W8tf v. EKI2.imiV.LISk mV)ftW t -a. . I ' - , it ! : !li w 1& if .H t HI H q j ) ? j V .. SECTION ONE VOLUME 13. LEI IS NOT HOME FORTHESENftTE Executive of State of Idaho Does Not Wish to Leave His Chair to Go to Seat at Washington I WILLING TO ALLOW HIS RIVAL TO GO Northwestern State Head ; Was Expected to Resign But Late in the Day He Decides to Retain Office BOISE, Nov. 1C. Governor James II. flaw ley decided at tbe last mo tnent today Hot to resign Ills offirv to atccpt tlio appointment as United States senator tit the hands of Lieti tiSnan Governor Swectzer This after noon lie appointed Judge K. I. Perke) of Uotee. to till the unexiired term of tho lato Senator Heybura Goenior Hnwlej said the statt tnent today of the acceptance of the United States senatorship irom Lieu tenant Governor Svvsetzer 10uld he virtually the same as apjiointlng him self. Jrolgo Perkey Is a native of Wayne county. Ohio, and came to Idaho In 1S94. lie was appointed judge of the fourth judicial district in l)Oi and slate democratic chairman in lflO'i llo took iart In the senatorial contest which resulted in the deftat of roimer Senator Dulois. EX-SEGRETARY OF ARIZONA PASSES AM PHOENIX, Nov 16. News was motived In Phoenix toda) of the sud ilen Jea'h last week at his ranch near Iirawiej California ot Ridgeley C Powers, secretary of state of rizont and acting governor of the terrttorj for several years beginning with 1SS4. During the time that llr. Powers held the position of secretary of Arizona the chief executive of the state was the abfenttent the great r state was absent the greater part of thn Hm,t mxfl Pnuprft ar-tpfl R ffnY. trnqr during almost the enUre Period i In office, being generallj known over the state as Governor Powers About fifteen years ago Mr Powers moved from Phoenix and up to the time of his death lived on his ranc.i near Ilrawlcy He was 70 yean; old at the time of his death. Tor si. jeara beginning with 180'j he was -nvAranr t Iho ctnfA nt MIslRlntiL I.fivlrn. hpon lrt.-il Ilpntpnant-cov-! ernor of the state lu that year on the republican ticket and assuming thu gubernatorial duties when Go ernor John Alcorn went to the senate in 1S71. He moved to Arizona in 1879. CHARLESTON'S "FLEET WEEK." CHARLESTON. S. C Nov. 16. During the week beginning tomorrow a mighty fleet of warships will ride at anchor In Charleston harbor, where fifty years ago some of the most stirring naval engagements of the civil war were fought Two di visions of the Atlantic fleet compris ing thirteen battleships or the first class, will take part in the mobiliza tion Included In the list will be the crack battleships Oeorgle Vermont, Louisiana, Nebraska, Kansas, Nw Hampshire. South Carolina, Rhode Is land and Virginia. A citizens' com mittee "headed by Mayor Grace has made great preparations for the en tertnlHtnent of the 12.060 officers and Waejaokfts of the fleet The city baa pat on holiday dress for the oc casion. Thousands of visitors from the South Atlantic States are expect ed here (hiring the week. HENRY DAVIS ENTERS 90th YEAR WASHINGTON. D. C. Nov. 1: - Henry Gsaway Davis, who vas the democratic nominee for vice presi dent In 1904. entered his nlnetleih ear today, having been born Nov 1. 1828. Mr Davis, who makes this city his place of winter residence, probab ly Is .the oldest citizen of the United States taking an active part In public affairs and questions. Since the civ il war he has taken ta active interest in public affairs, serving in both branches of the West Virginia legte Iflture. and for twelve years represent ed that state In the United States senate, declining to nra for another terra. Jast at present Mr Davis Is Hiving much attention to the efforts of his grandson. Stephen B BIkins, Jr.. to return to tbe United States senate. In which body he served by appointment for a ahort time follow In the death of his father. New Mr. Elklns aspires to the seat of Senator Watson, wbese successor Trill be elect ed hy ths West Virginia legislature ihte winter. . . THE MCEE DALLOOXrST WINS THIRD PRIZE Captain H. E. Honeywell. Captain II. K. llone) well, who rep resented .America In tne recent Inter national brlloon race which started Irom Stuttgart. German v. has wired home to bis friends In Kansas City I that tie won tnira prize. :ie piloted the balloon Uncle Ham. Early lust summer Honewell won the Ameri can race