The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972, October 07, 1912, Page 7, Image 7

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    Ttin OREGON DAILY JOURNAL,
PORTLAND, MONDAY EVENING, OCTOBER 7, 1312.
fflfflL SICKLES
LOVEDAPRIiICESS,
IIS
Stanton .; Sickles Gives - Out
More Excerpts ; From Aged
Veteran's Love Letters in
Family Fight Over Money;
. Hnaclal to lb. Journal. 1
New York, Oct. 7. In his campaign of
reprisal against his lather: General Dart'
lei K. Sickles, ...Stanton Sickles - today
brought In the name ; Of the Princes
; Vllm Lwoff-Farlaghy, with "whom he
declares that hi father was In love
two years ago. . -..
"Father was at ttiis time 80 years old,"
-aid fitanton.--"t have letters frnt'hlm
i to the princess in which he protests Ills
love for "her In the most extravagant
terms, whether sue , requited his at'
fectlona 1 know hot, . ; '
"In 'one! letter my father writes: ' VS
, ma,; I love you? In another, written
from Atlantlo City and addressed to her
. abroad, he- again -declares his love.
r ' princesr lWof f -Parlahy lias had an ex
' ceedlngly romantic career,. Including two
marriages. Born In Hungary of modest
' parents she married the wealthy Prince
JL.waff oBuBslateny earsago The
prince and the princess were divorced.
- In New York the princess has aston
lahed by the lavlshness of her manage
and har scale of living, as well as by
her originality In dress, -j
The son told of a seen, that took
place in the middle of July, 1910, when
the princess and two attendants called
on him at his hotel and informed him
that his father, the general, owed her
12,000 for portrait she had painted,
howing a contract he had signed and
demanded Immediate payment He es
corted her to his father's "home where
She waited all day and part of the
' avenlng until the general returned from
a conference with his lawyer.
, "Just what was the final outcome of.
th affair I do not know but rather con
- tlnued on friendly terms with the prin
cess," said young Sickles.
Stanton Sickles also gave out another
letter In his possession written by his
father to a woman now In society with
"whom be lived for 18 years. The woman
was then single but was contemplating
. marriage.
AGED HEROINE DIES
OF
E
IE
' Mrs, A. Dworshack, the. aged heroine
''who, September 12, sustained frightful
v burns while attempting to extinguish a
"blUB wlilflh had enveloped her 8-year-'
' old granddaughter, Dorothy Corcoran,
died this morning at the home of the
" family, 942 Alblua avenue, as a result
of the burns.
The child, whose life Mrs. Dwors
hack tried to save, died the day after
the accident at St. Vincent's hospital.
' The grandmother has been lingering
, : between life and death .ever since that
1 .Hlme.'
- -little Dorothy - was playing in the
I yard with matches, when suddenly a
; fJame caught In her dress. The grand
mother rushed to the tihild and after
' making a heroic effort managed to ex
tinguish the flames.
The child was the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. K. J. Corcoran. Mrs. Dwqrs
, ' hack was the mother of Mrs. Corcoran.
The remains are at the Dunning & Mo
, En tee parlors.
IAL
MENllSli
Active work for the winter in " the
Industrial elasses that are conducted
each year by the People's Institute will
start this week at the east side branch
.on Russell street The Women's club
will meet Wednesday afternoon at 1
o'clock. The story hour for children
. will be Thursday afternoon at 4 o'clock.
Friday afternoon the Kitchen Garden.
, and Housekeeping club for girls will
meet at 4 o'clock. Saturday morning
at 10 o'clock the sewing and dressmak-
Ing class will meet "The kindergarten
for small children was started two
weeks ago. The classes as announced
wiir continue throughout, the winter.
FIRST NATIONAL BUYS
OTHER HERMISTON BANK
(Special Jto The Journal.
NDUSTR
GLASSES
i ' tiermiston, or., Oct. 7. A large busl
ICness deal was made Saturday at Her-
I - mltnn whan th TiHrat Natlnna! hmV
. purchased the Hermiston Bank & Trust
company. The Hermiston Bank & Trust
, company,8tlU. retains, the huildlng., and
, the real estate, simply selling the se
curities and good will of the batik. Mr.
