-tttp vnnvTvn nT?rr.nvrA. SATURDAY. OCTOBER 22. 1910. DETHRONED MONARCH WHO IS IN EXILE, AND SEVERAL PICTURES OF WOMAN WHO AIDED IN HIS DOWNFALL. MYSTERY MADEOF LIBEL SUIT WILL BE HEARD MONDAY v Vfc'V Fall Over Banisters Results Seriously; HusbantfvNot -In Attendance. Attorneys Get Postponement After Both Sides File Briefs. .. - ' - COUNTESS fill 4 pMBS PLACE OF ACTION ISSUE Panama Action In Federal Court Because New York World Circu late at West Point Defease Objects to Supreme Court. WASHINGTON. Oct M. When the so r;id 1'aiiimt libel suit of the United Flairs against tba Press Publishing; Com- pany of New Tork u called for ariru ment today la the Ajpreme Court of the 1,'nUed States, the attorneys obtained a postponement until Monday. Tiw case u not reached until ao lata In tli afternoon that the anrunient could cat have been completed today had the attorneys proceeded. The present plan of the court Is to hear the case after tie rendering of opinions on Monday. Briefs on behalf of the Government and the Press Publishing Company were f I -d In the Supremo Court of tha United Scares today. Tt-jr rase la that In which x-Pre.ident Kww.'fit ordered the Department of Justice to proceed asa'rst tha publisher of the New Tork World becaues of the publication of stories to the effect that tner had been favoritism In tha pur tlnfs of the Panama Canal property by wl.lrh capitalist Including Charles) P. Tart, brother of the Prealdent: Douglas Koblnern. brother-in-law of ex-President Iloofei-elt. and others Here charged with tax ing reaped great financial benefit. Legality of Action Coa tended. Because of tb fact that the World elrrulated upon the Government reserva tion at Wet Point tha lbel proceedings were brought in tha Federal Courts and on tha b-gallty of this artlon depended the chief contentions of tha defendants' counsel. The brief for tba Press Publishing Com pany as filed by Delancey Klcoll. of New Tork. aiwlstant counsel. This coo tended that even though tha language of tha act of 159. was literally broad enough to rover tha case. It should not t so construed, for several reasons: The foremont of these waa that the "general acqulrsenc of legal minds for nearly a century In tha negative of tha proposi tion forbids the construction now for tha first time asserted by the Government." Action Held Unprecedented. 'During this period wa have passed through the mont momentoua events of our history." said the attorney. "In all the fierce dlscuneiens of the press no one baa ever held till now thst tha courts of the United States have Juris diction to punish a nbel first printed, published and circulated In one of tha states snd which. In tha course of a general circulation, haa happened to pene trate into this Federal reservation." Another reason advanced against tha Government construction waa "that the whole history and Ufa of the country t.i utterly at variance with any such construction," tha necessary result of which. It was contended, would be to confer upon the National authority a general control over the press of tha country. Tha Government's brief was argued by Attorney-General Wickersham, James M. Reynolds and Stuart McNa niara. It not only contained a state ment of facts, bnt an argument In sup port of Its position that the Indict ment against tba Presa Publishing 'oral. any should not have been quashed. ULstorj of Case Reviewed. "In effect." says tha Government's brief, "the published article charges that Charlea P. Tatt, Douglas Robinson and William Nelson Cromwell, with J. 1'terpont Morgan and others, acting through an American syndicate, ob tained control of the securities of tha rench company which owned tha Panama Canal route and Ita properties for the approximate sum of fS.OOO.AOe. Aided by tha intimacy which they en joyed with Theodore Roosevelt, then President of the United States, and brother-in-law of Douglas Robinson i and William H. Taft. then Secretary of War. and brother of Cliarlea P. Tsft. and by the co-operation of these offi cials with them, they were enabled to effect tha sals of tha Panama Canal to t ie United States for S4v.000.OOV and reap a profit of aoma lls.OOD.eoa. which was divided, aa charged, among Gov ernment favorites la the world of pol itics aud finance. The