vvhlOi started from Kansas City, covering twelve hundred miles In thtrty-jblx hours. I6GDWIN WILL HAVE TO HUE Execution However Take .Place Elsewhere Than at State Prison of Arizona STATE BOARD OBJECTS The state board of control has aJ ised United States Marshal C A. Overlotk that it cannot permit the execution of James II Goodwin, a goernment prisoner to take place in the Arizona state- prison. That the state board would take this view of the matter, on account the governors known Uews, on capital punishment, was indicated in the Ke iew several weeks ago. The I'nltid Slates attorney general had taken ji..iva uiiuiucj pciiciai uau lakvu I cognizance of the attitude of the Ari-I zona state administration on the ques tion of capital punishment and there will be no delay In the execution of Hood in by reason of the refusal of tbe governor to permit it to be done at the stite prison. Wheen Goodwin. Is resentenced the judge will nanu the place of execution In For Safe Keeping The letter of the board to Mur- Bhal Overlck recites that the prison - er is not beins kept -by the United States at the piison but wa removed to Florence for, sa.e-neepliig, that no contract exists cetween the board and the federal government for the keeping of federal prisoners and that therefore, the board feels under no obligation to permit the execution: that recently the governor reprieved a number of prisoners In the prison sentenced to death and that the ques tion or capital punishment Is to be settled by the legislature or the peo ple this winter The board further recites that an execution in the prison ma have a serious effect on tbe discipline and the reform system inaugurated by tne governor. Convicted at Globe Goodwin, who was convicted at Globe, the governor's home town for the brutal murder of two young men on the Indian reservation north of Florence, by" Judge E. . Lewis of the fifth judicial district, .sitting at Globe. Goodwin appealed to the Unit ed Statej circuit court of appeals at San Francisco which affirmed the judgment In October. When the mandate in tho case i received In the United States court at Phoenix. United States Attorney Mor rison will probably have him brought before tbe court and sentenced to be hanged in one or the county jails or the state where federal prisoners are confined FEARS PENITENTIARY CHICAGO, III, Nov. 16: Jack John - son visited the federal district attor- ney today and tried to have the charge of a violation or the Slann act reduced, so he pleads glulty He will piy his fine. Jack Johnson told several or his Mends that he feared that he was going to the penltenUary. NEW MEXICO WINS ALBUQUERQUE. X M Nov 16: Tbe football team of tbe New Mexico Agricultural college won tbe Intercol legiate championship of New Mexico and Arlrona when it defeated the Un iversity of New Mexico by a score of 26 to 0. ; wv I Am ' A . i pRbirr - f fc-u. 1 Siii' . i" ." BISBEE DAILY BISBEE. ARIZONA. SUNDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 17, 1912. WITNESSES TELL OF M1IW TIES PS Mrs. Ingersoll Shows That the Alleged 'Dynamiters Rented Rooms in Her House and Got a Launch i AFTER BLOWING UP OF TIMES MEN REJECTED Schmidt and Others Visit Woman's" ffouee and Are Not Allowed to- Remain There So Landlady Says. INDIANAPOLIS, . Nov 16. lncl dents in which James II. McNamara'e I reparations to blow up the ls An t-eles Times building, a wreck , In which twenti-one persons were killed. were blended Into a dramatic rtory l ten w itnessee from .California, at ihp -dynamite consplracA" trial to- dy. How a dynamiter rented a fur nished room in Mrs Lena Ingerftoirs llol m Sin Krancisco and how he got ii touch with F A Schmidt and Da-' nl Caplan, his alleged accomplice was told and how he dug up from a Hat to procure the gasoline launch PBtlme. To buy 500. pounds of eighty per c-nt nttro-glycerine. a high explosive, and how after fivlng the Los Angeles 'Times "explosion to occur October 1. I he returned to San Krancisco that 0 I night and begged Mrs. Ingersoll to AluStia,,ow nCm to remain there, offering her a wnole niontns rem. were ue tails related bj people who had had personal dealing, with McNamarn and r.mes C O'Hrien and thej told how a cottage owned by him on Nineteenth Ave., south. In the southern , part of ?an FrancUco had been rented be fora the 'Ix Angeles explosion and how. when several