Swaxye, cashier of the First National
. bank of Hermiston, will now have en-
. lre charge of both , banks, which will
gradually consolidate info the Frist Na-
. tional bank. They will have the build
ing that was occupied by the Hermiston
Bank Trust company, having leased
it for a tef m ef years, Mr. Held, presi
dent of tne Hermiston Bank & Trust
company, states that he will not leave
Hermiston, but after a few weeks will
again become active in business at this
place.
REVENUE CUTTiFRRES
f ON SUSPECTED SMUGLER
San Francisco, Oct. 7. Outstripping
the United States revenue cutter Hurley,
Captain Wilson commanding, the launch
Sampson No. 2, suspected of being a
smuggling boat, ploughed through th
Qplden Gate and disappeared despite the
fact that the Hartley fired several shots
at her here today. At noon the fa.
cutter Golden Gate was dispatched after
the fleeing launch by officials of the
Immigration service, and she is expected
to be overhauled some time this after
noon. . It is believed that the Sampson Is
concerned In the recent - smuggling
ashore of contraband Chinese at this
jjport
PREDICTS BRYAN WILL BE
NEXTTRUSTfiUSTER!i
Vincennes, Ind., Oct 7. William J.
Bryan will be the next attorney general
of the United States. This was the
prediction made by Senator Elect Ollie
James of Kentucky. Tills 4s the first
'time Bryan has been mentioned as the
possible trust buster of the confidently
expected Wilson administration.
OUTLAW LOVED A
DUNKARD MAID
irrwi Y f 1
Maude Iroler.
Roanoke, Va., Oct. 7. Although she
has taught her beloved pupils in the
Sunday school of the little Dunkard
church in the wild and mountainous
regions over the North Carolina line
from Hillesville, Va., the law and order
of the outer world. Miss Maude Iroler,
fiancee of V.'esley Edwards, said to be
the most dangerous of the Allen gang,
bravely defends the man Edwards, with
whom she was arrested at Des Moines,
Jowa, after Edwards and his uncle,
Sldna Allen, had successiuuy eiuaea me
men who wanted them for participating
in the murderous raid on the Hillesville
courthouse last March, Miss Iroler de
fends him thus: "Do I think he is
guilty? Why, I don't see how that can
make any difference. Once In a while
every man who thinks anything . of
himself has to draw his gun, and you
can't always tell who's right and who's
wrong. Anyhow, right or wrong, I be
long to him and I'll stick to him."
u
OF
(TJnMiMl Preaa T.mkWI tylra.)
Nw York. f)nt. 7. Refrtra starting
this afternoon on an 18 day campaign
trip of the middle west. Colonel Theo-
doee Roosevelt spent the morning con
ference here with Oscar S. Straus, the
Progressive nominee for governor of
New York, Senator Joseph M. Dixo of
Montana and George W. Perkins of Sew
York. The Progressive leaders expressed
satisfaction with the political situation
here and are confident that Straus will
sweep the state.
Colonel Roosevelt plans to go through
the middle west campaign without mak
ing speeches from the platform of his
private car. This Btep is necessary, it
is said, to save his voice for 'the set
speeches in the cities and towns in
cluded in his Itinerary.
FIRE HORSES CAREFULLY
STEP AROUND FIREMAN
BUT ENGINE KILLS HIM
(United Prrea Leaned Wire.)
Tacoraa, Wsh., Oct 7. Lad-
e derman Albert Schwarzer of the
4 Tacoma fire department, aged e
29, is dead through an accident
yesterday morning as he was
4 leaving ltt6 St. Helen ' avenue
e station on a call. , Schwaraer
tripped and fell to the pavement
as he attempted to swing on the e
hook and ladder wagon, the en-
4 gine that followed crushing his 4)
e skull. 4
The three horses on the en-
gine picked their- way , carefully
e around the prostrate man, but it
4 was impossible for the driver to 4
4 bring the engine to a standstill 4
e before Schwarzer was ground to " 4
death.