substantial question which tha Government holds Is before tha court was set out In the brief aa being hether or not tha United States courts base Jurisdiction to punish a corpora tion which printed In the City of New Tork a new.naper containing a libel, criminal under the laws of the Blata of New Tork. and circulated copies of the uim within the Federal Territory of tha same within the Federal Territory West Point. Tha Governments claim Is based on an act of Congress of 1SX wifh tha Government urges "operates to transfer tna stale law to Federal territory, for tha purpose of punishing acts committed there which. If per formed outside and In tha Jurisdiction of tha state, would be amendable to Its laws." riat-e of Action Is Issue. In the Government brief. It la ar gued that It la not only tha right, but the duty of Conaresa, so to legislate conrernlnt territory under Its exclusive Jurisdiction as to preserve peace) and good order therein. "The fact that one may be punished for Issuing a libel In New York Is no rea son,' says the Government, "for allow ing him to go free of all punishment for circulating It at West Point. The people In the latter place are entitled to protection." Tha Inconvenience to the accused of belna" subjected to prosecutions la sun dry places, where their alleged libels are circulated, was met with the argu ment that "the Inconvenience which may be suffered by criminals haa not gonerally been regarded as adequate reasons for permittlnc them to oper ate without restraint." Tho auggestton that the offense rhara-ed could be punished In New York State courts and therefore was nor intended to be included In the act of l brought forth the argument from the Government "that the state of New Tor a cannot punish an offense com mitted at West Point against tha United "Slates. " O'Connor on Way to Portland. SEATTLE. Waatv. Oct. 81. T. P. O Cortnor. tha Irish leader, who Is tour ing America. addressed a large audi ence here tonight on "Home Rule." Dur ing the day he addressed the students at the University of Washington and was entertained at luncheon by tha Seattle Press Club. He left late te ultLt tot Portland, i-.-ji-v' :k i s; , -i y ll 4 ; Fit I i .X- imnlM- v- . (u A -v' Jll ' .. II y-r-v i-- 'r ' ', - ""n. mi I KIXO MAXIEL, OF PORTUGAL, ASD MLLE. GABT DES tYS (GABRIELLB OF THE LILIES). LIST NOT COMPLETE Disasters at Sea in Storm Re main to Be Counted. 50 MEN STILL MISSING Authentic Reports Received So Far Show Total of fS Drowned In Shipwreck Most Florida Towns Weathered Blow. JACKSONVILLE. Fia-. Oct. 81. Only tha disasters at sea remain to be counted In obtaining complete reports of the damage done by tha gTeat hurricane which swept thia state early thla week. Although wtre and rail communication haa not been restored to many ptacea In the state. Including Miami and Key West, all points for which fears were enter tained have been heard from and all weathered tha big blow In fairly good shspe. Thirteen drowned In shipwrecks Is tha most authentic count at band today. In cluding those reported last night on both coasts of Florida. Word came from St. Augustine today that -three dead had been found In tha wreck of an unidentified four-masted schooner near Defray. Tha missing total at least to. Including tha crew of nine on tha oil barge Dallas, which broke adrift from her tow In a 100-mile blow on Tuesday. PASSENGERS ARE THANKFUL Steamer Comns Experience In Hur ricane Very Exciting. NEW TORK. Oct. 8L With her 90 or more puexengers thankful that they bad pasecl safely through tha hurricane which swrpt the Gulf and the Caribbean, tha Southern Pacific steamer Comus reached port today from New Orleans, four days late. Tha Comus left New Orleans on Wednesday, October 1C, and bad hardly got Into tha gulf when the storm broke. C. Do Mollnesux. secretary to O. W. Luce, general freight agent of the South ern Pacific Company at San Francisco, told tha story today of the exciting ex perience on the steamer. "Things begun to look alarming on Thursday." SMid Mr. Moiinesux. "and on Friday conditions grew rapidly worse. By Friday night we were in the thick of tha hurricane, which Captain alaxon suid waa the worst he had experienced In 17 years of sailing in these waters. Al though the hatches