weeks later he went out to learn why the cottage vas not occupied, he found ten lioxe'i of nitro-glcerine and powder Boxes Contained Povder. OTJrien said in his statement the coxes contained powder and tba he looked nto one box with .a lightet. cigar in his mouth, thinking the ex plosives were candles, and he knock ed a stick against a box The Los Angeles defective related what he saw -hen he arrived at the site of the ,. . h til lint. nme DUimins. nother development today was th- admission by frank EckholT. of Cin- Lilian that he aided lu the escape and concealment of McNamara after the dvnamiter was returning east Kekhoff also admitted having dc- nianded mone from the McNamaras to keep hit mouth closed. j Mrs. Ingersoll. the ilrst Important witness from California, was called 1 She said she now lived in Victoria, I It. C and said Sept 1. a month be- fore .the Los Angeles explosion, she hud fenled a room to McNamara who used an alia of 1. 15. Mryce. Later McNamara was vfsiled by Sfhmidt who i3 decrlbea as having a -squmty left or glass eye." Schmidt nlso known a Schmltt or -Schmidt-resided at the hotjie of Mrs. LaV.n. a friend of Mrs. lngersoll's. It was t'i this way that McNamara was di rected where to rent a room MNamara Leaves Hoel. On September 14 McNamara left Mrs. lngersoll's and went to a hotel, l'rom the hotel. a estified by a te! enhoue operator, most of the call3 a-ere made to the powder company for the purchase or explosives, Town er's launch in Oakland Mrs Ingersoll said she did not again see McNamara until thf night of October 1, "about 11 p. m. he came to my house and wanted roe to give him a room." she testified. I said I coitld make no,arrangements at tliRt hour, Then 'he begged me to cllow him to sleep on a sofa, saying he would Rive me the rent of the flat for a month. 1 declined and he left On the following night he called on the phone and again wanted to com I again refused to allow him That vvns the last I saw of him until. after his arrest" Miss Ethel Gill, telephone operator at a San Francisco hotel. Identified records of the calls by McNamara to t'i- oowder company, and to the Haunch owners. She was corroborated i by John Stanley, keeper of the boat- house BONDS PERMITTING PHOENIX, Nov. 16: The state cor poration commission Issued permis sion today to the Arlrona and East ern to Issue $600,000 bonds ror Im provement The company operates the Southern Pacific branch lines In the state of Arizona. OPERATION SUCCESSFUL CHICAGO, till.. Nov. 16: Senator William Lortmer wag operated on for appendicitis today. The operation was successful. TWELVE PACES TODAY MEMDER ASSOCIATED PRESS. Thousands of Panic Stricken Turks Flee From Constantinople For Asia Minor Jsv sssV bbbbbbVbb jMBEBBPsylBPPBsp,'lj3"T MEW- . -yLsg " a ikV. )bu m"9' if F4t?tvA9i AbbbbbuSI 1 ." - Surinc the past few weeks many thousands of Turkish residents Lave fleJ panic stricken from Cunsiantl noplo across tt Hellespont Into Asia Minor, fcome have taken their belo..R.n, Vltrr" "Ixl "atandomS I all r. order K make rood their escape. In tne accompanying nlcture panic sirtcken Inhabitants with their household effects are Men before the Croat mosque of Sultun-.dulelmanlch. ready to See from the city as the Ualkau srmy la stcrsiirs its doors. ' U RADHER'S JOB S IK HIT Democrat Needs Only Shake Plum Tree; No Opposition from the Other Parties to IS- LEGAL NECESSITY It -is probable that -the demporat vv-tvivti2atit,,"',rarVDJln''Ml'"'ocr''t party to succeed Sam II Ilradner. of Ilenson, as member of the lower liotiSf from this count, will get the plum without opposition from tha other tv,o parties and that the J.'i.OOn special election will be a mere legal lormalltv Severa i romlnent progressives have been afked If the rarly would have t candidate for the job and while the) did not peak with full authority, the J organisation having made no state ment, they agreed that It will bc im probable "What would one Dull Moose be able to do at Phoenix in a whole herd of democrats?" asked one Dull Mooser "He would be able to get no consideration of any party measure and he would only be the butt of the jokes or the democrats., I think that we will wait 'until the next general election Progressives as a clan are some what apathetic regarding politics, in dicating that there may have been color to the inxinuatlon that a pro