PUSH CLUBS WOULD
AID PARK PROJECT
Delegations from the North Portland
Commercial club, the North Alblna and
the Overlook Push clubs will attend a
meeting-of the Iiower AHjlna-Pnsh-'cmb
tonight, protesting against the proposed
extension of a Southern Pacific spur
track to. the Montgomery tract in Lower
Albino, where recently a large amount
of hydraulic leveling was done. - The
spur track construction, as proposed,
will Interfere with a plan already, made
for cutting directly across from Lower
Alblna to PattOn avenue, providing thus
a retourlng of the Pacific highway arid
a new routing for the St Johns carllne,
permitting the people of St. Johns to
come to the city about 20 minutes ahead
of the hour1 required now. It will be
proposed that the Montgomery tract be
converted Into a public park as adja
cent via the Broadway bridge to the
congested district on the west side north
of Burnslde and east of Seventh, - -.- 4
VANDERBILT ENJOYS
FIRST AERIAL TRIP
New York, Oct 7. Lieutenant Colonel
Cornelius Vanderbilt enjoyed his first
flight in an aeroplane at the Hempstead
Plains aviation field Saturday and de
clared it was the best fun he ever had.
He shook hands with George W. Beat
ty, the aviator who took him up In tne
air for about ten minute and congratu
lated the aviator on the skillful . man
ner In which h handle! the .machine,
Vanderbilt said he would ike.to make
another flight coma, time, "But don't
tell my wife," he added. '
"IH help you prove an. alibi,," -said
Beatty. . :,, ' '' -"''-. f ', .
lOnliod Pre t.H Wtrawi
r Seattle, Wash., Oct 7l7-"There is ab
solutely no truth to it," said A. 8. Tay
ror, publisher of the Seattle Post-Intelligencer
this rooming 4$ reference to a
rumor that his company had bought the
San Frahflnco Call. Former Senator
John I Wilson, president of the company,-
1s not In the city today; "
BEGINS
1
MIDDLE WEST
LQGGEO-OFF UN '
PlDUCTSIMEi
MONSTER DISPLAY
Venersborg t C6lony-in Clarke
County, Wash., Gives "Har
vest Home" festival Which
Surprises Portland Visitors,
That the finest of vegetables', grains
and fruit of all kinds, Including grapes,
can be grown with (he greatest success
on. the logged-off and cleared lands in
the Venersborg district Qf Clarke coun
ty, Washington, was demonstrated yes
terday at a: land products show held
In Venersborg colony, about 17 miles
northeast of Vancouver.'"7"
Visitors from Portland and Vancouver
pronounced the exhibits fully up to the
Dest shown at any of the land products
shows held In the Pacific Northwest,
and. were pleasantly surprised to find
thtfm In such large 'variety.
The attractive display was the more
remarkable -by reason . ( the fact-that
the exhibits had been gathered on only
a few, days' . notice, and, hence' repre
sented only the average run of the
products. ;
"A doeen prises' were awarded, Edwin
Engelstad capturing first, J. J. Peter
son second, and John Lovegren third.
The othef nine were for special exhibits.
An Idea of the possibilities of tht
soil that a few years ago fed huge for
ests may be gained, from the fact that
the exhibits included ten varieties of
apples, five varieties of potatoes of ex
cellent shape and slse. Immense pump
kins carrots, rutabagas, kale, onions,
radishes and even celery. Fourteen
pound cabbages clean and sound
throughout were among the finest of
the exhibits, and the cauliflower was
such that none could be grown to great
er perfection. Corn showed splendid
results, with three varieties, sweet,
common and popcorn, on display. The
fruit display included a large number
of beautiful clusters of grapes. An ex
pert grape grower, who visited that part
recently, pronounced the soil and cli
mate splendidly adapted to grape cul
ture, and many of the settlers figure
on engaging more extensively In this
industry.
The show was attended by a number
of Portland and Vancouver people. Dur
ing the afternoon a literary and musi
cal program was presented, in which a
number of Clarke county officials par
ticipated. A new schoolhouse has just been
erected in the colony. A modern saw
mill was Installed some time ago, and,
as a result of the convenience in get
ting building material, a number of pret
ty and comfortable residences are un
der construction throughout the colony,
the population of which, during the last
two years, has grown to about 260.
DIDN'T TRY TO PROTECT
L!
To tha Editor of The Jourlnal. Quot
ing me in reference to the public levee
of Portland last Saturday, The Journal
said "stockholders of the Oregonlan
Railway of Scotland got all of their
money back." I did not say that; what
I said was that all the bondholders (not
stockholders) of the Scotch Railway got
back their money from O. P. Huntington-
at par or face-value in cash. I
never triad to protect the Bcotch stock
holders. Why, should I? They and the
directors sent to Oregon an Irish bar
rister to institute suit against me, then
nam'ed Robertson, (now called Lord
Loebec, for services to the British lib
eral government as an Irish home rule
member. )
In this suit he made certain charges
to the Oregon supreme court, which
after giving him two separate trials,
taking evidence and hearing his argu
ments personally at Salem, wherein he
asked that I be made Individually liable
for $56,000 to 160,000. Judges Watson,
Lord and Waldo therein decided 'that
the appellants' claims, those of the Or
egonlan Railway Limited, "to be itself
indemnified by William Reld seem to
us equally devoid of equity. There Is
no ground, however, in the evidence for
imputing to Reid either neglect of the
Interests of the appellants and its pro
moters or any sort of misconduct or
bad faith by him throughout the entire
transaction."