were, battened down and everything waa locked tight, water forced Ita way Into soma of the state rooms. The decks were continually ewept. tha steamer pitched and rolled frightfully and everybody, even Captain Maxon. gave up the ship tor lost. "Conditions Improved the next dsy. however, but both sea and wind con tinued high and there was not enough sun for an observation. An effort was made to find the vessel's location by soundings; but without result. By Mon day things were Improved enough to give us some encouragement and on Tuesday, when the captain waa able to get an ob servation and head for the Florida Straits, wa ail felt we bad weathered the worst experiences In our lives." The Southern Pacific ateamer Creole, arrived thla morning; from New Orleans. Ii hours behind her schedule, report ing that on Monday last ahe was "hove to" for It houre and that on Tuesdsy. while passing through the Florida straits, she had passed a wrecked sail ing vessel and two stesmshlps ashore. The Brasos of tha Mallory line, cams Into tba Aetffeer tiixea daj L. a with. windows smashed and deck rails bent and twisted by tha force, of the storm. Cabins and saloons were water-soaked and the wireless appara tus was disabled. The Ogeechee. a small freighter, of the Texas steamship Company's line, waa due at this port yesterday, but haa not been reported. LEVER'S PASSENGERS ARE SAFE 1 Cargo Will Have to Be Removed to "' Save Steamer Lonlslnc. KET WEST, Fla Oct. 81. (Via Ha vana.) Tha United States cutter For ward returned here today, bringing the rest of tha passengers from the French trans-Atlantlo steamer Louisine, which went ashore on Sombrero Reef during; the hurricane on Monday. About half of tho 517 passengers reached here yea terday. The captain of the Louisine reporta that It will ba impossible to save his ship until tha cargo haa been removed. The captain of tha Norwegian steam er Fos, fast in tho quicksand at Mar suese, haa arrived at Tortugas Island, and reports his vessel In good condi tion. Ha will return to her today to discharge cargo. The bark Hugo waa towed Into port last night by the tug Astral. Th ballast steamer Miami will da part today for Jacksonville with the malls. Tha steamer Mascotte la ex pected from Jacksonville with malls during the day. The American steamer Herman Frasche. which was ashore off Alligator Light.- has been floated and Is being; towed Into port. The schooner Hanson B. Boecher Is reported water-logged and dismasted off Cape San Antonio. Cuba. CCY TP PAY TAXES TACOMA RAILWAY A POWER COMPANY LOSES FIGHT. Corporation to Turn Over $340,113 to City an Its Assessment for Past Threw Years. TACOMA. Wash.. Oct. 81. Tha Taco ma Railway St Power Company will on Monday send County Treasurer Mesth a certified check for 1340.113. representing taxes for the years 1907. 1908 and 10. Of this amount tJO.OOO Is Interest. Thus the city wine Its long fight. The taxes for 1907 will ba paid under protest because of the assessment lri that year of the franchise under which the company operates in thla city. This question haa been decided in favor of tha county by United States District Judge Hanford. but will probably be appealed by the company to the United States Court of Appeals. The decision to nay came aa a result of a conference today between represent atives of the county and J. B. Howe, general counsel, and L. II. Bean, general manager of the street railway company. Treasurer Meath had threatened the lines ot the traction company. GRAVE FEARS ARE FELT (Continued From First Page.) Helvetia at Vllle Marie. Quebec, arrived at Cobalt en route to Montreal, satisfied that they have out-distanced all competi tors by several hundred miles. "We were 40 hours out when wa landed." said 8chaeck. "Wa could have gone farther, hut it was the only settle ment we could see for a long; stretch of the country and wa decided to alight." The aeronauts reported that several persons had fired at tha balloon during the trip. Dr. Falrchlld Pension Examiner. OREGONIAN NEWS BUREAU. Wash ington. Oct. II. On recommendation of Representative Ilawley, Dr. J. H. Fair child has been appointed pension ex amining surgeon at Salem, vice Dr. J. A, lUcbaxusoa. v ' btbT BsTl P . v.. V -' v I - :- J n (t f: w'A " L IS Dethroned