Fair; variable winds, moatly saaterly, . VOL. X. NO 23. ' V - PORTLAND. ; , OREGON, . SUND AY; MORNING, y OCTOBER - (l".t FRIENDS BUI LOBLiS U MILITANT SUFFRAGETTE ORDERED, DEPORTED HUERTA'S EARLY RESIGNATION EXPECTED AS SUPPORTER OF wtm up EX-I DICTATOR 111 GOVEB Ml Crowd in 'ThePeople,s House ' - After . Red Fire ' Parade, to ; Cheer Deposed Official and .Show Hatred . of Tammany. CHARACTERISTIC TALK . . k DELIVERED BY SULZER Big Money Offered Him to Go qnj.ecture Stand and Give .His "Story.- . . ;' " . - (Catted Piess Lcssed Wlr.V v Albany.' N. Y, Oct 18. A dash " t rain somewhat dampened the entbusl ;; aim ot William Sulier'a adherents, who i ' tonight marched with big band and an ample supply of red fir andfireworks to give tba impeached governor a. loving opp at "The People' HouseA,rr ; ,n "Doors of the mansion were opened to , the multitude, ; and it was - speedily jammea witn a wet, but cheering crowd that was welcomed by Sulser himself. . Banners carried in the march and sub sequently stacked,- all dripping, against the costly wall decorations, bore the inscriptions "Our BUI; be dared to do right." and "William Sulser. victim of corrupt bos8ism." s ,.,-'. - Secretary Piatt aided "to welcome the people, and introduced J. W. Forest a .local progressive leader, who presented r the loving cup in a speech hot with ar raignment of bosslsm and filled with laudations of Sulser, , damuel Thomas also spoke In a similar vein, after which Sulser personally addressed - the crowd ' briefly and in familiar, words. . i . v. '.i 'Accuses "Arrogant Boss." . ' "For nearly a quarter of a century," he said, '1 have been a worker In the vineyard of the people," and added, "now I am a private, oltisen by the decree of an arrogant boss whose dictates I "do feated." v.?V- ''.X',zHi.:-!$t- 1 was impeached, not because ' of the offense with which I was charged,' but Because I rerusea to do Mr.- Murphy's bidding and pursued the corrupt pub- lio Servants who have been' his tools and henchmen." - Money Offered ulr.''"'c In conclusion, Sulser shouted Tam ' many hall cannot take .away my . man hood, my self-respect nd my determin ation to keep" utthe struggle for bon iest governments ' ' f Secretary Piatt grave out a statement that SuUer,.-fiod been offered f 10.000 by (Continued on JPage Four.t . - by;episcopalians IN II IMMORALITY ATTACKED SPEECHES IN NEVV Y ORK ' Problem;-of i Prostitution - Must - Be Solved : by the . Church, Declares Dean Sumner New Tork, i Oct, H.-Flaylng thoss who maintain that prostitution is a "necessary evil," three leaders' in' the ProteBtant Episcopal church tonight condemned a double standard of moral f ity and the' liquor interests ' with the vehemence of uncompromising oppo nents. .4 , ' .' '. 'O- v:.'- '..'' , , ' Speaking at a men's mass-meeting la the New Synod hall at the Cathedral of Bt John, the Divine, they began whai many bishops and delegates to the gen . eral convention hope for movement within the church further . to restr'st marriage .and to make the remarriage o divorced persons more difficult. 4 . . . "Is prostitution; necessary to' man . . . hood; womanhood; to the prosperity of a town or to the. sanctity of the home?" asked the Rev. W." T. Sumner, dean of ' the Cathedral of SainU Peter and Paul, , - of Chicago, who with the Rev. - Dr. jr. Williams Tomkins, and George Wharton h Pepper of Philadelphia, spoke. "Have 'we sunk so low in civilisation that the . , marital stats is considered so lightly . that man will make a. business contract ' ' " and give bis life in order to hold It In violate, and yet : will kneel before ths altar of Ood and there make the most ' boly coptract .'that man can maketo ls be true t the one he lovesand then go out and break Itr . . i "Wholly and unequivocally never 1" ho thundered as the audience sat In deatu i like silence. '.The .plea . that vice la necessary,!, he said,. ?'ls an Insult to f the honor of womanhood, a reflection ' J . upon manhood, and the celibate clergy. ' Dean Sumner condemned segregation , and regulation of vice. . , , "Segregation does not solve even the remotest phase of it," he argued. Regu latlon does not regulate, and never has " even given m false security. fhe only method to pursue ia constant and pr--'' slstent repression as an Immediate plan. - Absolut annihilation is the Ideal." . i City clubs, social settlements and com' ,r merclal organizations can never solve , the problem, he said, That' Is up to the - church, which, he maintained, will be . aided by woman suffrage. -. . , Aftsr declaring that "there is no mors V damnable Influence In the community 1 today than the liquor interests,' which v ' he characterised , as the greatest con - trlbutlng fores to these conditions, Dean ' ; Sumner began a bitter condemnation of married men leading a doubts standard , of life, asking "who are the 8,990,000 , man who furnish the 11000,000 vies profit in Chicago each yearT" - w Style pf women's clothes also came in for denunciation. "A false standard of living and of "dress, for the Indecent and Immoral dressing of women today,", he said, . "Is one answer to the question: . W.hy . does. . the girl go .-wrongr 0,.. h' l-r'J t-? I Photograph Copyrighted by International News Service Sirs. Emmelinc Pankhnrst, WAR AND TORTURE CARRIED ON IN ENGLAND, A MESSAGE MRS. PANKHURST SAYS She' Tells American Suffragette She 'Fears- Americans Do1 Not Understand Why Property Is Being Destroyed . ' by Women of Great Britain. ' s By RheU Ohlldi Dorr, noted jattra t getta and author of "What Eighty 4 , Million Women Wan." v J Ne , Tork, N. -Ti, (Jet, "I UP pose you know that the anti-woman suf fragists "have accused you of coming to the United r SUtea-' in order .to. ftjr Amarican women" to violence and dlsor der. Would you .mind; giving m 'plain statement of the objoot of your visit I asked Mr. pankhurst. . "I certainly have no Wea of inciting violence in American womon," she re plied. "Fortunately for them they have no need to' resort .to violence. Their suffrage movement seema to be pro ceeding successfuUy along orderly lines. In England the aituation ts unhappUy quite different ..':, Wby Cba Stas Come. j ; .... f- "The object of my visit Is two-fold. In the first place I want to bring the militant movement up to date. I think the majority of American women under stand us to a certain point They un derstand why" it was necessary for us to interrupt meetings at which cabinet ministers were speaking because in no other way could we secure a heating until we did things of that sort; the newspapers 'refused o give publicity to. our cause. "-.;:" ' ''; "American women understand,' and sympathise with our deputations to the leaders in the house ot commons; with our opposition to government candidates at by elections, -.with our demonstra tions, our pageants and processions. .The Destruction of Froperty.'"' I What fear, they do not understand la ' the locrioal' prokreasion of our war on the government as expressed in destruction of property; our( osnance of the courts and our refusal to accept Published Accent to Contrary ' StatE!riinnSii '' WsMkk': kkitkW$.. Major James F. Mclndoe. district gov ernment engineer, very emphatically de nUd last , night tba - truth of a "state ment In a dispatch from Washington yesterday Intimating ; that In his , sup' plemental, report to .the chief Of United States engineers ho had recommended against the continuance of dredging on the bar at th mouth eftha Columbia, river. :rwS." m?'&, -pr'.y-i "Suob a report fs. abiolutely uhtrue,' said Major-- Mclndoe. . ::.':' ( have made no secret of the fact that In m'y supplemental report X had recommended the continuance of dredg ing on the showing made by the dredge Chinook. .' V J, ' i j, "i "Before my report was formulated I announced that r would recommend the continuance of dredging if the Chinook had had any material effect In channel deepening.. The Chinook did make a showing, and I have not changed my position. It is regrettable that-Any other Impression should have been' giv en circulation." '"if ' , ? nti Major Molndde explained why his re port, which was to have been received in Washington by October 1, did not get there sooner, i By mistake it was sent from his office) direct to the -chief of United States engineers in Washing ton. It should have, been sent through the superior office at Ban Francisco. h .(Continued on rage IT'our.I . who la held at Ellis Island. 1 - ' -. . .r-T-.'