gressive Is only a Rooseveltoso. It Is certain that the republicans will not have a candidate. They will take Interest In the election only ir the progressives hare a candidate, in which event they would support thcuietv- itonds were unsteady. democratic candidate It Is said. The democrat who Is agreed upon by the democratic party will be an asy go-as-) ou-plea?e for the legisla tive job ir the progressives and re publicans keep their hands off In the (quabble. It will be like riding as the sole passenger on a S5.000 spcclnl train, for the election will cost just as much with one candidate as if there were half a dozen. TAFT SPEAKS WELL. NEW YORK. Nov. 16. President Taft sang his "Swan Song" as chief executive or the nation tonight and as the guest or the lotus club he re sponded to a toast, 'The President" in a speech which many or his hear crs considered th most remarkable ho had ever made. He shifted from the grave to the gay, from tbe philos ophy which he saTd tour years In the White House bad taught him to A discussion of problems which face the nation and he lauxhed at the outcome of the election. r- Turks 1c.jm.ib -.- ...mople. , i- Is No Presidental ! Contest Coming Says Board of Supervisors Los Angeles Body Declares) Against Mandamus writ I Brought by Democrats LOS ANGELES, C'al Nov 1C There will be no presidential ballot contest, stated certain au thorlties today "a.ter the vote or (he city and countv was announc ed by the lioaid or supervisors The law onlv allows cant !.. Jl.-; vj it l m J vlsors'are conducting the recount, which It Is expected will te finish ed Tuesday Tho hearing or tho mandamus suit obtained against the supervisors by the democrats comes up Mondaj HEAVi TONE SHOW! II STOCK H-RKE1 Rebound Was Sharp in Last Half of New York Trading prevailed in today's stock market and prices ranged well below vesterdays close. Jn the last half nour there was a harp rebound to which. In some cbses was lirought sharp recov ery but others showed a slight galu. In splt,e of the comparatively heavy pressure in the first hourf there wero no indications that Wilson's announce- L ment of a call on an extra session of congress caused any deep seated an- t Total sales par value JST.'.OOO. Gov-' ernnvnts unchanged. CAVALRYMAN STABBED. DOUGLAS, Nov. 16. Private Wjt bur C- Griffin of Troop I), Ninth caval ry was stabbed and fatally wounded today by Private John H. Landes, of the same troop. The wounded man was brought to the hospital tent bleeding with two wounds In hbv lody and with the blade or a lone knife sticking fully four inches Into his skull. MAKES RECORD SCORE. LOS ANGELES, Nov. 16. In years of record In football scores, the rec ord run for a. ;iouchdovn was made today In the WbltUer game between Whiltler high school and Santa Ana Athletic association. Score: Whlttler 100; Santa Ana 0; P.nch fullback. Whlttler. scored touchdown on ninety nine yard run. tM2TPW XL - m MAIIMS iE PLANING STRIKE I the, Industrial Workers of World Extending Prop aganda and Now Prose lyting in Honolulu STRIKE NEXT YEAR HONOIilTLl . ' o i 'te thliu f ro"r8e- the Sreat anJ really only out acioss he Parlfir ocean the ic. .lasting satisfaction one can have In dustrial Workers or the World have admission of the great office of pros begun a campaign of organization Ident l8 the thought that one has done among the working people and repre- jfomethlnp; permanently useful to hii sentatlves or the society have Intro-i fellow countrymen The mere en.o duced a doctrine to "the plantation ' ment "l tinsei ot ofrlce ,s ""hemeral laborers and Japanese Open declar-1 a"u "ne88 one can "x 0Tie!i memory atlons are urade that the Hawaiian! ? real P'OS"" he lus made through, affiliating with the oreanizers ar& I the exercise of the presidentia' pow- planning that a strike te called next year EMBARGO ON FRUIT PHOENLX. Nov !: The stale' horticultural commlAsinn titerArt nn embargo today on all citrus nursery I Vance, bound for San Diego rrora Co stock of Florida and California ue-jlumbia river points was sighted to- cause ot scale. TO ELECTRIFY RAILROAD DENVER, Colo, Nov. 16:-r-At an Initial cost of $3,000,000 the electri fication of the entire system of the Denver and Rio Gande began immed iately on the first section. It is under taken to be from Helper to Salt I-ake. 121 mlleg In length. FOOTBALL SCORES YESTERDAY Priiu&ton 