King Droops and Bemoans His Fate. GAFY DES LYS IS BLAMED Former King: Says Passion for Parisian Singer Was Bat Pass Ins Fancy, and Resents Her . Published Interview. LONDON. Oct. 81. (Special.) His friends fear that poor King Manuel will become a nervous wreck. He never ven tures outside the gardens of his pala tial stopping place, and would not even leave his room did not his mother, Queen Amelie, Insist on It. Manuel looks wretched, thin, worn, scared, unkempt. In fact. With broken step he walks around the gardens. aJ ways lamenting his fate and saying he has nothing left to live for now. His mother is always with him and has him under complete control. He Is a boy with no strength of character, emo tional, artistic and with all his father's Intense addiction to luxury and pleas ures. He is very polite and grateful to those about him, but rebuffs all efforts to arouse and amuse him. Manuel talks constantly of his grief at the hatred of his people and the pop ular declaration that hla downfall was largely due to the Influence of Gaby des Lys. the actress of whom he waa enam ored. . "I care nothing for Gaby des Lys," he has said often since the downfall of hla kingdom. "My passion for her was but a passing fancy." Manuel reviews the Interviews given by the dancer in which she has de clared herself the sweetheart of the dethroned King. Both King and Queen, It Is said, felt Intensely the Spanish government's re fusal to permit them to go to her mother's Villa Manrlqus near Seville. But tha Queen, a fine politician, must recognize that this Is not tha ttma for King Alfonso to do anything that would give pretext or capital to hla enemies. The exiles receive numerous de spatches by messenger from Lisbon dally. Several Portuguese monarchists have called on them whose names were not given to the newspaper men. It la reported here that Queen Amelie says tho Republican government can not last many daya and her son will be recalled; that the Braga ministry al ready has narrowly passed through two crises and that the threatened econo mise In the Portuguese civil and mili tary services have raised a host of enemies against the new government. Store Freedom la Given. LISBON, Oct 81. Decrees were pub lished today abolishing the exceptional laws put in force with the advent of the republic, including those concerning anarchists and the onea restraining news papers from publishing undesirable news. Ail the bishops and the higher mem bers of the clergy have announced their adhesion to the republic Soldiers who fought in the revolution have been grant ed four months' leave of absence with full pay. The Minister of the Interior has de clined to Introduce a number of meas ures favored by the Socialist party, which baa promised to support the government. Tontl to Confer With Del Val. i ROME. Oct. 8L According to the B sorvatore Romano, the Vatican organ. Mgr. Tontl baa been called to Rome in order that he may confer with Cardinal Merry del Val, the papal secretary of state, on the religious situation in Portu- .rr -ft MANUE WRECK TWO VERSIONS ARE TOLD Secrecy of Family of Conntess de Beaufort Is Strang Feature. Residence of Kllgallens In Chicago Is Deserted, CHICAGO, Oct. Jl. ( Special.) Countess de Beaufort, who formerly was Miss Irma Tracy-Kigallen, of 3230 Michigan avenue. Is at St. Duke's Hos pital today In a serious condition from injuries received yesterday afternoon at ner nome unaer cifcumv"-wo - - Avorv nn A Vihm mftdo CTBTV effort tO keen secret. - Mr. and Mrs. Kllgallen, the young - ' - snent all nififht at the hospital at their daughter's beside and were with her while her injuries, that Included a broken leg, were being attended to. me jount, uer uuuu, did not go to her room. Family Makes Mystery. TTtfnrtm Ia lisftn .11 knowledge Of the incident a secret began immediately after it happened. Today the Kllgauei residence was apparently deserted. Ser vants declared that the family was ii A Sit T. 11 Ire's Hosnltal 1 was denied that there was any record of any such patient as inn ouuLeas u Ttsmfort At the offices of the Chi ratro Heicrhts Land Company, in the li'.clniti it. 1 1 t 1 1 1 1 n ir which Mr Kllgallen heads. It waa said he had not been there slnca yesterday aiternoon Count de ueaurort was not