.' - , prison sentences for offenses we nevet denied committing. ' , i "l shall try : to --make them under standi at jay. ratd,'ll,snM pfeieht'our Sldof the' matter. t - "Tpu- see," said -the suffragette leader, "when the entire press is in the bands of the opposition it is not to be expected-that the woman's' side will- be fairly represented, is it? Aa a matter of fact the English press ignores as just as much as.lt can. ' It steadily and con Slstently misrepresents us and very fre quently it prints deliberate falsehoods about us. : : : Bomb Outrages Imagined.. . "Hajf the so-called bbmb outrages at tributed to the suffragettes never had existence at, all outside the imagination of reporters.' However, It is not my object to deny any accusations of this kind. "What t desire to make clear is the fact' that war is being waged, not only by women against the government,- but by the whole machinery of government parliament, the courts, the police ana the secret service against women. . , Women Being Tortured. "X want the American people to know that In England women are being tortured as the most desperate criminals among men have not been tortured since the middle ages. ; , ."The liberal government, - beaten and discredited by the militant suffragettes, its candidates defeated at the by-el ac tions until nothing- except the allegiance remains to keep it in power, has had recourse to, a piece of legislation absolutely-unprecedented In the history of English, law. ? I . refer to the infamous 'Cat and mouse act,' framed in the first place to make me a convict without ex actly kUllngr me and put Into effect In the hope -of crushing the health and vitality of women sent to prison for trivial offenses." ; ; ? ' ' MAN IS KILLED BY A John Schneider: Struck by the .;; Speeding-Vehicle; Dies on " 'Wato'Hospita f ;"V. ,,'V''. ,.r .v ;.;V f John 'Schneider,' J. a waiter '-.recently from Seattle.; was run over and killed last night at 0:45 o'clock by an ambu lance driven; by Benjamin Buck. The ambulance was speeding south on Third street . In response to a call to convoy a sick man from a restaurant to a hos- Hi, Th ccldant "i occurred Tat the ' inter section of Ankeiiy street, under peculiar clrcumstances-i The ambulance was tol lowing closely, behind the police auto, which was speeding in the' same direo tion on a-hurry call from the east side. Behind the ambulance came the police patrol In response to a call to pick uo a drunken man. , The clanging, of bells and tgongs, aafl shrieking whistles. evW dently y confused r Schneider and he tapped onto the street a'ter the pollco touring car had passed, and direotly in front of the ambulance. J X street car passing at the time aerved to heighten the confusion. $,?;.. . ",,. , .4,.. The injured man as taken with all possible haste to the Good Samaritan hospital, but died on the way. The body was then taken to , Dunning A McEn tee'a and placed In charge of the cor oner. The man appears to be about 40 years'''orage.iJ:.'o ; Another ambulance .was summoned for the man takeri fit in the restaurant He bad a stroke of paralysis and was tAkn ta Rt Vlnnant'a hninltil - All could be learned about him was that his name was i-iara, SHE BRINGS M rs. Pankhurst, . Detained by V Immigration Authorities, Is Awaiting Word From ; Com s missioner Caminettl.' REFERS INVESTIGATORS - TO AMERICAN HISTORY Asks About ' Moral Turpitude Involved In Boston Tea Par ty and Similar; Incidents. 'p. C ' - DnItd Ptms Leased .Wire.) ' i v New York, Oct 18-Excluded from entry to1 the United . States ; on the grounds of having been convicted In Emgland on a crime Involving moral turpitude, Mrs.' Emmellne : Pankhurst, militant suf f ragttte leader ' In : that country, tonight occupied the same , de tention room at Ellis Island wherein was detained Ciprtano Castro, South America's "stormy petrel." The Madison Square Garden mass meeting at whlch Mrs, Pankhurst was to : have made ber first speech tomor row night ' has ?' been , postponed until Monday, night ,.i t. ,: v.':- Mrs. .Pankhurst was 'denied admit tan ca to '.this'' country today after a secret hearing' which lasted an hour at Ellis Island, and during which she was - denied - representation . by counsel. Lxr C Stewart assistant superintendent of Ellis Island ; S. Ay , Eppler, perma nent member of the Inquiry board, and A. P. SchelL v law clerk, or the local immigration office, composed the board of inquiry which held ' Mrs. Pankhurst , . 1' Expects Belease oa Bond, he militant leader j expected to be released: . tomorrow at ' noon on bund, pending , an appeal to Washington or the federal courts, the ' same .course which proved successful ' in securing for Castro ianaing privueges nere,' 1 The first: step in the ; fight to over rule the' action, of the .Inqulny board will be .taken tomorrow when Berbert Beeves,': retained . by vMra. i,0.'H. MP. Belmont to.: represent - Mrs. Pankhurst appears, before Commissioner General of Immigration caminettl in Washing ton' to argue' her? case. v 't ': ':- -Upon' ths decision of Commissioner OWneral Caminettl and the approval of 31s nnawg oy tne secretary or laoor, ependa .the auestJpn,...o.j;. M.r-JPank: burst i'. en try here.