m., military review at Carabanchel, a camp about 6 miles from Madrid. 4 p. m., concert in the Plaza de Toros by choral societies from different sections of Spain. 10.30 p. m., ball in the house of Duchess of Fernan Nunez, attended by all the royal family and all the visiting princes, diplomatic corps, special embassies, missions, and others.

June 5. 9.30 p. m., illuminated military and civic parade, reviewed from the royal palace by the King, the royal family, the foreign princes, and the special ambassadors and envoys, who then bade farewell to their Majesties.

June 6. 5 p. m., battle of flowers in the park of Madrid. Suspended on account of rain. 8.30 p. m., banquet at the royal palace in honor of the Spanish authorities.

June 7. Banquet in the royal palace in honor of the diplomatic

corps.

June 8. 3 p. m., general reception in the royal palace.

The foregoing constituted the strictly official programme. In addition there were popular festivities almost every night and several receptions and dinners and teas at the different embassies and legations. The decorations of the city, and especially those at night, were most extensive and beautiful, and united with everything else to express the universal delight of the people in the King's choice of a bride who, by her beauty and graciousness, captivated all who saw

her.

I have, etc.,

WM. MILLER COLLIER.

No. 55.]

The Secretary of State to Minister Collier.

DEPARTMENT OF STATE, Washington, June 29, 1906. SIR: I have to acknowledge the receipt of your No. 109, of the 8th instant, reporting concerning the festivities attending the wedding of His Majesty the King.

You will make suitable expression of this Government's thanks for the courtesies paid to the special ambassador and suite, and express appreciation of the consideration shown by Señor Don Jaime de Ojeda, who acted as aid and escort to the ambassador.

I am, etc.,

ELIHU ROOT

ATTEMPT ON THE LIFE OF THE KING AND QUEEN OF SPAIN.

Minister Collier to the Secretary of State.

[Telegram.]

AMERICAN LEGATION,

Madrid, May 31, 1906.

Bomb thrown at King and Queen while returning to palace after

wedding. Their Majesties escaped wrecked. Many of escort killed.

uninjured. Royal carriage

COLLIER.

No. 108.]

Minister Collier to the Secretary of State.

[Extract.]

AMERICAN LEGATION,

Madrid, June 5, 1906.

SIR: I confirm my cable sent you on May 31, at about 5 p. m., reading as follows: "

The telegraph office at the time this message was dispatched was crowded by hundreds of people sending messages to assure their friends of their own safety and by newspaper correspondents sending dispatches to their papers, so that it was possible that the message was delayed in transmission, notwithstanding I called on the director of the telegraph office and asked him to make the message preferential, which he promised to do.

I had previously gone to the palace to inquire about the condition of their Majesties and had inscribed my name in the book placed for that purpose in the royal apartments and left a note with the minister of state, he being absent from his office; and I also called upon the subsecretary of state, Señor Ojeda, and also upon the president of the council of ministers.

I left on the afternoon of the 1st of June a note with the minister of state as follows:

EXCELLENCY: I am directed by the President to express through your excellency to their Majesties the unspeakable horror with which he has learned of the dastardly attempt upon the lives of their Majesties and of his great happiness that they have escaped uninjured. That God may guard their Majesties and grant them many years is the President's fervent prayer.

Permit me to express to your excellency, whom I ask to be the bearer of the President's message, the assurances of my highest consideration.

His Excellency the MINISTER OF STATE.

WM. MILLER COLLIER.

The attempt upon the lives of their Majesties was made as they were returning from the Church of San Jeronimo after their marriage. They had traversed almost the entire extent of the long route from the church to the palace, having passed through streets filled with tens of thousands of people who had given them a most enthusiastic ovation, the beauty and graciousness of the new Queen and the gallantry of

a Supra.

the young King calling out everywhere proofs of affection and loyalty. Near the end of the Calle Mayor the bomb was thrown from a balcony on the fourth floor of a house. The results show that it probably exploded in the air and undoubtedly was composed of chemicals. The King and Queen escaped without injury, not even a scratch, although it is said the bridal gown was splashed with blood. The front of the carriage in which their Majesties were driving was wrecked; one of the horses nearest to the carriage was killed; several of the "caballerizos" of the King riding near the carriage were wounded; some of the escort were killed; a number of officers, soldiers, and policemen who were lining the street were killed, also six or eight residents of the lower floor of the house from which the bomb was thrown, some of whom were persons of high social position, among them being the Marquesa de Tolosa, sister of the Duke of Ahumada. Up to the date at which I am writing 20 persons have died as a result of the explosion of the bomb and the official list of injured number 108.

Their Majesties, after the clearing away of the smoke caused by the explosion, got out of their carriage and entered the empty "coach of respect" which it is customary to have in Spanish pageants such as the brilliant wedding cortege, and proceeded amid a crowd almost frenzied with delight to the royal palace.