at m nun pltal today, nor could he be found. ta n., f hi nersnnal friends, how ever, the Count gave one of the two versions that there are or tne accident that resulted In his wires injuries. Two Versions Told. "Irma and I." he explained, "were standing at the head of the stairway. She was on the stairway and I was on the floor above. She had hold of my hand and was leaning across the ban ister. In some manner she lost her balance, fell over the banister and crashed to the floor below." The other story was that the Count and his wife were descending the stairway when the Countess' foot slip red on a rug and she4 plunged head foremost over the banister. It was said that she and the Count were alone in the house at the time, except for the servants. However, later It was declared the parents were In the house and reached her side a moment after she was in jured. Father Issues Statement. M. H. Kllgallen. father of the Countess, yielded tonight and made the following statement There ia nothing mysterious about the accident. My daughter was hurt Thurs day afternoon at my residence, tone was on the third floor ana was going aowu to the second floor. She stepped on a small rug on the landing between, tne floors. The rug slipped and in trying 10 resrain her footing she fell over a small railing. My wile saw tne acciaent, as also did. the Countess' husband. They, however, were not near enough to save her. It waa a miracle that my daughter was not more dangerously hurt. MRS. LANG'S SUIT HALTED Ex-Husband Enters Demurrer to Charges Involving Family. (lREfiOS CITY. Or.. Oct. 21. (Spe cial.) Legal formalities have commnea to halt the progress In the suit or irs. Alice Marie La ner aealnst Louis Lang, a prominent Portland business man, in which the divorced wife ef Lang seeks THE DANGERS OF BARGAIN' GLASSES These are the lenses usually advertised for "as low as 11.00." They are the kind that hare been spoiled at the factory In the grinding. They really have no value and would be high at 10 cents tha pair. More blind ness Is caused from their use than from all other causes com bined. These are f Irst-quality lenses. Focus directly In center. High ly polished and ground by skilled workmen. These are the kind we handle. V- i, ' 4 If iaa.ii .iitAiWJi There Isn't a much easier way of ruining your eyes than to let some one test them who knows but little more than you do about it. Only a competent eye special ist can discover the defects and correct them with proper lenses. high-ci.ass work at the lowest possible: prices. THOMPSON EYESIGHT SPECIALIST SECO.D FLOOR CORBETT BLDG, Fifth and Morrison. From the greatest stars of grand opera clear through to "Bones" and "Tambo" of the minstrel show on the Victor. In between there's charming vaudeville sketches, band and orchestra music symphonies, spe cial dance music, comic songs, bal lads, sacred selections every thing that the heart may desire. And all played and sung: in the world's best way, as the Victor alone can play them. Visit our new Victor parlors and we'll gladly play any Victor music you want to hear. STORE OPEN TONIGHT Shell man Wholesale and Retail, Sixth and Morrison Streets, Opp. Postoffice to set aside the decree of divorce and to , have the original suit reqpened, ,hflr(rina hflr husband and members of his family with fraud. After Mrs. Lang's compiaini wa. rtiA tha attnrnn'n for her divorced husband. Malarkey, Seabrook and Stott. entered a motion to striae oui poruu of the compiajni. inis was ovenuiou m rwtnhaf. 11 v.- .Tnrttre CamDbell. who allowed Lang 10 days in which to file further proceedings. On October 15 IHfft .jjU h J This Trade-mark Is on 5 r i v a- W :& lis aKer s reakfast I Registered V. S. intent Offic the best Way. 52 Highest Awards in Europe and America j WALTER BAKER & CO. LTD. Established 1780 ay&Co. Lang Interposed a demurrer to the complaint of his former wife, upon tha ground that various members of Lang's family who are charged with having conspired to practice fraud on Mrs. Lang were not made parties defendant in. the suit. Argument will probably be made on the demurrer as soon as Judge Campbell can hear It. Individual license must bow to pub lic good. (Paid advertisement.) 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