In conclusion, I wish to state, that
C. P. Huntington said to me: "Your P.
& W. V. railway is the tall which wags
the dog (the Oregonian railway). I
don't want to buy the dog (dregonian
railway) unless I get the tail with it
Your P. & W. V. line is built to the
public, levee now and I own both roads."
Hence he said, he cheerfully paid
cash value for all of both companies'
railway bonds and afterwards trans
ferred them to the Southern Pacific
company. WILLIAM REID.
SHOOTS WIFE, SELF
(United Prwa Ltaaed Wtra.)
Oakland, Cal., Oct. 7. Because ' sho
Insisted upon going to the home of her
brother for dinner, Mrs. Alice Sllva la
in the hospital here today with a bullet
hole in her lung and her husband, Al
fonstt Sllva, who did the shooting, lies
near her with self (nfllcteded wounds in
file head and breast The condition of
both Is considered precarious.
Miss Marian Llnds, who resides Jn the
Sllva home, witnessed the shooting.
She tried to dissuade Sllva, but he
turned upon her, she alleges, shouting:
"You get or I'll kill you, too."
After the shooting Miss Linds rustled
from Iter house screaming for aid
REPORTED THAT WILSON
HAS PURCHASED "CALL"
Halted fm taa4 W1r.
San Francisco, Oct. 7. Reports clrr
culated In San Francisco today 4hat
Millionaire John D. Spreckels had sold
the San Francisco Call to Former United
States Senator John I Wilson, owner
of the Seattle Post-Intelligencer, "were
denied by the Call management.
Tt 1iid beew yeTrtCTtry-Tamored'Ttiat
the transfer had been effected, and that
Charles W. Hornlck, editor and pub
Usher ' for Spreckels, had permanently
retired from connection with the paper.
At the office of the Call, however, it
was declared that Hornlck Is leaving
the paper for a year' vacation, ad
that there la no truth in tne reported
SCOTCH STOCKHO
DERS
ENRAGED
AN
PIONEER OF 1849
' IS COURT BAILIFF
L.- All
5n
A. B. Stuart.
A. B. Stuart, the first bailiff in a
court in Portland, and a pioneer of
1(49, was appointed bailiff of the grand
Jury this morning by Circuit Judge
Morrow, presiding Judge, in place of
Richard Delch, who was removed by
Judge Morrow Saturday for political
reasons. Mr. Stuart Is approaching his
eighty-fourth year and has frequently
acted as a bailiff. For 1 4 years he held
the position under Judge Shattuck and
he served many of the other well known
Judges. He came to Oregon from San
Francisco and made the trip from an
eastern home in 1845 by way of Cape
Hern.
Judge Morrow Expects to Pass
on Wood Charter Ballot
Controversy.
Judge Robert G. Morrow of the circuit
court announced this morning that his !
decision as to whether City Auditor Bar
bur should be mandamused to place the
Wood short charter on the ballot In com
petition with the official commission
plan charter would be handed down to
morrow. If Judge Morrow orders that the Wood
charter be placed on the special election
ballot November it means that he
recognizes as law the statute passed
since the adoptlqn of the Initiative and
referendum which requires that the city
auditor must place on the ballot any
and all Initiative measures which the
council has Ignored or has refused to
submit. He strongly Indicated Satur
day that such would be his decision.
11 he says that City Attorney Barbur
need not place the Wood short charter
on the ballot, It will mean that he rec
ognizes as law that portion of the state
constitution which, together with tha
McNary ordinance, provides that the
city may prescribe the manner and -form,
of submitting measures to the vote of
the peqple, and that in the case of Port
land the preferred manner is to have
the council say whether measures shall
be submitted or not The position of
the Wood charter advocates is that
when 15 per cent of the voters have
signed an initiative petition to submit
a measure to the electorate, it must be
submitted.