--- h--':';"A - i. 1 acoral Tnrpttnaa Bealed, ? I Before leaving here' tonight. Attorney Reeves said be would base his whole argument on the claimed fact that the -crime for which the militant leads was Jailed In England does not Involve moral turpitude- that her offense was purely a, political; one and that she was tried under en ancient law under which men ' (Continued on Page Two.) S.P. i First Arbitration 'r Between "a Western Road and Men Un der Erdman Act. Concluded. Ban Francisco. Oct 11. Ths first arbitration held , between , a western railroad and its employes under the Newlahds arbitration ; act passed by congress last July . was accomplished today when the arbiters filed with the United States district court their find ings and award in the dispute between the Southern Pacific company and the organisation of engineers, conductors and . trainmen. .? The majority opinion rof ' the arbiters upheld the contentions of the South ern Faclflo on the distinction between street car service ' and suburban elec tric service. . Hearings before the board of arbiters were held for two weeks. The board was composed of M. E. Mont gomery, vice- president of the Brother hood of Locomotive Engineers; W. R. Scott general manager of the South ern Pacific, and Judge F. . Davis, ap pointed by the federal board of media tion, p The- brotherhoods were ' repre sented by T. A. Gregg, vice president of the Order of Railway Conductors, and C B. McLaughlin, vice president of the . Railway Trainmen. Henry C Booth Of the legal staff of William F. Herrln. - chief counsel of the South ern Pacific looked after, the com pany's interests. . j .; fi rr4 Trouble' plana, la 'Oakland,;.',"?! The origin of the controversy was in ' the Southern Paclf io putting on a street car . service . between the Six teenth Street station,. Oakland, and Alameda, and manning; It with street car men on street car pay.- The broth erhoods claimed that their men should be employed . and the dispute assumed a wide scope, embracing operations of the Southern ' Paclf lo In street car service:.' over ' Ita '. entirej "S ayatani;'':vt.t. . The company is 1 making , large In vestments in Portland, Or., and ' vtcln Ity 'and the finding of the - board, of arbiters covers this field as ,'well.S When ' the Southern Paclf lo electri fied ' Its Alameda county suburban service :'H ' contlitued ths, former en gineers and , conductors f as electric motormen . and conductors, under an agreement wlthA the organisations that the same rate of pay would apply ; ; v street Oar Pervloe Bald. JHstiaot. . "' The organisations i-f: demanded V that any form of electrlo service should be paid on the same stiale.' The Southern Paclfla refused to . accede to this de mand, claiming that street car service (Coounued oa Page Two,; WINS GONTENTION m MM oe NEW SUBURBAN LINES :a. 1 1 h"liilSillf iPliililfellfelliiilf f I ! "v'.'- ' ivft.V:ii:.: , . ,r', mm . Photography Copyrighted by International News Service President Iluerta of Mexico, whose retirement from office to Imminent OF TAKE FIRM POSITION Resolutions :, Favor Interstate Bridge, University Appropri- . ation and Better Roadg, , . The campaign for the proposed Inter state bridge over the Columbia at Van couvejr was ; strongly endorsed, a de cision was made to fight for the state university ' appropriations ' and ' oppose the referendum aimed to cripple t re sources, and the building of permanent national highways were commended In a set of strong resolutions unanimously adopted by the 'Oregon State. Editorial association shortly before the adjourn ment of the annual convention yester day afternoon : In the Press, club. ' Al bert Bede of the Cottage Grove Sen- tlnal was elected president, - and Plhl Bates was reelected secretary by accla mation. ' " . In addition the association went on record as favoring the campaign for olean advertising, the state-wide use 'of Oregon made goods, arid demanded the passage of a state bill regulating bill boards outside of incorporated cities and their removal, especially along the Pa cific Highway and ail principal county and state highways. In this connection the resolutions state that all bill boards . (Continued on Page Four.) . NO