6, Yale 6. Tied. Harvard 3, Dartmouth 0. Utah 43, Colorado College 0. Wyoming 25, Chadron 0. Navy 40. A. and M. 0 Wisconsin 14. Minnesota 0. Pennsylvania 34, Carlisle 26. Drown 24. La. Fiyctte 7. -t Williams 12. Amherst 0. Army 15. Tufts 6. ( Chicago 10, Illinois 0. Yale Freshmen 17, Harvard Freh men IS. Michigan 20. Cornell 7 Vanderbllt 23. Central 0. Georgetown 16. Vlrginio 13. Ames 7, Iowa 21. Drake 0, Grinnell 13. Purdue 91, Rose Poly. 0. Missouri 33, Washington 0.' (Nebraska 14, Kansas 3. Haskell 32. Kansas City College 12. Colorado Mines 10, Denver 0. All Star Callfornian 8, Australllana 12. Washington 30, Ojegon 14. Occidental 53, Pomona 13; PHOENIX. Nov 16: The fight of the Santa Fe against Arizona's three rent fare law will be heard In tbe federtl court December 2. Judge Mor- - row's restraining order was filed here today. SIX PAGES NUMBER 162 PRESIDENT TUFT SUGGESTSSTATE AND LI UNITE Chief Executive Urges .That Legislative Branches Ger in Touch with Executive and Not Segregate HE FORBIDS ABUSIVE . LANGUAGE CONGRESS Nation's Head Declares Sen sitive Man Should Not Be Allowed to Take Place at Front of United States INDIANAPOLIS; Siii. 1G: Presi dent Taft made a suggestion that lev IsUitlv e steps be taken towards bring ing' more closely together the opera tion of the executive in legislative tranches "Tfye studied effort to maintain these branches are separate and j.ri a great mistake "The- rules of the two houses," iw (said. I advised tn forbid the use ot 'abusive language b.v one member asalnst another by the members of i one house against another house. J 'Close examination of these- rules ( will not show any limitation on parl . lamentary character of language that mav he directed against the president I as to him members may use pressure of their own sweet will ir mem i bers or the cabinet wre allowed tin 1 floor, their Aery presence would sug gest In the posslbillt) of reply, a moderation in discussing the admin istration which now at times will not j prevail. , 'The strongest reason at the pres- ' Cni .fltnmflni. thi. ..l.unt,.. t.. ,l.n. n.. Influence or the executive shall hav In shaping legislation and it may ho more In harmony with the responsibil ity -of people- to- hold him to r-kM?(, it Sensitive Men No Exccutive One of the results or my observ ation in the presidency Is that my po sition will not place me in a position to be enjoyed b a sensitive man. Ex perience in the presidency toughens the hide or the occupant so his faults will resist the stings of criti cism directed asainst him from the time he takes office until he lays It down 'I think the period for successful muckraking is gradually drawing to a "'ose. I hope so We must consider the ebulltion in muckraking litera ture only one of the temporary excus es of the times which is curing lts-if, 1-y the tiring of those whose putronge Is fotmed for motivje Trom Its begin ning rise. f r th,er ls ' 'e real pleasure In con I temptation of the holding or it' STEAMER TAKEN IN TOW SAN FRANCISCO. Nov 16 Hollln tin a Spnvr km the atonmni- nrmtih day by the steamer Yukon twenty miles west of Wllllpa harbor in a disastrous condition. I-ater advices received from the marine department of the chamber of commerce reported, the steamer riverside had reached the vessel and had taken her lu tow T. R's PLURALITY REDUCED SAN FRANCISCO, XoV. 16: Ad ditional returns all reported to the of fice of the secretary of state and It brought Col. Roosevelt's plurality to 119. Los Angeles and Humboldt counties are yet to be ""officially counted. CHAMPIONS PLAY TO TIE PRINCETON, Nov. 16 : Princeton and Yale In their annual football bat tle today played each other to i C to 6 tie. The play of the teams was so evenly matched that neither had the iiower to rush a ball to a. touch down. Each put up a stone wall de fense and all scorlnjr was done on goals from the field and on goal from placement. DEAD MAN ELECTED CARROLL. la, Nov. 16- Attorney General Cassion bus been asked to determine what happens when voters elect a dead man to office. Vlctur Schirk was electpd county supervis or after he bad been in tbe grave rive days, A. A- Patton his opponent, who received hell as many votes l claiming the election. The casq has been sept to tbe head or the Iowa legal department for an opinion. i. m hfte . w . ... . jaT.j' J --k??&zi.-': iiLi . ., tw. AW j,