THEFT IS DOUBTED
iCnttMl Prraa Laaed Wlra.t
Oakland. Cal., Oct. 7. Declaring that
be stole 575,000 from the British gov
ernment at Sydney, N. S, W Robert
Charles Holt, alias Clafton, Is held by
the police here today. The authorities'
believe Holt Is seeking deportation to
Australia.
When he gave himself up, Holt ex
plained that he had seen Rose Miller, a
woman- with- whom- he - was Irving at the
time of the theft, and feared she would
expose him.
The police are waiting for advices
from the British consul in San Francisco.
KIDNAPER CROWE IS
Omaha, Neb., Oct 7. Sick and a pau
per, Pat Crowe, who gained notoriety
as the kidnaper of Edward Cudahy, Is
In the county hospital here today pre
paring for an operation which may end
his career. Crowe la a physical wreck
from dissipation. He was sentenced
here a few days ago to (90 days as a
vagrant, and went from a cell to the
hospital.
IDAHO OFFICIALS COME
FOR WHITE SLAVER
I'
Authorities of the Idaho state prison
at Boise have asked for the return of
Oeorge Levy, arrested in Portland two
weeks. ag on request of the government
special officers at Sea'ttle, for violating
the international white slavery law!
In 1901 Levy murdered a rich -man in
Boise and was sentenced, first to death
and then to life imprisonment. He
eryed J 0yesrs (ot,fen,tenfieandwag
paroled on condition that he would leave
the country and never return. Levy is
by birth a' Frenchman and he. returned
to Franca A year .later he chose to
return to the United States and brought
a woman with him for immoral pur
poses. He was captured in Portland two
weeks ago' by Portland officers after
the special government officers., from
Seattle had made a vain search for him
tsar . : msttfj
CHARTER
COMES TOMORROW
CONFESSION
1
SICK
PAUPER
PEOPLEKEEDFACTS
ON CHARTER PUHS
Proposed Commission Form of
Government Not Fully Un
derstood in Portland.
That there should be more publicity
given the provisions of the proposed
commission plan charter upon which the
people will vote November I, is a grow
ing .sentiment in Portland. Although it
is a plan which will revolutionise the
government of the city, . if adapted,
there has been comparatively no popu
lar dlscusslonJof It. Inquiry has shown
that few I people have ', familiarised;
themselves with-the features of the
charter. " ' . , " .
Because government by a commission
of .five centralizes responsibility and
authority and makes every man entrust
dwUh city business dlreotly answer
able for the kind of work he does and
because It would result in the reorgan
ization of departments for the sake of
efficiency and economy most of the
present city officials are in favor of
It. -v .. ,
Mayor Ruslillght said: "I think the
commission plan charter submitted by
the-"tf f loiat charter- board should - be
adopted. It is a good charter. ' It has
been adapted to Portland's needs by
long study and' through hard work by.
the men of Portland most competent to
do it I shall be glad If the charter Is
given fullest publicity before the peo
ple vote." ,
City Auditor Barbur said: "If the
people of Portland do not adopt com
mission plan government they must
adopt some other plan that will have the
same effect, namely, to more closely
organic the departments of city work.
The conflict between departments, the
lack of coherency, Js the cause of waste
effort and loss of money."
"Richard W. Montague, Blgel Orutxe
and P. ,L. Willis, than whom no men of
Portland are more competent on mu
nicipal law, and myself, composed the
committee that had the duty of draft
ing the charter which was unanimously
approved by the remainder of the of
ficial charter board," said City Attorney
Giant. "The best experience of many
years in direct contact with the work
ings of municipal government In Its
many departments was put into that
chart-r."
The official charter board provided
for a commission of five members, of
whom one will he mayor. Each commis
sioner will be head of a department of
city government. He will have under
his direction all the duties that pertain
mM m otiikwillil far
I lllllllllllllllllMtlllllllllllillllllllltl llllllillliill llllllill 111 (
All you have to do is to ask for Schlitz
in Brown Bottles. 1 , -
Sunlight grows hops, but spoils the beer.
"Beer acted upon by light soon takes up
the very disagreeable, so-called 'light
taste,' and also a repulsive, skunk-like odor, "
says no less an authority than the Wahl-Henius Institute
of Fermentology, the scientific authorities on
the subject. ' Beer so affected, " they say, 'is
offensive to the palate of most consumers.1 1
Light starts day sv$&m
gives the best protection against light. The Brown
Bottle protects Schlitz purity from the brewery to
your glass.