CURRENCY LAW AT' SPECIAL SESSION Hope ; for -Enactment of Adminis tration Meaanre la ' ' " ::' Given Up. Washington, Oct II. All hope of en acting the administration currency bill Into law at this session 'were given up today. Confidential reports made to the president set November 10 as the earli est possible date upon which a report on the measure could be -looked for from the senate banking and currency com mittee. At the same time it waa stated that six weeks of debate would be con sumed by - the senate before the bill could be passed on to the conferees of the senate and house. ; Senator Stone of Missouri, gavs no tice in the senate today that he would address that body Wednesday on the necessity of immediate action on cur rency ..legislation.'..; ,..:'::' MISTAKEN FOR DEER, YOUNG MAN IS KILLED Elmer Conger ; of Jacksonville, OrM Shot by Hunting Com- ". i panlon.. : I,' Speclal to ,Tb'.JouraLi vQVis$ Medford, Or., Oct II. -Elmer Conger, It: years old; living on Va ranch, near Jacksonville, was shot and killed In the Dead Indian country this afternoon, the other side of Ashland, when mis taken for a deer by another member of the hunting party. ; Coroner. John Perl left tonight for Ashland to get the body and bring It to this city. Conger, had been hunting fbr several days with his brother, A. P. Conger, and a number of friends, living; in Jacksonville, yiij.' k As none of the party have' reached Ashland yet, the details taf the accident are not known. ' - Elmer Conger waa well known la Rogue river valley and came from a prominent family. . " 1 , A ..This is the first fatality of the deer season in southern pregon..:j,,.t jUv EDITORS OREGON N.FKUFUStU'lAW M.'f 1. - VV - ': -1 A A r- A mmmmmmm BY Reception, Banquet ; and Dance Are . Features of Great Ova tion Given Californians. The poppy of San Francisco vied with the rose of Portland last night.'- In fact, 12 poppies from' sunny California were accorded the most - rousing and genuine ovation, and' reception that ever was given in honor of a visiting, bevy of maidens in this city .before. , With '. the Royal Rosarlans as hosts, the visiting' Portola girls were guests ot honor at a banquet tendered them at the Oregon hotel.' Over 160 Rosatrlans and their frlenda were present to pay them homage. ' Chosen by -their native city to represent it in the' northwest in order .to advertise San Francisco's big fiesta, the Portola, this even dosen of pretty .girls had their first taste of Port land hospitality. To say that the Royal Kosariana uvea up to toe world "royal' is putting It mildly. . . ':.'-. s . Ail , of last , evening , they wera the guests . of - the 'Rosarlans and the Ro sarlans alone, first at a banquet down stairs In the hotel, then at a reception on the mezsahlne floor ' and lastly at a dance In the Crystal room . . The banquet was one round. of hale Portola girls, well met. . Speaker after speaker paid tribute to the' beauty of the visitors, praised '.their, celebration, the Portola, and campared with it Port land's' own- feast of ; the flowers, the Kose ireauval, ana then 1 invariably (Continued on Page Eleven.) SQUAW MARRIES MAN WHO GAVE HER WHISKEY Cornwall's Imprisonment Ends When Mollio Clark Becomes ,, His Bride. ' Stevenson, Wash., Oct 18. Dan Corn- wallVho was arrested three weeka ago for giving whiskey to an "Indian squaw, and who has been in Jail since that time, will probably not" be prosecuted, because today. Mollle Clark, the squaw, went to the Jail and was married to him. Inasmuch as a. wife need not testify against her husband, the state had , no case against Cornwal, and he, waa - re leased for hlsi honeymoon. i ... Mollle Clark, that .waa, Is a full- blooded Cascade. The ceremony was performed by Rev. Charles JS. Nellor. Mrs..! Cornwall t la 50 years old, Her husband Is. ,38. 'y,fiA ; ,A j.-vk VOLTURNO, STILL AFIRE, f.i.'.t..-'.io oiniiTrntnw 1 lair-n ' , 10 aiunicu oi.uiscn "' ,: y.i.v.-' .;......?.., St."t lioulg Passed Herv Tbree 1 Days After ShlXlas Abandoned; ..'.';.:.V, ..?.:'' j-ti.-''..':''-.!.!1?!,-'' ''.".i..". i:ir.!'W;VHaifc.:ir. .Menace. 1 ,. v :v ' ' : y - '-fx '; 1 ;" '" ' 'm: gy'y y',vf (By the toternatiOMl Kews Bertlra.) ' ' New York, Oct, 18. The Uranium liner Voltum6 Is still burning In mid- ocean,' aocordtng . to Captain Jamison, of the- American liner St Louis, who arrived i-here today. He .reported- that he passed iithe i Volturno -three ?::' day after ?shi' was".' abandonedjiteiitsi'v;.;,1: The ill-fated ship had drifted from latitude. 