The ministers of the Crown, in council, determined not to suspend the festivities, wishing not to interrupt the popular will. As a mark of respect to the victims, the ball of the palace on the following Saturday was changed into a reception without music. It is also still possible that the battle of flowers fixed by the programme for Wednesday next will be suspended or that the King will absent himself, as special fear of danger at that time is felt, the bomb hurled on the 31st of May having been hidden in a bouquet of flowers. The King and Queen (both of whom showed great bravery at the time of the outrage) on the next morning, unaccompanied by escort, automobiled through the streets of Madrid and everywhere were greeted with "vivas" and every sign of love and affection: On Saturday, however, in going to the bull fight, the royal party went through streets different from those announced, and the justifiable nervousness of the Government caused them to recall on Sunday morning all the tickets which had been given out for the gala function at the Teatro Real that night, reissuing, however, new tickets in the place of them. This was done because it was feared that some tickets of the first issue might have fallen into the hands of anarchists. In the confusion which momentarily ensued after the commission of the outrage of hurling the bomb on the day of the wedding, the anarchist escaped from the building and was lost in the crowd. Numerous arrests of suspicious characters and of professed anarchists were made in hope of discovering the perpetrator of the outrage or accomplices. Yesterday, in a small village about 20 kilometers from Madrid, a suspicious character was arrested by one of the police force, and as he failed to give a clear account of himself and as his appearance in many respects coincided with the description which had been published of the person who for a number of days had been the tenant of the rooms from which the bomb was thrown, and who beyond question was the miscreant who perpetrated the outrage, he was directed by the policeman to accompany him to a tribunal, there to establish his identity. He consented without hesitation to do so, but the two had

not proceeded far when the man under arrest suddenly drew a revolver, shooting the policeman through the head, causing instant death, and seeing that he was likely to be pursued by the people of a near-by village and that escape would be impossible, he again drew his revolver and shot himself through the heart, dying in about fifteen minutes. The body was afterwards brought to Madrid and was identified beyond doubt as that of the tenant and sole occupant of the rooms from which the bomb was thrown, to whom every circumstance points as the perpetrator of the outrage, and who, inquiry shows, had long professed anarchistic beliefs. The miscreant was one. Morales, a resident of Catalonia, a native of a village near Barcelona, and recently a resident of that city, where he had belonged to anarchist societies which flourish so rampantly in that place. He was not of the poorer classes. Until about a year ago he had been engaged with his father in the manufacture of woolen goods, the family owning a small factory.

This attempt to assassinate the King and Queen, occurring on the exact anniversary of the attempt made upon his life in Paris last year, and following the numerous anarchistic outrages in Barcelona, has aroused in Spain a demand for the expulsion of all foreign anarchists and the arrest of all Spanish anarchists; also for the calling of an international conference to consider how united action can be taken by the nations of the world to combat this opposition to all forms of government. It has also resulted in some startling revelations as to the number of anarchists in Spain, reliable journals being authority for the statement that the police registers of Spain contain the names of 5,000 anarchists.

I have, etc.,

WM. MILLER COLLIER.

No. 112.]

Minister Collier to the Secretary of State.

AMERICAN LEGATION,

Madrid, June 11, 1906. SIR: I have the honor to inclose herewith a copy, with translation, of Their Majesties' thanks, conveyed through the ministry of state, for the congratulations of the President and Government of the United States on the occasion of the providential escape, unharmed, of Their Majesties, the King and Queen.

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Madrid, June 1, 1906. EXCELLENCY: His Majesty, the King, my august sovereign, before whom I had the honor to place the contents of the polite note of yesterday's date which your excellency addressed to me, has been pleased to command me to beg you to thank the President and the Government of the United States for the congratulations which were extended to His Majesty, as well as to Her Majesty the

Queen, for having escaped unharmed from the criminal attempt of which they might have been victims, and also to express to your excellency his gratitude for your personal share in these congratulations.

I avail myself of this opportunity to reiterate to your excellency the assurances of my most distinguished consideration.

E. DE OJEDA. P. A. Under Secretary.

STATUS OF NON-CATHOLIC RELIGIOUS DENOMINATIONS IN SPAIN.

No. 34.]

The Acting Secretary of State to Minister Collier.

DEPARTMENT OF STATE, Washington, January 30, 1906.

SIR: In view of a letter addressed to the President, under date of the 25th ultimo, by the Rev. John Lee and Bishop L. B. Wilson, and referred to the department by the President's secretary on the 6th instant, I have to say that I should be pleased if you would report as to the present status of the non-Catholic religious denominations in Spain in the matter of the exercise of their forms of faith. It is understood that the toleration within the " temple " is permitted, but that outward manifestations of a form of religion other than the constitutional religion of the realm are prohibited.

I am sir, etc.,

No. 71 B.]

ROBERT BACON.

Minister Collier to the Secretary of State.

AMERICAN LEGATION, Madrid, February 17, 1906. SIR: Replying to department's request No. 34, of January 30 last, for a statement of the status of non-Catholic Christians in Spain, I have the honor to report that the existing constitution of Spain provides:

ARTICULO II. La Religion catolica, apostolica, romana, es la del Estado. La nacion se obliga a mantener el culto y sus ministros.

Nadie sera molestado en el territorio español por sus opiniones religiosas ni por el ejercicio de su respectivo culto, salvo el respeto debido á la moral cristiana.

No se permitinán, sin embargo, otras cerenonias ni manifestaciones publicas que las de la religion del Estado.

This is to be translated as follows:

ARTICLE II. The Catholic religion, apostolic, Roman, is the religion of the State. The nation obligates itself to maintain its worship and its ministers.

No one will be interfered with (literally, "troubled ") in Spanish territory because of his religious opinions nor for the exercise of his respective form of worship, saving only the respect due to Christian morals. However, no other ceremonies nor manifestations in public except those of the religion of the State will be permitted.

I am unable, after search and inquiry, to find any statutes upon the subject of religious worship nor any written decrees or orders defining the constitutional provision quoted or providing for its enforcement. I have received from Rev. Mr. Gulick, a Protestant minister,

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