Why don't you, too, drink Schlitz? More and
more people every year are demanding it.
We started in a hut. Today our agencies
dot the earth. Our output exceeds a million
barrels a year. k ; KOTEOEZLD BROS
DISTBIBUTOBS,
See that crown or cork 80-2244-2S N. First Street,
is branded "Schlitz." Portland, Oregon.
Fao&m. Maia 153. A 4668.
to that department He will be made
directly responsible by systematic pub
licity and frequent accountings for the
quality of his work. He is not to be
allowed to have any outside interests
or business and he .must have no in
terest in any contract with tha city.
E BODIES TO ,
. DISSECTING TABLE
' . (UDlUd Frete Ltaaed Wire.)
New York, Oct l.Wlth the primary
Idea of making people understand that
autopsies are in the Interest of medical
science, 200 prominent ' physicians of
Brooklyn and Long Island arc pledged
today to wllj their bodies to the dis
secting tabledThis action was taken at
a meeting held in Hoffman Island by
the Associated Physicians of' Long
Island. The medicos wish to dissipate
the morbid' impression . which the gen
eral publlo maintains in regard to au
topsies. ,
(Suaclal to The Journal.)
Manchester, Mass., Oct 7. From the
seat of an aeroplane, James Bryce, Brit
ish ambassador - to the Unlttd States,
had a birdseye view of the Massachuetts
north shore Saturday. The diplomat is
visiting friends at Manchester. Among
those who called to pay their respects
was W. Sterling Burgess, who swooped
down In hif blplans. Mr, Bryce ex
pressed a desire to make a flight. The
aviator thereupon invited the ambas
sador to accompany htm in an aerial
excursion and tha Invitation was ac
cepted. Mr. Bryce was In the air 25
minutes.'
Snake in Art Basket.
(United Preu Lriaed Wire.)
San Francisco, Oct. 7. After purchas
ing a Chinese art basket and taking it
home, E. C. Child discovered a large, fat
snake curled up comfortably In th
interior. When the shock had subsided
Child found the snake was made of
paper.
Distant Fire Frightens Woman.
Log Angeles, Oct. 7. Hearing a cry
of fire and seeing; a cloud of smoke,
Mrs. L. M. Harvey leaped from a sec
ond story window and broke her leg.
Tha fire was in an apartment house a
block away.
TfteBesir
PLEDG
ME RIGHT
poiKirtu
IRIII1U
Europe" Sends7 Joint Note to
Turkey and Allies Urging an
Immediate Settlement of
-Difficulties. "V
-t United prmt'TasF(f Wtr.)
London. Oct. 7.-r-Wlth England fall
ing in line today with the other Euro
pean powers in a joint note to Turkey
and the Balkan states, "urging immedi
ate settlement of difficulties, the out
look for an amicable adjustment of the
main points at issue without war is
greatly improved.
The outstanding features of the hole '
are: ,
' Turkey is advised to give Macedonia :
and Albania more latitude in the way
of self-government.
The Balkan states are warned that,
the powers will not permit them to'
seize any territory even If , war with
Turkey comes. '; ,
" Government officials' tbdayresent"the "
report that Great Britain's procrasttna
tlon nearly blocked the plan of the
other powers to prevent warfare. . Of
ficials of the foreign office insist that -England
merely suggested changes in
the wording of the joint note. These
change which have been adopted, di
plomats say, have transformed , the .
document from a peremptory demand
jnto a polite suggestion. that immediate t
reforms are desirable. England, they
assert Is more than anxious to mollify,
the Turks since Kalmll Pasha, who is
especially friendly to Great Britain,
has been appointed chief adviser to the
sultan.
Turkey Would Obejr Powers. '
London, Oct. 7. Belief that the ef
forts, of the powers to prevent war in
the Balkans would be successful was"
expressed in a dispatch received by the
London Dally Mall today from its Con
stantinople correspondent. The dispatch
Indicated that Turkish officials would
carry out the suggestions voiced in the
Joint note.
Greeks Seize Steamship. .
Berlin. Oct 7. The Turkish embassy
here asserted today that Greeks In Pir
aeus stormed a steamship bearing Turk
ish passengers and, dragging the women
from the vessel, mistreated them.
; 1 ?
is, "iff -