48-26; longitude 84.33 to lati tude 48.7, longitude 15.4. : This is In a northeasterly, direction and , Into the middle of 'the steamship lane. A Brit ish .warship has been sent out to de stroy the bulk, :. ,, :v jrs. , .-'., KUYAL Hip '. .' ., b ;t ... : Close Alliance Between Lord : . Cowdray's OiJ Interests and Mexican Executive . Begins to Make Itself Evident. , POWERS DIVIDED AS TO ATTITUDE TO HUERTA Confirmation of His Resigna tion Is Lacking Germany . Calls Diplomats Meeting. " (Br the InternstioBal News aerrice.V " , . Washington, D. C Oct 18. No con firmation has been received at the state department . of the rumors current to- : day that General Huerta bad resigns J the presidency of Mexico. A long dis patch . received from Charge d" Affaires O'Shaughenessy, however, made it clear that the Huerta administration has re ceived Its greatest encouragement from the British minister in Mexico City and the British Interests throughout the re- .; publlo. These important things are set forth In Mr. OShaughnessy's message: , The i British colony : in Mexico City and British? moneyed Intesests else where lh Mexico are standing by Huer ta and the Huerta. government . , ; The British minister has adopted as hla the views of the British people on. the situation - possibly on the ad vice of his . borne, government The minister holds ; that when Huerta re signs, his successor should be a mar . . who would take care of British Inter ests in Mexico, as Huerta baa done. . -- . OU Xaflaeaoe Is Pelt. : The belief of administration officials t here is that Great Britain Is asserting : a domination over the diplomatic corps in Mexico . City., and is Ignoring the United States: because this government haa hot shown an Inclination to consult with .the othera ::"".:,'.-:. .';"V ,K ;j ,fe Ambassador Carden's evident person al . pique and Lord ;Cowdray'a English syndicate's control of vast Mexican oil holdings were considered ' significant faets Influencing eventa ' The present alignment 'in dlplomatio meetings in Mexico City is; .- ,,, Great, Britain, Japan, Spain and most . of the Important South- and -Central (Continued ee Page two.1 . : . . 1 -----" n BE FATALLY INJURED -l :j;-:'0'-"":'"'"'-:,;'; " ' - Charles ' Haas . Wounds Wife and v Another' Manr Then Flees; Police on Trail. Charles Haas, a meat cutter employed by the Jones Meat company, shot his wife in the abdomen and William Hell in the side last evening at the Hell res idence, 410 East Emerson street, where the woman, has been hiding from her. husband the past 10' days. : The 'woman was taken to the Good Samaritan hos pital, where City physician Zleglen and Dr. R. J. Marsh operated upon her. The physicians report she ' has a fighting ' chance for her Ufa Hell's injuribs are not serious.- Haas had not ; been cap tured at midnight if::y'.' .- 6s- Hell and the Haas family have been friends for 25 yeara both men being employed o meat cutters, Haas worked under Hail at the market . For the last three years, Haas has had more or less trouble, being taken to Denver, Col., nine months ago to face a larceny charge, but he escaped punishment His wife has been working at the Oregon. (Continued on Page Four.) KING WILL INVEST MILLION FOR PRINCE Returns From Lancaster Duchy to 5 Pay for Securi- ; tlea. 1 , V' . "1 London," Oct. 18. King George will shortly invest more than 11,000.000 In Stocks and bonds tor the benefit of the Prince " of Walevr The purchase " wi'l K. . 1 in the ' name of Leopold De Rothschild, wfio lias lately become as sociated with the conduct of the finan cial affairs or tne royai ramny. ina money represents accumulated revenue Hi. rftirtiw nt X Ancater , whlph in tlWIH .. , -1 the property, of . the Prince of Wales. but tne- latter' win nut n cumieK control ot the income, until he reaches hla majority. ,' v . THAW'S COUNSEL FILES BRIEF OF "INSIDE FACJS" Information Includes Disclosure ly j Dutchess County Grand ' Jurymen. - ' Concord. N..K, Oct. 1. Counsel r Harry KrThaw filed today a br! f li t Governor Felker , giving the - :. : 1 "inside facts" of the effort on t' i"l of William T. Jerome to -uri . 1 1 dictment charging crmHplracy - !, : Thaw. The rwnarkftWa jmrt tt t brief Is that It contnins i-f-r which must almost of r.f , 1 come, from members ef t. "( county grand Jury." b-' m s v . Indlctmant waa solicit DOWN 'tfV'AV-V 1 "SV' &Mlk$V'ip'At. s!!'?''.!!;: ill ' ' v. . . :,'-ii"f ,'iy jl ' ';l